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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Desert and The Sown
+
+Author: Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8219]
+This file was first posted on July 3, 2003
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DESERT AND THE SOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Eldred, Clay Massei and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DESERT AND THE SOWN
+
+
+By Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+I. A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+
+II. INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+
+III. THE INITIAL LOVE
+
+IV. “A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT”
+
+V. DISINHERITED
+
+VI. AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+
+VII. MARKING TIME
+
+VIII. A HUNTER'S DIARY
+
+IX. THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+
+X. THE WHITE PERIL
+
+XI. A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+
+XII. THE BLOOD-WITE
+
+XIII. CURTAIN
+
+XIV. KIND INQUIRIES
+
+XV. A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+
+XVI. THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+
+XVII. THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+
+XVIII.THE STAR IN THE EAST
+
+XIX. PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+
+XX. A STATION IN THE DESERT
+
+XXI. INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+
+XXII. THE CASE STRIKES IN
+
+XXIII.RESTIVENESS
+
+XXIV. INDIAN SUMMER
+
+XXV. THE FELL FROST
+
+XXVI. PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+
+It was an evening of sudden mildness following a dry October gale.
+The colonel had miscalculated the temperature by one log--only one, he
+declared, but that had proved a pitchy one, and the chimney bellowed
+with flame. From end to end the room was alight with it, as if the
+stored-up energies of a whole pine-tree had been sacrificed in the
+consumption of that four-foot stick.
+
+The young persons of the house had escaped, laughing, into the fresh
+night air, but the colonel was hemmed in on every side; deserted by
+his daughter, mocked by the work of his own hands, and torn between the
+duties of a host and the host's helpless craving for his after-dinner
+cigar.
+
+Across the hearth, filling with her silks all the visible room in his
+own favorite settle corner, sat the one woman on earth it most behooved
+him to be civil to,--the future mother-in-law of his only child. That
+Moya was a willing, nay, a reckless hostage, did not lessen her father's
+awe of the situation.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus, according to her wont at this hour, was composedly doing
+nothing. The colonel could not make his retreat under cover of her real
+or feigned absorption in any of the small scattering pursuits which
+distract the female mind. When she read she read--she never “looked at
+books.” When she sewed she sewed--presumably, but no one ever saw her
+do it. Her mind was economic and practical, and she saved it whole, like
+many men of force, for whatever she deemed her best paying sphere of
+action.
+
+It was a silence that crackled with heat! The colonel, wrathfully
+perspiring in the glow of that impenitent stick, frowned at it like
+an inquisitor. Presently Mrs. Bogardus looked up, and her expression
+softened as she saw the energetic despair upon his face.
+
+“Colonel, don't you always smoke after dinner?”
+
+“That is my bad habit, madam. I belong to the generation that
+smokes--after dinner and most other times--more than is good for us.”
+ Colonel Middleton belonged also to the generation that can carry a
+sentence through to the finish in handsome style, and he did it with a
+suave Virginian accent as easy as his seat in the saddle. Mrs. Bogardus
+always gave him her respectful attention during his best performances,
+though she was a woman of short sentences herself.
+
+“Don't you smoke in this room sometimes?” she asked, with a barely
+perceptible sniff the merest contraction of her housewifely nostrils.
+
+“Ah--h! Those rascally curtains and cushions! You ladies--women,
+I should say--Moya won't let me say ladies--you bolster us up with
+comforts on purpose to betray us!”
+
+“You can say 'ladies' to me,” smiled the very handsome one before him.
+“That's the generation _I_ belong to.”
+
+The colonel bowed playfully. “Well, you know, I don't detect myself, but
+there's no doubt I have infected the premises.”
+
+“Open fires are good ventilators. I wish you would smoke now. If you
+don't, I shall have to go away, and I'm exceedingly comfortable.”
+
+“You are exceedingly charming to say so--on top of that last stick,
+too!” The colonel had Irish as well as Virginian progenitors. “Well,” he
+sighed, proceeding to make himself conditionally happy, “Moya will never
+forgive me! We spoil each other shamefully when we're alone, but of
+course we try to jack each other up when company comes. It's a great
+comfort to have some one to spoil, isn't it, now? I needn't ask which it
+is in your family!”
+
+“The spoiled one?” Mrs. Bogardus smiled rather coldly. “A woman we had
+for governess, when Christine was a little thing, used to say: 'That
+child is the stuff that tyrants are made of!' Tyrants are made by the
+will of their subjects, don't you think, generally speaking?”
+
+“Well, you couldn't have made a tyrant of your son, Mrs. Bogardus. He's
+the Universal Spoiler! He'll ruin my striker, Jephson. I shall have to
+send the fellow back to the ranks. I don't know how you keep a servant
+good for anything with Paul around.”
+
+“Paul thinks he doesn't like to be waited on,” Paul's mother observed
+shrewdly. “He says that only invalids, old people, and children have any
+claim on the personal service of others.”
+
+“By George! I found him blacking his own boots!”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus laughed.
+
+“But I'm paying a man to do it for him. It upsets my contract with that
+other fellow for Paul to do his work. We have a claim on what we pay for
+in this world.”
+
+“I suppose we have. But Paul thinks that nothing can pay the price of
+those artificial relations between man and man. I think that's the way
+he puts it.”
+
+“Good Heavens! Has the boy read history? It's a relation that began when
+the world was made, and will last while men are in it.”
+
+“I am not defending Paul's ideas, Colonel. I have a great sympathy with
+tyrants myself. You must talk to him. He will amuse you.”
+
+“My word! It's a ticklish kind of amusement when _we_ get talking. Why,
+the boy wants to turn the poor old world upside down--make us all stand
+on our heads to give our feet a rest. Now, I respect my feet,”--the
+colonel drew them in a little as the lady's eyes involuntarily took the
+direction of his allusion,--“I take the best care I can of them; but
+I propose to keep my head, such as it is, on top, till I go under
+altogether. These young philanthropists! They assume that the Hands and
+the Feet of the world, the class that serves in that capacity, have got
+the same nerves as the Brain.”
+
+“There's a sort of connection,” said Mrs. Bogardus carelessly. “Some
+of our Heads have come from the class that you call the Hands and Feet,
+haven't they?”
+
+The colonel admitted the fact, but the fact was the exception. “Why,
+that's just the matter with us now! We've got no class of legislators.
+I don't wish to plume myself, but, upon my word, the two services are
+about all we have left to show what selection and training can do. And
+we're only just getting the army into shape, after the raw material that
+was dumped into it by the civil war.”
+
+“Weren't you in the civil war yourself?”
+
+“I was--a West Pointer, madam; and I was true to my salt and false to my
+blood. But, the flag over all!--at the cost of everything I held dear
+on earth.” After this speech the colonel looked hotter than ever and a
+trifle ashamed of himself.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus's face wore its most unobservant expression. “I don't
+agree with Paul,” she said. “I wish in some ways he were more like other
+young men--exercise, for instance. It's a pity for young men not to love
+activity and leadership. Besides, it's the fashion. A young man might
+as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Blood is a strange
+thing,” she mused.
+
+The colonel looked at her curiously. In a woman so unfrank, her
+occasional bursts of frankness were surprising and, as he thought, not
+altogether complimentary. It was as if she felt herself so far removed
+from his conception of her that she might say anything she pleased, sure
+of his miscomprehension.
+
+“He is not lazy intellectually,” said the colonel, aiming to comfort
+her.
+
+“I did not say he was lazy--only he won't do things except to what he
+calls some 'purpose.' At his age amusement ought to be purpose enough.
+He ought to take his pleasures seriously--this hunting-trip, for
+instance. I believe, on the very least encouragement, he would give it
+all up!”
+
+“You mustn't let him do that,” said the colonel, warming. “All that
+country above Yankee Fork, for a hundred miles, after you've gone fifty
+north from Bonanza, is practically virgin forest. Wonderful flora
+and fauna! It's late for the weeds and things, but if Paul wants game
+trophies for your country-house, he can load a pack-train.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus continued to be amused, in a quiet way. “He calls them
+relics of barbarism! He would as soon festoon his walls with scalps, as
+decorate them with the heads of beautiful animals,--nearer the Creator's
+design than most men, he would say.”
+
+“He's right there! But that doesn't change the distinction between men
+and animals. He is your son, madam--and he's going to be mine. But, fine
+boy as he is, I call him a crank of the first water.”
+
+“You'll find him quite good to Moya,” Mrs. Bogardus remarked
+dispassionately. “And he's not quite twenty-four.”
+
+“Very true. Well, _I_ should send him into the woods for the sake of
+getting a little sense into him, of an every-day sort. He 'll take in
+sanity with every breath.”
+
+“And you don't think it's too late in the season for them to go out?”
+
+There was no change in Mrs. Bogardus's voice, unconcerned as it was; yet
+the colonel felt at once that this simple question lay at the root of
+all her previous skirmishing.
+
+“The guide will decide as to that,” he said definitely. “If it is, he
+won't go out with them. They have got a good man, you say?”
+
+“They are waiting for a good man; they have waited too long, I think.
+He is expected in with another party on Monday, perhaps, Paul is to meet
+the Bowens at Challis, where they buy their outfit. I do believe”--she
+laughed constrainedly--“that he is going up there more to head them off
+than for any other reason.”
+
+“How do you mean?”
+
+“Oh, it's very stupid of them! They seem to think an army post is part
+of the public domain. They have been threatening, if Paul gives up the
+trip, to come down here on a gratuitous visit.”
+
+“Why, let them come by all means! The more the merrier! We will quarter
+them on the garrison at large.”
+
+“Wherever they were quartered, they would be here all the time. They are
+not intimate friends of Paul's. _Mrs._ Bowen is--a very great friend.
+He is her right-hand in all that Hartley House work. The boys are just
+fashionable young men.”
+
+“Can't they go hunting without Paul?”
+
+“Wheels within wheels!” Mrs. Bogardus sighed impatiently. “Hunting trips
+are expensive, and--when young men are living on their fathers, it
+is convenient sometimes to have a third. However, Paul goes, I half
+believe, to prevent their making a descent upon us here.”
+
+“Well; I should ask them to come, or make it plain they were not
+expected.”
+
+“Oh, would you?--if their mother was one of the nicest women, and your
+friend? Besides, the reservation does not cover the whole valley. Banks
+Bowen talks of a mine he wants to look at--I don't think it will make
+much difference to the mine! This is simply to say that I wish Paul
+cared more about the trip for its own sake.”
+
+“Well, frankly, I think he's better out of the way for the next
+fortnight. The girls ought to go to bed early, and keep the roses in
+their cheeks for the wedding. Moya's head is full of her frocks and
+fripperies. She is trying to run a brace of sewing women; and all those
+boxes are coming from the East to be 'inspected, and condemned' mostly.
+The child seems to make a great many mistakes, doesn't she? About every
+other day I see a box as big as a coffin in the hall, addressed to some
+dry-goods house, 'returned by ----'”
+
+“Moya should have sent to me for her things,” said Mrs. Bogardus. “I am
+the one who makes her return them. She can do much better when she is
+in town herself. It doesn't matter, for the few weeks they will be
+away, what she wears. I shall take her measures home with me and set the
+people to work. She has never been _fitted_ in her life.”
+
+The colonel looked rather aghast. He had seldom heard Mrs. Bogardus
+speak with so much animation. He wondered if really his household was so
+very far behind the times.
+
+“It's very kind of you, I'm sure, if Moya will let you. Most girls think
+they can manage these matters for themselves.”
+
+“It's impossible to shop by mail,” Mrs. Bogardus said decidedly. “They
+always keep a certain style of things for the Western and Southern
+trade.”
+
+The colonel was crushed. Mrs. Bogardus rose, and he picked up her
+handkerchief, breathing a little hard after the exertion. She passed
+out, thanking him with a smile as he opened the door. In the hall she
+stopped to choose a wrap from a collection of unconventional garments
+hanging on a rack of moose horns.
+
+“I think I shall go out,” she said. “The air is quite soft to-night. Do
+you know which way the children went?” By the “children,” as the colonel
+had noted, Mrs. Bogardus usually meant her daughter, the budding tyrant,
+Christine.
+
+“Fine woman!” he mused, alone with himself in his study. “Splendid
+character head. Regular Dutch beauty. But hard--eh?--a trifle hard in
+the grain. Eyes that tell you nothing. Mouth set like a stone. Never
+rambles in her talk. Never speculates or exaggerates for fun. Never runs
+into hyperbole--the more fool some other folks! Speaks to the point or
+keeps still.”
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+
+The colonel's papers failed to hold him somehow. He rose and paced the
+room with his short, stiff-kneed tread. He stopped and stared into the
+fire; his face began to get red.
+
+“So! Moya's clothes are not good enough. Going to set the people to
+work, is she? Wants an outfit worthy of her son. And who's to pay for
+it, by gad? Post-nuptial bills for wedding finery are going to hurt poor
+little Moya like the deuce. Confound the woman! Dressing my daughter
+for me, right in my own house. Takes it in her hands as if it were
+her right, by----!” The colonel let slip another expletive. “Well,”
+ he sighed, half amused at his own violence, “I'll write to Annie. I
+promised Moya, and it's high time I did.”
+
+Annie was the colonel's sister, the wife of an infantry captain,
+stationed at Fort Sherman. She was a very understanding woman; at least
+she understood her brother. But she was not solely dependent upon his
+laggard letters for information concerning his private affairs. The
+approaching wedding at Bisuka Barracks was the topic of most of the
+military families in the Department of the Columbia. Moya herself had
+written some time before, in the self-conscious manner of the newly
+engaged. Her aunt knew of course that Moya and Christine Bogardus had
+been room-mates at Miss Howard's, that the girls had fallen in love with
+each other first, and with visits at holidays and vacations, when the
+army girl could not go to her father, it was easily seen how the
+rest had followed. And well for Moya that it had, was Mrs. Creve's
+indorsement. As a family they were quite sufficiently represented in
+the army; and if one should ever get an Eastern detail it would be very
+pleasant to have a young niece charmingly settled in New York.
+
+The colonel drew a match across the top bar of the grate and set it
+to his pipe. His big nostrils whitened as he took a deep in-breath. He
+reseated himself and began his duty letter in the tone of a judicious
+parent; but, warming as he wrote, under the influence of Annie's
+imagined sympathy, he presently broke forth with his usual arrogant
+colloquialism.
+
+“She might have had her pick of the junior officers in both branches.
+And there was a captain of engineers at the Presidio, a widower, but an
+awfully good fellow. And she has chosen a boy, full of transcendental
+moonshine, who climbs upon a horse as if it were a stone fence, and has
+mixed ideas which side of himself to hang a pistol on.
+
+“I have no particular quarrel with the lad, barring his great burly
+mouthful of a name, Bo--gardus! To call a child Moya and have her fetch
+up with her soft, Irish vowels against such a name as that! She had a
+fond idea that it was from Beauregard. But she has had to give that up.
+It's Dutch--Hudson River Dutch--for something horticultural--a tree,
+or an orchard, or a brush-pile; and she says it's a good name where it
+belongs. Pity it couldn't have stayed where it belongs.
+
+“However, you won't find him quite so scrubby as he sounds. He's very
+proper and clean-shaven, with a good pair of dark, Dutch eyes, which he
+gets from his mother; and I wish he had got her business ability with
+them, and her horse sense, if the lady will excuse me. She runs the
+property and he spends it, as far as she'll let him, on the newest
+reforms. And there's another hitch!--To belong to the Truly Good
+at twenty-four! But beggars can't be choosers. He's going to settle
+something handsome on Moya out of the portion Madame gives him on his
+marriage. My poor little girl, as you know, will get nothing from me but
+a few old bits and trinkets and a father's blessing,--the same
+doesn't go for much in these days. I have been a better dispenser than
+accumulator, like others of our name.
+
+“I do assure you, Annie, it bores me down to the ground, this
+humanitarian racket from children with ugly names who have just chipped
+the shell. This one owns his surprise that we _work_ in the army! That
+our junior officers teach, and study a bit perforce themselves. His own
+idea is that every West Pointer, before he gets his commission, should
+serve a year or two in the ranks, to raise the type of the enlisted man,
+and chiefly, mark you, to get his point of view, the which he is to
+bear in mind when he comes to his command. Oh, we've had some pretty
+arguments! But I suspect the rascal of drawing it mild, at this stage,
+for the old dragon who guards his Golden Apple. He doesn't want to poke
+me up. How far he'd go if he were not hampered in his principles by the
+fact that he is in love, I cannot say. And I'd rather not imagine.”
+
+The commandant's house at Bisuka Barracks is the nearest one to the
+flag-pole as you go up a flight of wooden steps from the parade ground.
+These steps, and their landings, flanked by the dry grass terrace of the
+line, are a favorite gathering place for young persons of leisure at
+the Post. They face the valley and the mountains; they lead past the
+adjutant's office to the main road to town; they command the daily
+pageant of garrison duty as performed at such distant, unvisited posts,
+with only the ladies and the mountains looking on.
+
+Retreat had sounded at half after five, for the autumn days grew short.
+The colonel's orderly had been dismissed to his quarters. There was no
+excuse, at this hour, for two young persons lingering in sentimental
+corners of the steps, beyond a flagrant satisfaction in the shadow
+thereof which covered them since the lighting of lamps on Officers' Row.
+
+The colonel stood at his study window keeping his pipe alive with slow
+and dreamy puffs. The moon was just clearing the roof of the men's
+quarters. His eye caught a shape, or a commingling of shapes, ensconced
+in an angle of the steps; the which he made out to be his daughter,
+in her light evening frock with one of his own old army capes over her
+shoulders, seated in close formation beside the only man at the Post who
+wore civilian black.
+
+The colonel had the feelings of a man as well as a father. He went back
+to his letter with a softened look in his face. He had said too much; he
+always did--to Annie; and now he must hedge a little or she would think
+there was trouble brewing, and that he was going to be nasty about
+Moya's choice.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+THE INITIAL LOVE
+
+“Let us be simple! Not every one can be, but we can. We can afford to
+be, and we know how!”
+
+Moya was speaking rapidly, in her singularly articulate tones. A reader
+of voices would have pronounced hers the physical record of unbroken
+health and constant, joyous poise.
+
+“Hear the word of your prophet Emerson!” she brought a little fist down
+upon her knee for emphasis, a hand several sizes larger closed upon it
+and held it fast. “Hear the word--are you listening? 'Only _two_ in the
+Garden walked and with Snake and Seraph talked.'”
+
+The young man's answer was an instant's impassioned silence. Too close
+it touched him, that vital image of the Garden. Then, with an effect of
+sternness, he said,--
+
+“Have we the right to do as we please? Have we the courage that comes of
+right to cut ourselves off from all those calls and cries for help?”
+
+“_I_ have,” said the girl; “I have just that right--of one who knows
+exactly what she wants, and is going to get it if she can!”
+
+He laughed at her happy insolence, with which all the youth and nature
+in him made common cause.
+
+“I shouldn't mind thinking about your Poor Man,” she tripped along, “if
+he liked being poor, or if it seemed to improve him any; or if it were
+only now and then. But there is so dreadfully much of him! Once we
+begin, how should we ever think about anything else? He'd rise up and
+sit down with us, and eat and drink with us, and tell us what to wear.
+Every pleasure of our lives would be spoiled with his eternal 'Where do
+_I_ come in?' It was simple enough in _that_ garden, with only those
+two and nobody outside to feel injured. But we are those two, aren't
+we? Isn't everybody--once in a life, and once only?” She turned her face
+aside, slighting by her manner the excessive meaning of her words. “I
+ask for myself only what I think I have a right to give you--my absolute
+undivided attention for those first few years. They say it never lasts!”
+ she hastened to add with playful cynicism.
+
+Young Bogardus seemed incapable under the circumstances of any adequate
+reply. Free as they were in words, there was an extreme personal shyness
+between these proud young persons, undeveloped on the side of passion
+and better versed in theories of life than in life itself. They had
+separated the day after their sudden engagement, and their nearest
+approaches to intimacy had been through letters. Naturally the girl was
+the bolder, having less in herself to fear.
+
+“That is what _I_ call being simple,” she went on briskly. “If you
+think we can be that in New York, let us live there. _I_ could be simple
+there, but not with you, sir! That terrible East Side would be shaking
+its gory locks at us. We should feel that we did it--or you would! Then
+good-by to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!”
+
+“You are my life, liberty, and happiness, and I will be your almoner,”
+ said Paul, “and dispense you”--
+
+“Dispense _with_ me!” laughed the girl. “And what shall I be doing while
+you are dispensing me on the East Side? New York has other sides. While
+you go slumming with the Seraph, I shall be talking to the Snake! Now,
+_do_ laugh!” she entreated childishly, turning her sparkling face to
+his.
+
+“Am I expected to laugh at that?”
+
+“Well, what shall we do? Don't make me harden my heart before it has had
+time to soften naturally. Give my poor pagan sympathies a little time to
+ripen.”
+
+“But you have lived in New York. Did you find it such a strain on your
+sympathies?”
+
+“I was a visitor; and a girl is not expected to have sympathies. But to
+begin our home there: we should have to strike a note of some sort.
+How if my note should jar with yours? Paul, dear, it isn't nice to
+have convictions when one is young and going to be married. You know it
+isn't. It's not poetic, and it's not polite, and it's a dreadful bore!”
+
+The altruist and lover winced at this. Allowing for exaggeration, which
+was the life of speech with her, he knew that Moya was giving him a bit
+of her true self, that changeful, changeless self which goes behind all
+law and “follows joy and only joy.” Her voice dropped into its sweetest
+tones of intimacy.
+
+“Why need we live in a crowd? Why must we be pressed upon with all this
+fuss and doing? Doing, doing! We are not ready to do anything yet. Every
+day must have its dawn;--and I don't see my way yet; I'm hardly awake!”
+
+“Darling, hush! You must not say such things to me. For you only to look
+at me like that is the most terrible temptation of my life. You make
+me forget everything a man is bound--that I of all men am bound to
+remember.”
+
+“Then I will keep on looking! Behold, I am Happiness, Selfishness, if
+you like! I have come to stay. No, really, it's not nice of you to act
+as if you were under higher orders. You are under my orders. What right
+have we to choose each other if we are not to be better to each other
+than to any one else?--if our lives belong to any one who needs us, or
+our time and money, more than we need it ourselves? Why did you choose
+me? Why not somebody pathetic--one of your Poor Things; or else save
+yourself whole for all the Poor Things?”
+
+“Now you are 'talking for victory,'” he smiled. “You don't believe we
+must be as consistent as all that. Hearts don't have to be coddled
+like pears picked for market. But I'm not preaching to you. The heavens
+forbid! I'm trying to explain. You don't think this whole thing with me
+is a pose? I know I'm a bore with my convictions; but how do we come by
+such things?”
+
+“Ah! How do I come not to have any, or to want any?” she rejoined.
+
+“Once for all, let me tell you how I came by mine. Then you will know
+just where and how those cries for help take hold on me.”
+
+“I don't wish to know. Preserve me from knowing! Why didn't you choose
+somebody different?”
+
+He looked at her with all his passion in his eyes. “I did not choose.
+Did you?”
+
+“It isn't too late,” she whispered. Her face grew hot in the darkness.
+
+“Yes; it is too late--for anything but the truth. Will you listen,
+sweet? Will you let the nonsense wait?”
+
+“Deeper and deeper! Haven't we reached the bottom yet?”
+
+“Go on! It's the dearest nonsense,” she heard him say; but she detected
+pain in his voice and a new constraint.
+
+“What is it? What is the 'truth'?”
+
+“Oh, it's not so dreadful. Only, you always put me in quite a different
+class from where I belong, and I haven't had the courage to set you
+right.”
+
+“Children, children!” a young voice called, from the lighted walk above.
+Two figures were going down the line, one in uniform keeping step beside
+a girl in white who reefed back her skirts with one hand, the other was
+raised to her hair which was blowing across her forehead in bewitching
+disorder. Every gesture and turn of her shape announced that she was
+pretty and gay in the knowledge of her power. It was Chrissy, walking
+with Lieutenant Lane.
+
+“Where are you--ridiculous ones? Don't you want to come with us?”
+
+“'Now who were they?'” Paul quoted derisively out of the dark.
+
+“We are going to Captain Dawson's to play Hearts. Come! Don't be
+stupid!”
+
+“We are not stupid, we are busy!” Moya called back.
+
+“Busy! Doing what?”
+
+“Oh, deciding things. We are talking about the Poor Man.”
+
+“The poor men, she means.” Christine's high laugh followed the
+lieutenant's speech, as the pair went on.
+
+“He _is_ a bore!” Moya declared. “We can't even use him for a joke.”
+
+“Speaking of Lane, dear?”
+
+“The Poor Man. Are you sure that you've got a sense of humor, Paul?
+Can't we have charity for jokes among the other poor things?”
+
+Paul had raised himself to the step beside her. “You are shivering,” he
+said, “I must let you go in.”
+
+“I'm not shivering--I'm chattering,” she mocked. “Why should I go in
+when we are going to be really serious?”
+
+Paul waited a moment; his breath came short, as if he were facing a
+postponed dread. “Moya, dear,” he began in a forced tone, “I can't help
+my constraints and convictions that bore you so, any more than you can
+help your light heart--God bless it--and your theory of class which to
+me seems mediaeval. I have cringed to it, like the coward a man is when
+he is in love. But now I want you to know me.”
+
+He took her hand and kissed it repeatedly, as if impressing upon her
+the one important fact back of all hypothesis and perilous efforts at
+statement.
+
+“Well, are you bidding me good-by?”
+
+“You must give me time,” he said. “It takes courage in these days for
+a good American to tell the girl he loves that his father was a hired
+man.”
+
+He smiled, but there was little mirth and less color in his face.
+
+“What absurdity!” cried Moya. Then glancing at him she added quickly,
+“_My_ father is a hired man. Most fathers who are worth anything are!”
+
+“My father was because he came of that class. His father was one before
+him. His mother took in tailoring in the village where he was born. He
+had only the commonest common-school education and not much of that.
+At eleven he worked for his board and clothes at my Grandfather Van
+Elten's, and from that time he earned his bread with his hands. Don't
+imagine that I'm apologizing,” Paul went on rapidly. “The apology
+belongs on the other side. In New York, for instance, the Bogardus blood
+is quite as good as the Bevier or the Broderick or the Van Elten; but
+up the Hudson, owing to those chances or mischances that selected our
+farming aristocracy for us, my father's people had slipped out of
+their holdings and sunk to the poor artisan class which the old Dutch
+landowners held in contempt.”
+
+“We are not landowners,” said Moya. “What does it matter? What does any
+of it matter?”
+
+“It matters to be honest and not sail under false colors. I thought
+you would not speak of the Poor Man as you do if you knew that I am his
+son.”
+
+“Money has nothing to do with position in the army. I am a poor man's
+daughter.”
+
+“Ah, child! Your father gives orders--mine took them, all his life.”
+
+“My father has to take what he gives. There is no escaping 'orders.'
+Even I know that!” said Moya. A slight shiver passed over her as she
+spoke, laughing off as usual the touch of seriousness in her words.
+
+“Why did you do that?” Paul touched her shoulder. “Is it the wind? There
+is a wind creeping down these steps.” He improved the formation slightly
+in respect to the wind.
+
+“Listen!” said Moya. “Isn't that your mother walking on the porch?
+Father, I know, is writing. She will be lonely.”
+
+“She is never lonely, more or less. It is always the same loneliness--of
+a woman widowed for years.”
+
+“How very much she must have cared for him!” Moya sighed incredulously.
+What a pity, she thought, that among the humbler vocations Paul's father
+should have been just a plain “hired man.” Cowboy, miner, man-o'-war's
+man, even enlisted man, though that were bad enough--any of these he
+might have been in an accidental way, that at least would have been
+picturesque; but it is only the possession of land, by whatsoever means
+or title, that can dignify an habitual personal contact with it in the
+form of soil. That is one of the accepted prejudices which one does not
+meddle with at nineteen. “Youth is conservative because it is afraid.”
+ Moya, for all her fighting blood, was traditionally and in social ways
+much more in bonds than Paul, who had inherited his father's dreamy
+speculative habit of thought, with something of the farm-hand's distrust
+of society and its forms and shibboleth.
+
+Paul's voice took a narrative tone, and Moya gave herself up to
+listening--to him rather more, perhaps, than to his story.
+
+Few young men of twenty-four can go very deeply into questions of
+heredity. Of what follows here much was not known to Paul. Much that he
+did know he would have interpreted differently. The old well at Stone
+Ridge, for instance, had no place in his recital; and yet out of it
+sprang the history of his shorn generation. Had Paul's mother grown up
+in a houseful of brothers and sisters, governed by her mother instead
+of an old ignorant servant, in all likelihood she would have married
+differently--more wisely but not perhaps so well, her son would loyally
+have maintained. The sons of the rich farmers who would have been her
+suitors were men inferior to their fathers. They inherited the vigor and
+coarseness of constitution, the unabashed materialism of that earlier
+generation that spent its energies coping with Nature on its stony
+farms, but the sons were spared the need of that hard labor which their
+blood required. They supplied an element of force, but one of great
+corruption later, in the state politics of their time.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT
+
+In the kitchen court called the “Airy” at Abraham Van Elten's, there
+was one of those old family wells which our ancestors used to locate so
+artlessly. And when it tapped the kitchen drain, and typhoid took the
+elder children, and the mother followed the children, it was called the
+will of God. A gloomy distinction rested on the house. Abraham felt the
+importance attaching to any supreme experience in a community where life
+runs on in the middle key.
+
+A young doctor who had been called in at the close of the last case
+went prying about the premises, asking foolish questions that angered
+Abraham. It is easier for some natures to suffer than to change. If the
+farmer had ever drunk water himself, except as tea or coffee, or mixed
+with something stronger, he must have been an early victim, to his own
+crass ignorance. He was a vigorous, heavy-set man, a grand field for
+typhoid. But he prospered, and the young doctor was turned down with
+the full weight and breadth of the Van Elten thumb, or the Broderick;
+Abraham's build was that of his maternal grandmother, Hillotje
+Broderick.
+
+On the Ridge, which later developed into a valuable slate quarry,
+there was a spring of water, cold and perpetual, flowing out of the
+trap-formation. Abraham had piped this water down to his barns and
+cattle-sheds; it furnished power for the farm-work. But to bring it to
+the house, in obedience to the doctor's meddlesome advice, would be an
+acknowledgment of fatal mistakes in the past; would raise talk and blame
+among the neighbors, and do away with the honor of a special visitation;
+would cost no trifle of money; would justify the doctor's interference,
+and insult the old well of his father and his father's father, the
+fountain of generations. To seal its mouth and bid its usefulness cease
+in the house where it had ministered for upwards of a hundred years was
+an act of desecration impossible to the man who in his stolid way loved
+the very stones that lined its slimy sides. The few sentiments that had
+taken hold on Abraham's arid nature went as deep as his obstinacy and
+clung as fast as his distrust of new opinions and new men. The question
+of water supply was closed in his house; but the well remained open and
+kept up its illicit connection with the drain.
+
+Old Becky, keeper of the widower's keys, had followed closely the
+history of those unhappy “cases;” she had listened to discussions,
+violent or suppressed, she had heard much talk that went on behind her
+master's back.
+
+Employers of that day and generation were masters; and masters are meant
+to be outwitted. Emily, the youngest and last of the flock, was now a
+child of four, dark like her mother, sturdy and strong like her father.
+On an August day soon after the mother's funeral, Becky took her little
+charge to the well and showed her a tumbler filled, with water not
+freshly drawn.
+
+“See them little specks and squirmy things?” Emmy saw them. She followed
+their wavering motion in the glass as the stern forefinger pointed.
+“Those are little baby snakes,” said Becky mysteriously. “The well is
+full of 'em. Sometimes you can see 'em, sometimes you can't, but they're
+always there. They never grow big down the well; it's too dark 'n' cold.
+But you drink that water and the snakes will grow and wriggle and
+work all through ye, and eat your insides out, and you'll die. Your
+mother”--in a whisper--“she drunk that water, and she died. Your sister
+Ruth, and Dirck, and Jimmy, they drunk it, and they died. Now if Emmy
+wants to die”--Large eyes of horror fastened on the speaker's face.
+“No--o, she don't want to die, the Loveums! She don't want Becky to have
+no little girl left at all! No; we mustn't ever drink any of that bad
+water--all full of snakes, ugh! But if Emmy's thirsty, see here! Here's
+good nice water. It's going to be always here in this pail--same water
+the little lambs drink up in the fields. Becky 'll take Emmy up on the
+hill sometime and show where the little lambs drink.”
+
+Grief had not clouded the farmer's oversight in petty things. He noticed
+the innocent pail on the area bench, never empty, always specklessly
+clean.
+
+“What is this water?” he asked.
+
+Becky was surly. “Drinking water. Want some?”
+
+“What's it doing here all the time?”
+
+“I set it there for Emmy. She can't reach up to the bucket.”
+
+Abraham tasted the water suspiciously. The well-water was hard, with
+a tang of iron. The spring soft, and less cold for its journey to the
+barn.
+
+“Where did you get this water?”
+
+“Help yourself. There's plenty more.”
+
+“Becky, where did this water come from? Out o' the well?”
+
+Becky gave a snort of exasperation. “Sam Lewis brought it from the barn!
+I'm too lame to be histin' buckets. I've got the rheumatiz' awful in my
+back and shoulders, if ye want to know!”
+
+“Becky, you're lying to me. You've been listening to what don't concern
+you. Now, see here. You are not going to ask the men to carry water for
+you. They've got something else to do. _There's_ your water, as handy as
+ever a woman had it; use that or go without.”
+
+Abraham caught up the pail and flung its contents out upon the grass,
+scattering the hens that came sidling back with squawks of inquiring
+temerity.
+
+When next Emmy came for water, the old woman took her by the hand in
+silence and led her into the dim meat-cellar, a half-basement with one
+low window level with the grass. There was the pail, safe hidden behind
+the soft-soap barrel.
+
+“I had to hide it from your pa,” Becky whispered. “Don't you never let
+him know you're afraid o' the well-water. He drunk it when he was a
+little boy. He don't believe in the snakes. But _there wa'n't none
+then_. It's when water gets old and rotten. You can believe what Becky
+says. _She_ knows! But you mustn't ever tell. Your father 'd be as mad
+as fire if he knowed I said anything about snakes. He'd send me right
+away, and some strange woman would come, and maybe she'd whip Emmy.
+Emmy want Becky to go?” Sobs, and little arms clinging wildly to Becky's
+aproned skirts. “No, no! Well, she ain't goin'. But Emmy mustn't tell
+tales or she might have to. Tattlers are wicked anyway. 'Telltale tit!
+Your tongue shall be slit, and all the little dogs'--There! run now!
+There's your poppy. Don't you never,--never!”
+
+Emmy let her eyes be wiped, and with one long, solemn, secret look of
+awed intelligence she ran out to meet her father. She did not love him,
+and the smile with which she met him was no new lesson in diplomacy. But
+her first secret from him lay deep in the beautiful eyes, her mother's
+eyes, as she raised them to his.
+
+“Ain't that wonderful!” said Becky, with a satisfied sigh, watching her.
+“Safe as a jug! An' she not five years old!” For vital reasons she had
+taught the child an ugly lesson. Such lessons were common enough in her
+experience of family discipline. She never thought of it again.
+
+That year which took Emmy's mother from her brought to the child her
+first young companion and friend. Adam Bogardus came as chore-boy to
+the farm,--an only child himself, and sensitive through the clashing
+of gentle instincts with rough and inferior surroundings; brought up
+in that depressed God-fearing attitude in which a widow not strong,
+and earning her bread, would do her duty by an only son. Not a natural
+fighter, she took what little combativeness he had out of him, and made
+his school-days miserable--a record of humiliations that sunk deep and
+drove him from his kind. He was a big, clumsy, sagacious boy, grave
+as an old man, always snubbed and condescended to, yet always trusted.
+Little Emmy made him her bondslave at sight. His whole soul blossomed in
+adoration of the beautiful, masterful child who ordered him about as her
+vassal, while slipping a soft little trustful hand in his. She trotted
+at his heels like one of the lambs or chickens that he fed. She brought
+him into perpetual disgrace with Becky, for wasting his time through her
+imperious demands. She was the burden, the delight, the handicap, the
+incentive, and the reward of his humble apprenticeship. And when he was
+promoted to be one of the regular hands she followed him still, and got
+her pleasure out of his day's work. No one had such patience to tell
+her things, to wait for her and help her over places where her tagging
+powers fell short. But though she bullied him, she looked up to him
+as well. His occupations commanded her respect. He was the god of the
+orchards and of the cider-making; he presided at all the functions of
+the farm year. He was a perfect calendar besides of country sports in
+their season. He swept the ice pools in the meadow for winter sliding,
+after his day's work was done. He saved up paper and string for
+kite-making in March. He knew when willow bark would slip for April's
+whistles. In the first heats of June he climbed the tall locust-trees
+to put up a swing in which she could dream away the perfumed hours.
+At harvest she waited in the meadow for him to toss her up on the
+hay-loads, and his great arms received her when she slid off in the
+barn. She knelt at his feet on the bumping boards of the farm-wagon
+while he braced himself like a charioteer, holding the reins above
+her head. He threshed the nut-trees and routed marauding boys from her
+preserves, and carved pumpkin lanterns to light her to her attic chamber
+on cold November nights, where she would lie awake watching strange
+shadows on the sloping roof, half worshiping, half afraid of her idol's
+ugliness in the dark.
+
+These were some of Paul's illustrations of that pastoral beginning, and
+no doubt they were sympathetically close to the truth. He lingered
+over them, dressing up his mother's choice instinctively to the little
+aristocrat beside him.
+
+When Emmy grew big enough to go to the Academy, three miles from the
+farm, it was all in the day's work that Adam should take her and fetch
+her home. He combined her with the mail, the blacksmith, and other
+village errands. Whoever met her father's team on those long stony hills
+of Saugerties would see his little daughter seated beside his hired man,
+her face turned up to his in endless confiding talk. It was a face, as
+we say, to dream of. But there were few dreamers in that little world.
+The farmers would nod gravely to Adam. “Abraham's girl takes after her
+mother; heartier lookin', though. Guess he'll need a set o' new tires
+before spring.” The comments went no deeper.
+
+Abraham was now well on in years; he made no visits, and he never drove
+his own team at night. When his daughter began to let down her frocks
+and be asked to evening parties, it was still Adam who escorted her.
+He sat in the kitchen while she was amusing herself in the parlor. She
+discussed her young acquaintances with him on their way home. The
+time for distinctions had come, but she was too innocent to feel
+them herself, and too proud to accept the standards of others. He was
+absolutely honest and unworldly. He thought it no treachery to love her
+for herself, and he believed, as most of us do, that his family was as
+good as hers or any other.
+
+It would be hard to explain the old man's obliviousness. Perhaps he had
+forgotten his own youth; or class prejudice had gone so deep with him as
+to preclude the bare thought of a child of his falling in love with one
+of his “men.” His imagination could not so insult his own blood. But
+when the awakening came, his passion of anger and resentment knew no
+bounds. To discharge his faithless employee out of hand would be the
+cripple throwing away his crutch. Though he called Adam _one_ of his
+men, and though his pay was that of a common laborer, his duties had
+long been of a much higher order. Abraham had made a very good bargain
+out of the widow's son. Adam knew well that he could not be spared, and
+pitied the old man's helpless rage. He took his frantic insults as part
+of his senility, and felt it no unmanliness to appease it by giving his
+promise that he would speak no more of love to Emmy while he was taking
+her father's wages. But Emmy did not indorse this promise fully. To her
+it looked like weakness, and implied a sort of patience which did
+not become a lover such as she wished hers to be. The winter wore on
+uncomfortably for all. Towards spring, Becky's last illness and passing
+away brought the younger ones together again, and closer than before.
+Adam kept his promise through days and nights of sickroom intimacy; but
+though no word of love was spoken, each bore silent witness to what was
+loveliest in the other, and the bond between them deepened.
+
+Then spring came, and its restlessness was strong upon them both. But it
+was Emmy to whom it meant action and rebellion.
+
+They stood on the orchard hill one Sunday afternoon at the pause of the
+year. Buds were swelling and the edges of the woods wore a soft blush
+against the vaporous sky. The bare brown slopes were streaked with snow.
+A floe of winter ice, grinding upon itself with the tide, glared yellow
+as an old man's teeth in the setting sun. From across the river came
+the thunder of a train, bound north, two engines dragging forty cars of
+freight piled up by some recent traffic-jam; it plunged into a tunnel,
+and they waited, listening to the monster's smothered roar. Out it
+burst, its breath packed into clouds, the engines whooped, and round
+the curve where a point of cedars cut the sky the huge creature unwound
+itself, the hills echoing to its tread.
+
+Emmy watched it out of sight, and breathed again. “Hundreds, hundreds
+going every day! It seems easy enough for everybody else. Oh, if I were
+a man!”
+
+“What do you want I should do, Emmy?” Adam knew well what man she was
+thinking of.
+
+“_I_ want? Don't you ever want things yourself?”
+
+“When I want a thing bad, I gen'ly think it's worth waiting for.”
+
+“People don't get things by waiting. I don't know how you can stand
+it,--to stay here year after year. And now you've tied yourself up with
+a promise, and you know you cannot keep it!”
+
+“I'm trying to keep it.”
+
+“You couldn't keep it if you cared--really and truly--as some do!” She
+dropped her voice hurriedly. “To live here and eat your meals day after
+day and pass me like a stick or a stone!”
+
+The slow blood burned in Adam's face and hammered in his pulses. His
+blue eyes were bashful through its heat. “I don't feel like a stick nor
+a stone. You know it, Emmy. You want to be careful,” he added gently.
+“Would going away look as if I cared?”
+
+“Why--why don't you ask me to go with you?” The girl tried to meet his
+eyes. She turned off her question with a proud laugh.
+
+“Be--careful, child! You know why I can't take you up on that. Would
+you want we should leave him here alone--without even Becky? You're only
+trying me for fun.”
+
+“No; I am not!” Emmy was pale now. Her breast was rising in strong
+excitement. “If we were gone, he would know then what you are worth to
+him. Now, you're only Adam! He thinks he can put you down like a boy. He
+won't believe I care for you. There's only one way to show him--that
+is, if we do care. In one month he would be sending for us back. Then we
+could come, and you would take your right place here, and be somebody.
+You would not eat in the kitchen, then. Haven't you been like a son to
+him? And why shouldn't he own it?”
+
+“But if he won't? Suppose he don't send for us to come back?”
+
+“Then you could strike out for yourself. What was Tom Madden, before
+he went away to Colorado, or somewhere--where was it? And now everybody
+stops to shake hands with him;--he's as much of a man as anybody. If you
+could make a little money. That's the proof he wants. If you were rich,
+you'd be all right with him. You know that!”
+
+“I'd hate to think it. But I'll never be rich. Put that out of your
+mind, Emmy. It don't run in the blood. I don't come of a money-making
+breed.”
+
+“What a silly thing to say! Of course, if you don't believe you can, you
+can't. Who has made the money here for the last ten years?”
+
+“It was his capital done it. It ain't hard to make money after you've
+scraped the first few thousands together. But it's the first thousand
+that costs.”
+
+“How much have you got ahead?”
+
+Adam answered awkwardly, “Eleven hundred and sixty odd.” He did not like
+to talk of money to the girl who was the prayer, the inspiration, of his
+life. It hurt him to be questioned by her in this sordid way.
+
+“You earned it all, didn't you?”
+
+“I've took no risks. Here was my home. He give me the chance and he
+showed me how. And--he's your father. I don't like to talk about his
+money, nor about my own, to you.”
+
+“Oh, you are good, good! Nobody knows! But it's all wasted if you
+haven't got any push--anything inside of yourself that makes people know
+what you are. I wish I could put into you some of my _fury_ that I
+feel when things get in my way! You have held yourself in too long. You
+can't--_can't_ love a girl, and be so careful--like a mother. Don't you
+understand?”
+
+“Stop right there, Emmy! You needn't push no harder. I can let go
+whenever you say so. But--do _you_ understand, little girl? Man and wife
+it will have to be.”
+
+Emmy did not shrink at the words. Her face grew set, her dark eyes full
+of mystery fixed themselves on the slow-moving ice-floe grinding along
+the shore.
+
+“I know,” she assented slowly.
+
+“I can't give you no farm, nor horses and carriages, nor help in the
+kitchen. It's bucklin' right down with our bare hands--me outside and
+you in? And you only eighteen. See what little hands--If I could do it
+all!”
+
+“Your promise is broken,” she whispered. “I made you break it. You will
+have to tell him now, or--we must go.”
+
+“So be!” said Adam solemnly. “And God do so to me and more also, if I
+have to hurt my little girl,--Emmy--wife!”
+
+He folded her in his great arms clumsily--the man she had said was like
+a mother. He was almost as ignorant as she, and more hopeful than he had
+dared to seem, as to their worldly chances. But the love he had for her
+told him it was not love that made her so bold. The first touch of
+such love as his would have made her fear him as he feared her. And the
+subtle pain of this instinctive knowledge, together with that broken
+promise, shackled the wings of his great joy. It was not as he had hoped
+to win the crown of life.
+
+Paul, it may be supposed, had never liked to think of his mother's
+elopement. It had been the one hard point to get over in his conception
+of his father, but he could never have explained it by such a scene as
+this. It would have hampered him terribly in his tale had he dreamed of
+it. He passed over the unfortunate incident with a romancer's touch, and
+dwelt upon his grandfather's bitter resentment which he resented as
+the son of his mother's choice. The Van Eltens and Brodericks all fared
+hardly at the hands of their legatee.
+
+It was not only in the person of a hireling who had abused his trust
+that Abraham had felt himself outraged. There were old neighborhood
+spites and feuds going back, dividing blood from blood--even brothers of
+the same blood. There was trouble between him and his brother Jacob, of
+New York, dating from the settlement of their father's, Broderick Van
+Elten's, estate; and no one knows what besides that was private and
+personal may have entered into it. It was years since they had met,
+but Jacob kept well abreast of his brother's misfortunes. A bachelor
+himself, with no children to lose or to quarrel with, it was not
+displeasing to him to hear of the breaks in his brother's household.
+
+“What, what, what! The last one left him,--run off with one of his men!
+What a fool the man must be. Can't he look after his women folks better
+than that? Better have lost her with the others. Two boys, and Chrissy,
+and the girl--and now the last girl gone off with his hired man. Poor
+Chrissy! Guess she had about enough of it. Things have come out pretty
+much even, after all! There was more love and lickin's wasted on Abe.
+Father was proudest of him, but he couldn't break him. Hi! but I've
+crawled under the woodshed to hear him yell, and father would tan him
+with a raw-hide, but he couldn't break him; couldn't get a sound out
+of him. Big, and hard, and tough--Chrissy thought she knew a man; she
+thought she took the best one.”
+
+With slow, cold spite Jacob had tracked his brother's path in life
+through its failures. Jacob had no failures, and no life.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+DISINHERITED
+
+Proud little Emmy, heiress no longer, had put her spirit into her
+farm-hand and incited him to the first rebellion of his life. They
+crossed the river at night, poling through floating ice, and climbed
+aboard one of those great through trains whose rushing thunder had made
+the girlish heart so often beat. This was long before the West Shore
+Line was built. Neither of them had ever seen the inside of a Pullman
+sleeper. Emmy could count the purchased meals she had eaten in her life;
+she had never slept in a hotel or hired lodging till after her marriage.
+Hardly any one could be so provincial in these days.
+
+Adam Bogardus was a plodder in the West as he had been in the East. He
+was an honest man, and he was wise enough not to try to be a shrewd one.
+He tried none of the short-cuts to a fortune. Hard work suited him best,
+and no work was too hard for his iron strength and patient resolution.
+But it broke the spirit of a man in him to see his young wife's despair.
+Poverty frightened and quelled her. The deep-rooted security of her old
+home was something she missed every day of her makeshift existence. It
+was degradation to live in “rooms,” or a room; to move for want of means
+to pay the rent. She pined for the good food she had been used to. Her
+health suffered through anxiety and hard work. She was too proud to
+complain, but the sight of her dumb unacceptance of what had come to
+her through him undoubtedly added the last straw to her husband's mental
+strain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“It is hard for me to realize it as I once did,” said Paul, as the story
+paused. “You make tragedy a dream. But there is a deep vein of tragedy
+in our blood. And my theory is that it always crops out in families
+where it's the keynote, as it were.”
+
+“Never mind, you old care-taker! We Middletons carry sail enough to need
+a ton or two of lead in our keel.”
+
+“But, you understand?”--
+
+“I understand the distinction between what I call your good blood, and
+the sort of blood I thought you had. It explains a certain funny way you
+have with arms--weapons. Do you mind?”
+
+“Not at all,” said Paul coldly. “I hate a weapon. I am always ashamed of
+myself when I get one in my hand.”
+
+“You act that way, dear!”
+
+“God made tools and the Devil made weapons.”
+
+“You are civil to my father's profession.”
+
+“Your father is what he is aside from his profession.”
+
+“You are quite mistaken, Paul. My father and his profession are one.
+His sword is a symbol of healing. The army is the great surgeon of the
+nation when the time comes for a capital operation.”
+
+“It grows harder to tell my story,” said Paul gloomily;--“the short and
+simple annals of the poor.”
+
+“Now come! Have I been a snob about my father's profession?”
+
+“No; but you love it, naturally. You have grown up with its pomp and
+circumstance around you. You are the history makers when history is most
+exciting.”
+
+“Go on with your story, you proud little Dutchman! When I despise you
+for your farming relatives, you can taunt me with my history making.”
+
+Paul was about two years old when his parents broke up in the Wood
+River country and came south by wagon on the old stage-road to Felton.
+Whenever he saw a “string-bean freighter's” outfit moving into Bisuka,
+if there was a woman on the driver's seat, he wanted to take off his hat
+to her. For so his mother sat beside his father and held him in her arms
+two hundred miles across the Snake River desert. The stages have been
+laid off since the Oregon Short Line went through, but there were
+stations then all along the road.
+
+One night they made camp at a lonely place between Soul's Rest and
+Mountain Home. Oneman Station it was called; afterwards Deadman Station,
+when the keeper's body was found one morning stiff and cold in his bunk.
+He died in the night alone. Emily Bogardus had cause to hate the man
+when he was living, and his dreary end was long a shuddering remembrance
+to her, like the answer to an unforgiving prayer.
+
+The station was in a hollow with bare hills around, rising to the
+highest point of that rolling plain country. The mountains sink below
+the plain, only their white tops showing. It was October. All the wild
+grass had been eaten close for miles on both sides of the road, but over
+a gap in the Western divide was the Bruneau Valley, where the bell-mare
+of the team had been raised. In the night she broke her hopples and
+struck out across the summit with the four mules at her heels. Towards
+morning a light snow fell and covered their tracks. Adam was compelled
+to hunt his stock on foot; the keeper refusing him a horse, saying he
+had got himself into trouble before through being friendly with the
+company's horses. He started out across the hills, expecting that the
+same night would see him back, and his wife was left in the wagon camp
+alone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“I know this story very well,” said Paul, “and yet I never heard it but
+once, when mother decided I was old enough to know all. But every word
+was bitten into me--especially this ugly part I am coming to. I wish
+it need not be told, yet all the rest depends on it; and that such an
+experience could come to a woman like my mother shows what exposure and
+humiliation lie in the straightest path if there is no money to smooth
+the way. You hear it said that in the West the toughest men will be
+chivalrous to a woman if she is the right sort of a woman. I'm afraid
+that is a romantic theory of the Western man.
+
+“That night, before his team stampeded, as he sat by the keeper's fire,
+father had made up his mind that the less they had to do with that man
+the better. He may have warned mother; and she, left alone with the
+brute, did not know the wisdom of hiding her fear and loathing of him.
+He may have meant no more than a low kind of teasing, but her suffering
+was the same.
+
+“Father did not come. She dared not leave the camp. She knew no place to
+go to, and in his haste, believing he would soon be with her again, he
+had taken all their little stock of funds. But he had left her his gun,
+and with this within reach of her hand in the shelter of the wagon hood,
+without fire and without cooked food, she kept a sleepless watch.
+
+“The stages came and went; help was within sound of her voice, but she
+dared make no sign. The passengers were few at that season, always
+men, on the best of terms with the keeper. He had threatened--well, no
+matter--such a threat as a more sophisticated woman would have smiled
+at. She was simple, but she was not weak. It was a moral battle between
+them. There were hours when she held him by the power of her eye alone;
+she conquered, but it nearly killed her.
+
+“One morning a man jumped down from the stage whose face she knew. He
+had recognized my father's outfit and he came to speak to her, amazed
+to find her in that place alone. There was no need to put her worst fear
+into words; he knew the keeper. He made the best he could of father's
+detention, but he assured her, as she knew too well, that she could not
+wait for him there. He was on his way East, and he took us with him as
+far as Mountain Home. To this day she believes that if Bud Granger had
+led the search, my father would have been found; but he went East to
+sell his cattle, the snows set in, and the search party came straggling
+home. The man, Granger, had left a letter of explanation, inclosing one
+from mother to father, with the keeper. He bribed and frightened him,
+but for years she used to agonize over a fear that father had come back
+and the keeper had withheld the letter and belied her to him with some
+devilish story that maddened him and drove him from her. Such a fancy
+might have come out of her mental state at that time. I believe that
+Granger left the letter simply to satisfy her. He must have believed my
+father was dead. He could not have conceived of a man's being lost in
+that broad country at that season; but my father was a man of hills and
+farms, all small, compact. The plains were another planet to him.
+
+“The letter was found in the keeper's clothing after his death; no
+one ever came to claim it of his successor. Somewhere in this great
+wilderness a tired man found rest. What would we not give if we knew
+where!
+
+“And she worked in a hotel in Mountain Home. Can you imagine it! Then
+Christine was born and the multiplied strain overcame her. Strangers
+took care of her children while she lay between life and death. She had
+been silent about herself and her past, but they found a letter from one
+of her old schoolmates asking about teachers' salaries in the West, and
+they wrote to her begging her to make known my mother's condition to
+her relatives if any were living. At length came a letter from
+grandfather--characteristic to the last. The old home was there, for her
+and for her children, but no home for the traitor, as he called father.
+She must give him up even to his name. No Bogardus could inherit of a
+Van Elten.
+
+“She had not then lost all hope of father's return, and she never
+forgave her father for trying to buy her back for the price of what she
+considered her birthright. She settled down miserably to earn bread for
+her children. Then, when hope and pride were crushed in her, and faith
+had nothing left to cling to, there came a letter from Uncle Jacob, the
+bachelor, who had bided his time. Out of the division in his brother's
+house he proposed to build up his own; just as he would step in and buy
+depreciated bonds to hold them for a rise. He offered her a home and
+maintenance during his lifetime, and his estate for herself and her
+children when he was through. There were no conditions referring to our
+father, but it was understood that she should give up her own. This,
+mainly, to spite his brother, yet under all there was an old man's plea.
+She felt she could make the obligation good, though there might not be
+much love on either side. Perhaps it came later; but I remember enough
+of that time to believe that her children's future was dearly paid for.
+Grandfather died alone, in the old rat-ridden house up the Hudson. He
+left no will, to every one's surprise. It might have been his negative
+way of owning his debt to nature at the last.
+
+“That is how we came to be rich; and no one detects in us now the crime
+of those early struggles. But my father was a hired man; and my mother
+has done every menial thing with those soft hands of hers.” A softer one
+was folded in his own. Its answering clasp was loyal and strong.
+
+“Is _this_ the story you had not the courage to tell me?”
+
+“This is the story I had the courage to tell you--not any too soon,
+perhaps you think?”
+
+“And do you think it needed courage?”
+
+“The question is what you think. What are we to do with Uncle Jacob's
+money? Go off by ourselves and have a good time with it?”
+
+“We will not decide to-night,” said Moya, tenderly subdued. But, though
+the story had interested and touched her, as accounting for her lover's
+saddened, conscience-ridden youth, it was no argument against teaching
+him what youth meant in her philosophy. The differences were explained,
+but not abolished.
+
+“It was spite money, remember, not love money,” he continued, reverting
+to his story. “It purchased my mother's compliance to one who hated her
+father, who forced her to listen, year after year, to bitter, unnatural
+words against him. I am not sure but it kept her from him at the last;
+for if Uncle Jacob had not stepped in and made her his, I can't help
+thinking she would have found somehow a way to the soft place in his
+heart. Something good ought to be done with that money to redeem its
+history.”
+
+“You must not be morbid, Paul.”
+
+“That sounds like mother,” said Paul, smiling. “She is always jealous
+for our happiness; because she lost her own, I think, and paid so
+heavily for ours. She prizes pleasure and success, even worldly success,
+for us.”
+
+“I don't blame her!” cried Moya.
+
+“No; of course not. But you mustn't both be against me, and Chrissy,
+too. She is so, unconsciously; she does not know the pull there is on
+me, through knowing things she doesn't dream of, and that I can never
+forget.”
+
+“No,” said Moya. “I am sure she is perfectly unconscious. We exchanged
+biographies at school, and there was nothing at all like this in hers.
+Why was she never told?”
+
+“She has always been too strained, too excitable. Every least incident
+is an emotion with her. When she laughs, her laugh is like a cry.
+Haven't you noticed that? Startle her, and her eyes are the very eyes of
+fear. Mother was wise, I think, not to pour those old sorrows into her
+little fragile cup.”
+
+“So she emptied them all into yours!”
+
+“That was my right, of the elder and stronger. I wouldn't have missed
+the knowledge of our beginnings for the world. What a prosperous fool
+and ass I might have made of myself!”
+
+“Morbid again,” said Moya. “You belong to your own day and generation.
+You might as well wear country shoes and clothes because your father
+wore them.”
+
+“Still, if we have such a thing in this country as class, then you and I
+do not belong to the same class except by virtue of Uncle Jacob's money.
+Confess you are glad I am a Bevier and a Broderick and a Van Elten, as
+well as a Bogardus.”
+
+“I shall confess nothing of the kind. Now you do talk like a _nouveau_
+Paul, dear,” said Moya, with her caressing eyes on his--they had paused
+under the lamp at the top of the steps--“I think your father must have
+been a very good man.”
+
+“All our fathers were,” Paul averred, smiling at her earnestness.
+
+“Yes, but yours in particular; because _you_ are an angel; and your
+mother is quite human, is she not?--almost as human as I am? That
+carriage of the head,--if that does not mean the world!”--
+
+“She has needed all her pride.”
+
+“I don't object to pride, myself,” said the girl, “but you dwell so upon
+her humiliations. I see no such record in her face.”
+
+“She has had much to hide, you must remember.”
+
+“Well, she can hide things; but one's self must escape sometimes. What
+has become of little Emily Van Elten who ran away with her father's
+hired man? What has become of the freighter's wife?”
+
+“She is all mother now. She brought us back to the world, and for our
+sakes she has learned to take her place in it. Herself she has buried.”
+
+“Yes; but which is--was herself?”
+
+“And you cannot see her story in her face?”
+
+“Not that story.”
+
+“Not the crushing reserve, the long suspense, the silence of a sorrow
+that even her children could not share?”
+
+“I know her silence. Your mother is a most reticent woman. But is she
+now the woman of that story?”
+
+“I don't understand you quite,” said Paul. “How much are we ourselves
+after we have passed through fires of grief, and been recast under the
+pressure of circumstances! She was that woman once.”
+
+“The saddest part of the story to me is, that your father, who loved her
+so, and worked so hard for his family, should have served you all the
+better by his death.”
+
+“Oh, don't say that, dear! Who knows what is best? But one thing we do
+know. The sorrow that cut my mother's life in two brought you and me
+together. It rent the stratum on which I was born and raised it to the
+level of yours, my lady!”
+
+“I shall not forget,” whispered Moya with blissful irony, “that you are
+the Poor Man's son!”
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+
+The autumn days were shortening imperceptibly and the sunsets had
+gained an almost articulate splendor: cloud calling unto cloud, the west
+horizon signaling to the east, and answering again, while the mute dark
+circle of hills sat like a council of chiefs with their blankets drawn
+over their heads. Soon those blankets would be white with snow.
+
+Behind the Post where the hills climb toward the Cottonwood Creek
+divide, there is a little canon which at sunset is especially inviting.
+It hastens twilight by at least an hour during midsummer, and in autumn
+it leads up a stairway of shadow to the great spectacle of the day--the
+day's departure from the hills.
+
+The canon has its companion rivulet always coming down to meet the
+stage-road going up. As this road is the only outlet hillward for all
+the life of the plain, and as the tendency of every valley population is
+to climb, one thinks of it as a way out rather than a way in. Higher up,
+the stage-road becomes a pass cut through a wall of splintered cliffs;
+and here it leads its companion, the brook, a wild dance over boulders,
+and under culverts of fallen rock. At last it emerges on what is
+called The Summit; and between are green, deep valleys where the little
+ranches, fields and fences and houses, seem to have slid down to the
+bottom and lie there at rest.
+
+A party of young riders from the post had gone up this road one evening,
+and two had come down, laughing and talking; but the other two remained
+in the circle of light that rested on the summit. Prom where they sat
+in the dry grass they could hear a hollow sound of moving feet as the
+cattle wandered down through folds of the hills, seeking the willow
+copses by the water. On the breast of her habit Moya wore the blossoms
+of the wild evening primrose, which in this region flowers till the
+coming of frost. They had been gathered for her on the way up, and as
+she had waited for them, sitting her horse in silence, the brown owls
+gurgled and hooted overhead from nest to nest in the crannies of the
+rocks.
+
+“You need not hold the horses,” she commanded, in her fresh voice.
+“Throw my bridle over your saddle pommel and yours over mine.--There!”
+ she said, watching the horses as they shuffled about interlinked. “That
+is like half the marriages in this world. They don't separate and they
+don't go astray, but they don't _get_ anywhere!”
+
+“I have been thinking of those 'two in the Garden,'” mused Paul, resting
+his dark, abstracted eyes on her. “Whether or no your humble servant has
+a claim to unchallenged bliss in this world, there's no doubt about your
+claim. If my plans interfere, I must take myself out of the way.”
+
+“Oh, you funny old croaker!” laughed the girl. “Take yourself out of the
+way, indeed! Haven't you chosen me to show you the way?”
+
+“Moya, Moya!” said Paul in a smothered voice.
+
+“I know what you are thinking. But stop it!” she held one of her crushed
+blossoms to his lips. “What was this made for? Why hasn't it some work
+to do? Isn't it a skulker--blooming here for only a night?”
+
+“'Ripen, fall, and cease!'” Paul murmured.
+
+“How much more am I--are you, then? The sum of us may amount to
+something, if we mind our own business and keep step with each other,
+and finish one thing before we begin the next. I will not be in a hurry
+about being good. Goodness can take care of itself. What you need is to
+be happy! And it's my first duty to make you so.”
+
+“God knows what bliss it would be.”
+
+“Don't say 'would be.'”
+
+“God knows it is!”
+
+“Then hush and be thankful!” There was a long hush. They heard the far,
+faint notes of a bugle sounding from the Post.
+
+“Lights out,” said Moya. “We must go.”
+
+“You haven't told me yet where our Garden is to be,” he said.
+
+“I will tell you on the way home.”
+
+When they had come down into the neighborhood of ranches, and Bisuka's
+lights were twinkling below them, she asked: “Who lives now in the
+grandfather's house on the Hudson?”
+
+“The farmer, Chauncey Dunlop.”
+
+“Is there any other house on the place?”
+
+“Yes. Mother built a new one on the Ridge some years ago.”
+
+“What sort of a house is it?”
+
+“It was called a good house once; but now it's rather everything it
+shouldn't be. It was one of the few rash things mother ever did; build a
+house for her children while they were children. Now she will not change
+it. She says we shall build for ourselves, how and where we please.
+Stone Ridge is her shop. Of course, if Chrissy liked it--But Chrissy
+considers it a 'hole.' Mother goes up there and indulges in secret
+orgies of economy; one man in the stable, one in the garden--'Economy
+has its pleasures for all healthy minds.'”
+
+“Economy is as delicious as bread and butter after too much candy. I
+should love to go up to Stone Ridge and wear out my old clothes. Did any
+one tell me that place would some day be yours?”
+
+“It will be my wife's on the day we are married.”
+
+“That is where your wife, sir, would like to live.”
+
+“It is a stony Garden, dear! The summer people have their places nearer
+the river. Our land lies back, with no view but hills. For one who has
+the world before her where to choose, it strikes me she has picked out a
+very humble Paradise.”
+
+“Did you think my idea was to travel--a poor army girl who spends
+her life in trunks? Do we ever buy a book or frame a picture without
+thinking of our next move? As for houses, who am I that I should be
+particular? In the Army's House are many mansions, but none that we
+can call our own. Oh, I'm very primitive; I have the savage instinct to
+gather sticks and stones, and get a roof over my head before winter sets
+in.”
+
+To such a speech as this there was but one obvious answer, as she rode
+at his side, her appealing slenderness within reach of his arm. It did
+not matter what thousands he proposed to spend upon the roof that should
+cover her; it was the same as if they were planning a hut of tules or a
+burrow in the snow.
+
+“It is a poor man's country,” he said; “stony hillsides, stony roads
+lined with stone fences. The chief crop of the country is ice and stone.
+In one of my grandfather's fields there is a great cairn which Adam
+Bogardus, they say, picked up, stone by stone, with his bare hands, and
+carted there when he was fourteen years old. We will build them into the
+walls of our new house for a blessing.”
+
+“No,” said Moya. “We will let sleeping stones lie!”
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+MARKING TIME
+
+There was impatience at the garrison for news that the hunters had
+started. Every day's delay at Challis meant an abridgment of the
+bridegroom's leave, and the wedding was now but a fortnight away. It
+began to seem preposterous that he should go at all, and the colonel
+was annoyed with himself for his enthusiasm over the plan in the first
+place. Mrs. Bogardus's watchfulness of dates told the story of her
+thoughts, but she said nothing.
+
+“Mamsie is restless,” said Christine, putting an arm around her mother's
+solid waist and giving her a tight little hug apropos of nothing. “I
+believe it's another case of 'mail-time fever.' The colonel says it
+comes on with Moya every afternoon about First Sergeant's call. But
+Moya is cunning. She goes off and pretends she isn't listening for the
+bugle.”
+
+“'First Sergeant or Second,' it's all one to me,” said Mrs. Bogardus. “I
+never know one call from another, except when the gun goes off.”
+
+“Mamsie! 'When the gun goes off!' What a civilian way of talking. You
+are not getting on at all with your military training. Now let me give
+you some useful information. In two seconds the bugle will call the
+first sergeant--of each company--to the adjutant's office, and there
+he'll get the mail for his men. The orderly trumpeter will bring it to
+the houses on the line, and the colonel's orderly--beautiful creature!
+There he goes! How I wish we could take him home with us and have him
+in our front hall. Fancy the feelings of the maids! And the rage on the
+noble brow of Parkins--awful Parkins. I should like to give his pride a
+bump.”
+
+Mother and daughter were pacing the colonel's veranda, behind a partial
+screen of rose vines--October vines fast shedding their leaves. Every
+breeze shook a handful down, which the women's skirts swept with them as
+they walked. Mrs. Bogardus turned and clasped Christine's arm above the
+elbow; through the thin sleeve she could feel its cool roundness. It was
+a soft, small, unmuscular arm, that had never borne its own burdens, to
+say nothing of a share in the burdens of others.
+
+“Get your jacket,” said the mother. “There is a chill in the air.”
+
+“There is no chill in me,” laughed Christine. “You know, mamsie, you
+aren't a girl. I should simply die in those awful things that you wear.
+Did you ever know such a hot house as the colonel keeps!”
+
+“The rooms are small, and the colonel is--impulsive,” Mrs. Bogardus
+added with a smile.
+
+“There is something very like him about his fire-making. I should know
+by the way he puts on wood that he never would have “--Mrs. Bogardus
+checked herself.
+
+“A large bank account?” Christine supplied, with her quick wit, which
+was not of a highly sensitive order.
+
+“He has a large heart,” said her mother.
+
+“And plenty of room for it, bless him! The slope of his chest is like
+the roof of a house. The only time I envy Moya is when she lays her head
+down on it and tries to meet her arms around him as if he were a tree,
+and he strokes her hair as if his hand was a bough! If ever I marry a
+soldier he shall be a colonel with a white mustache and a burnt-sienna
+complexion, and a sword-belt that measures--what is the colonel's
+waist-measure, do you suppose?”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus listened to this nonsense with the smile of a silent
+woman who has borne a child that can talk. Moya had often noticed how
+uncritical she was of Christine's “unruly member.”
+
+“It isn't polite to speak of waist-measures to middle-aged persons like
+your mother and the colonel,” she said placidly. “You like it very much
+out here?”
+
+“Fascinating! Never had such a good time in my whole life.”
+
+“And you like the West altogether? Would you like to live here?”
+
+“Oh, if it came to living, I should want to be sure there was a way
+out.”
+
+“There generally is a way out of most things. But it costs something.”
+ Mrs. Bogardus was so concise in her speech as at times to be almost
+oracular.
+
+“Army people are sure of their way out,” said Christine, “and I guess
+they find it costs something.”
+
+“Why do they buy so many books, I wonder? If I moved as often as they
+do, I'd have only paper covers and leave them behind.”
+
+“You are not a reader, mummy. You're a business woman. You look at
+everything from the practical side.”
+
+“And if I didn't, who would?” Mrs. Bogardus spoke with earnestness. “We
+can't all be dreamers like Paul or privileged persons like you. There
+has to be one in every family to say the things no one likes to hear and
+do the things nobody likes to do.”
+
+“We are the rich repiners and you are the household drudge!” Christine
+shouted, laughing at her own wit.
+
+“Hush, hush!” her mother smiled. “Don't make so much noise.”
+
+“I should like to know who's to be the drudge in Paul's privileged
+family. It doesn't strike me it's going to be Moya. And Paul only
+drudges for people he doesn't know.”
+
+“Moya is a girl you can expect anything of. She is a wonderful mixture
+of opposites. She has the Irish quickness, and yet she has learned to
+obey. She has had the freedom and the discipline of these little lordly
+army posts. She is one of the few girls of her age who does not measure
+everything from her own point of view.”
+
+“Is that a dig at me, ma'am?”
+
+At that moment Moya came out upon the porch.
+
+She was very striking with the high color and brilliant eyes that
+mail-time fever breeds. Christine looked at her with freshly aroused
+curiosity, moved by her mother's unwonted burst of praise. The faintest
+tinge of jealousy made her feel naughty. As Moya went down the board
+walk, the colonel's orderly came springing up the steps to meet her with
+the mail-bag. He saluted and turned off at an angle down the embankment
+not to present his back to the ladies.
+
+“Did you see that! He never raised his eyes. They are like priests. You
+can't make them look at you.” Moya looked at Christine in amazement.
+The man himself might have heard her. It was not the first time
+this privileged guest had rubbed against garrison customs in certain
+directions hardly worth mentioning. Moya hesitated. Then she laughed
+a little, and said: “Only a raw recruity would look at an officer's
+daughter, or any lady of the line.”
+
+“Oh, you horrid little aristocrat! Well, I look at them, when they are
+as pretty as that one, and I forgive them if they look at me.”
+
+Moya turned and hovered over the contents of the mail-bag. In the
+exercise of one of her prerogatives, it was her habit to sort its
+contents before delivering it at the official door.
+
+“All, all for you!” she offered a huge packet of letters, smiling, to
+Mrs. Bogardus. It was faced with one on top in Paul's handwriting. “All
+but one,” she added, and proceeded to open her own much fatter one in
+the same hand. She stood reading it in the hall.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus presently followed and remained beside her. “Could I speak
+to your father a moment?” she asked.
+
+“Certainly, I will call him,” said Moya.
+
+“Wait: I hear him now.” The study door opened and Colonel Middleton
+joined them. Mrs. Bogardus leading the way into the sitting-room, the
+colonel followed her, and Moya, not having been invited, lingered in the
+hall.
+
+“Well, have the hunters started yet?” the colonel inquired in his breezy
+voice, which made you want to open the doors and windows to give it
+room. “Be seated! Be seated! I hope you have got a long letter to read
+me.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stood reflecting. “The day this letter was mailed they got
+off--only two days ago,” she said. “Could I reach them, Colonel, with a
+telegram?”
+
+“Two days ago,” the colonel considered. “They must have made Yankee Fork
+by yesterday. Today they are deep in the woods. No; I should say a man
+on horseback would be your surest telegram. Is it anything important?”
+
+“Colonel, I wish we could call them back! They have gone off, it seems
+to me, in a most crazy way--against the judgment of every one who knows.
+The guide, this man whom they waited for, refused, it appears, to go
+out again with another party so late in the fall. But the Bowens were
+determined. They insisted on making arrangements with another man. Then,
+when 'Packer John,' they call him, heard of this, he went to Paul and
+urged him, if he could not prevent the others from going, to give up the
+trip himself. The Bowens were very much annoyed at his interference,
+and with Paul for listening to him. And Paul, rather than make things
+unpleasant, gave in. You know how young men are! What silly grounds are
+enough for the most serious decisions when it is a question of pride or
+good faith. The Bowens had bought their outfit on Paul's assurance that
+he would go. He felt he could not leave them in the lurch. On that, the
+guide suddenly changed his mind and said he would go with them sooner
+than see them fall into worse hands. They were, in a way, committed to
+the other man, so they took _him_ along as cook--the whole thing done in
+haste, you see, and unpleasant feelings all around. Do you call that a
+good start for a pleasure trip?”
+
+“It's very much the way with young troops when they start
+out--everything wrong end foremost, everybody mad with everybody else. A
+day in the saddle will set their little tempers all right.”
+
+“That isn't the point,” Mrs. Bogardus persisted gloomily. As she spoke,
+the two girls came into the room and stood listening.
+
+“What is the point, then?” Christine demanded. “Moya has no news; all
+those pages and pages, and nothing for anybody or about anybody!”
+
+“'Such an intolerable deal of sack to such a poor pennyworth of bread,'”
+ the colonel quoted, smiling at Moya's bloated envelope.
+
+“But what do you think?” Mrs. Bogardus recalled him. “Don't you think
+it's a mistake all around?”
+
+“Not at all, if they have a good man. This flat-footed fellow, John,
+will take command, as he should. There is no danger in the woods at any
+season unless the party gets rattled and goes to pieces for want of a
+head.”
+
+“Father!” exclaimed Moya. “You know there is danger. Often, things have
+happened!”
+
+“Why, what could happen?” asked Christine, with wide eyes.
+
+“Many things very interesting could happen,” the colonel boasted
+cheerfully. “That is the object of the trip. You want things to happen.
+It is the emergency that makes the man--sifts him, and takes the chaff
+out of him.”
+
+“Take the chaff out of Banks Bowen,” Moya imprudently struck in, “and
+what would you have left?” She had met Banks Bowen in New York.
+
+“Tut, tut!” said the colonel. “Silence, or a good word for the
+absent--same as the”--The colonel stopped short.
+
+“You are so scornful about the other men, now you have chosen one!”
+ Christine's face turned red.
+
+“Why, Chrissy! You would not compare your brother to those men! Papa, I
+beg your pardon; this is only for argument.”
+
+“I don't compare him; but that's not to say all the other men are
+chaff!” Christine joined constrainedly in the laugh that followed her
+speech.
+
+“You need not go fancying things, Moya,” she cried, in answer to a
+quizzical look. “As if I hadn't known the Bowen boys since I was so
+high!”
+
+“You might know them from the cradle to the grave, my dear young lady,
+and not know them as Paul will, after a week in the woods with them.”
+
+The colonel had missed the drift of the girls' discussion. He was
+considering, privately, whether he had not better send a special
+messenger on the young men's trail. His assurances to the women left
+a wide margin for personal doubt as to the prudence of the trip. Aside
+from the lateness of the start, it was, undoubtedly, an ill-assorted
+company for the woods. There was a wide margin also for suspense, as all
+mail facilities ceased at Challis.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+A HUNTER'S DIARY
+
+Early in November, about a week before the hunters were expected home, a
+packet came addressed to Moya. It was a journal letter from Paul, mailed
+by some returning prospector chance encountered in the forest as the
+party were going in. Moya read it aloud, with asterisks, to a family
+audience which did not include her father.
+
+“To-day,” one of the first entries read, “we halt at Twelve-Mile Cabin,
+the last roof we shall sleep under. There are pine-trees near the cabin
+cut off fifteen feet above the ground, felled in winter, John tells us,
+_at the level of the snow!_
+
+“These cabins are all deserted now; the tide of prospecting has turned
+another way. The great hills that crowd one another up against the sky
+are so infested and overridden by this enormous forest-growth, and the
+underbrush is so dense, it would be impossible for a 'tenderfoot' to
+gain any clear idea of his direction. I should be a lost man the moment
+I ventured out of call. Woodcraft must be a sixth sense which we lost
+with the rest of our Eden birthright when we strayed from innocence,
+when we ceased to sleep with one ear on the ground, and to spell our way
+by the moss on tree-trunks. In these solitudes, as we call them,
+ranks and clouds of witnesses rise up to prove us deaf and blind. Busy
+couriers are passing every moment of the day; and we do not see, nor
+hear, nor understand. We are the stocks and stones. Packer John is our
+only wood-sharp;--yet the last half of the name doesn't altogether fit
+him. He is a one-sided character, handicapped, I should say, by some
+experience that has humbled and perplexed him. Two and two perhaps
+refused to make four in his account with men, and he gave up the
+proposition. And now he consorts with trees, and hunts to live, not
+to kill. He has an impersonal, out-door odor about him, such as the
+cleanest animals have. I would as soon eat out of his dry, hard, cool
+hand, as from a chunk of pine-bark.
+
+“It is amusing to see him with a certain member of the party who tries
+to be fresh with him. He has a disconcerting eye when he fixes it on a
+man, or turns it away from one who has said a coarse or a foolish thing.
+
+“'The jungle is large,' he seems to say, 'and the cub he is small. Let
+him think and be still!'”
+
+“Who is this 'certain member' who tries to be 'fresh'?” Christine
+inquired with perceptible warmth.
+
+“The cook, perhaps,” said Moya prudently.
+
+“The cook isn't a 'member'!--Well, can't you go on, Moya? Paul seems to
+need a lot of editing.” Moya had paused and was glancing ahead, smiling
+to herself constrainedly.
+
+“Is there more disparagement of his comrades?” Christine persisted.
+
+“Christine, be still!” Mrs. Bogardus interfered. “Moya ought to have the
+first reading of her own letter. It's very good of her to let us hear it
+at all.”
+
+“Oh dear, there's no disparagement. Quite the contrary! I'll go on with
+pleasure if you don't mind.” Moya read hurriedly, laughing through her
+words:--
+
+“'If you were here, (Ah, _if_ you were here!) You should lend me an
+ear--One at the least Of a pair the prettiest'--which is, within a foot
+or two, the rhythm of 'Wood Notes.' Of course you don't know it!”
+
+“This is a gibe at me,” Moya explained, “because I don't read Emerson.
+'It is the very measure of a marching chorus,' he goes on to say, 'where
+the step is broken by rocks and tree-roots;'--and he is chanting it
+to himself (to her it was in the original) as they go in single file
+through these 'haughty solitudes, the twilight of the gods!'”
+
+“'Haughty solitudes'!” Christine derided.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus sighed with impatience, and Moya's face became set. “Well,
+here he quotes again,” she haughtily resumed. “Anybody who is tired of
+this can be excused. Emerson won't mind, and I'm sure Paul won't!” She
+looked a mute apology to Paul's mother, who smiled and said, “Go on,
+dear. I don't read Emerson either, but I like him when Paul reads him
+for me.”
+
+“Well, I warn you there is an awful lot of him here!” Moya's voice was a
+trifle husky as she read on.
+
+“Old as Jove, Old as Love'”
+
+“I thought Love was young!”--Christine in a whisper aside.
+
+“'Who of me Tells the pedigree? Only the mountains old, Only the waters
+cold, Only the moon and stars, My coevals are.'”
+
+Moya sighed, and sank into prose again. “There is a gaudy yellow moss
+in these woods that flecks the straight and mournful tree-trunks like a
+wandering glint of sunlight; and there is a crêpe-like black moss that
+hangs funeral scarfs upon the boughs, as if there had been a death in
+the forest, and the trees were in line for the burial procession. The
+grating of our voices on this supreme silence reminds one of 'Why will
+you still be talking, Monsieur Benedick?--nobody marks you.'
+
+“There are silences, and again there are whole symphonies of sound. The
+winds smites the tree-tops over our heads, a surf-like roar comes up
+the slope, and the yellow pine-needles fall across the deepest darks as
+motes sail down a sunbeam. One wearies of the constant perpendicular,
+always these stiff, columnar lines, varied only by the melancholy
+incline where some great pine-chieftain is leaning to his fall supported
+in the arms of his comrades, or by the tragic prostration of the 'down
+timber'--beautiful straight-cut English these woodsmen talk.
+
+“Last evening John and I sat by the stove in the men's tent, while the
+others were in the cabin playing penny-ante with the cook (a sodden
+brute who toadies to the Bowens, and sulks with John because he objected
+to our hiring the fellow--an objection which I sustained, hence his
+logical spite includes me). John was melting pine gum and elk tallow
+into a dressing for our boots. I took a mean advantage of him, his hands
+being in the tallow and the tent-flap down, and tried on him a little
+of--now, don't deride me!--'Wood Notes.' It is seldom one can get the
+comment of a genuine woodsman on Nature according to the poets.'”
+
+Moya read on perfunctorily, feeling that she was not carrying her
+audience with her, and longing for the time when she could take her
+letter away and have it all to herself. If she stopped now, Christine,
+in this sudden new freak of distrustfulness, would be sure to
+misunderstand.
+
+ “'For Nature ever faithful is
+ To such as trust her faithfulness.
+ When the forest shall mislead me,
+ When the night and morning lie,
+ When sea and land refuse to feed me,
+ Will be time enough to die.
+
+ Then will yet my Mother yield
+ A pillow in her greenest field;
+ Nor the June flowers scorn to cover
+ The clay of their departed lover.'”
+
+“That is beautiful,” Mrs. Bogardus murmured hastily. “Even I can
+understand that.” Moya thanked her with a glance.
+
+“And what did the infallible John say?” Christine inquired.
+
+“John looked at me and smiled, as at a babbling infant”--
+
+“Good for John!”
+
+“Christine, be still!”
+
+“John looked at me and smiled,” Moya repeated steadily. Nothing could
+have stopped her now. She only hoped for some further scattering mention
+of that “certain member” who had set them all at odds and spoiled what
+should have been an hour's pure happiness. “'You'll get the pillow all
+right,' he said. 'It might not be a green one, nor I wouldn't bank much
+on the flowers; but you'll be tired enough to sleep without rocking
+about the time you trust to Nature's tuckin' you in and puttin' victuals
+in your mouth. I never _see_ nature till I came out here. I'd seen
+pretty woods and views, that a young lady could take down with her
+paints; but how are you going to paint that?'--he waved his tallow-stick
+towards the night outside. 'Ears can't reach the bottom of that
+stillness. That's creation before God ever thought of man. Long as I've
+been in the woods, I never get over the feeling that there's _something
+behind me_. If you go towards the trees, they come to meet you; if you
+go backwards, they go back; but you can't sit down and sit still without
+they'll come a-creeping up and creeping up, and crowding in'--
+
+“He stirred his 'dope' awhile, and then he struck another note. 'I've
+wintered alone in these mountains,' he said, 'and I've seen snowslides
+pounce out of a clear sky--a puff and a flash and a roar; an' trees four
+foot across snappin' like kindlin' wood--not because it hit 'em; only
+the breath of it struck them; and maybe a man lying dead somewheres
+under his cabin timbers. That's no mother's love-tap. Pillows and
+flowers ain't in it. But it's good poetry,' he added condescendingly.
+
+“I have not quoted him right, not being much of a snap-shot at dialect;
+and his is an undefined, unclassifiable mixture. Eastern farm-hand and
+Western ranchman, prospector, who knows what? His real language is in
+his eye and his rare, pure smile. And just as his countenance expresses
+his thoughts without circumlocution or attempt at effect, so his body
+informs his clothing. Wind and rain have moulded his hat to his head,
+his shoes grip the ground like paws; his buckskins have a surface like
+a cast after Rodin. They are repousséed by the hard bones and sinews
+underneath. I can think of nothing but the clothing of Millet's peasants
+to compare with this exterior of John's. He is himself a peasant of the
+woods. He has not the predatory instincts. If he could have his way, not
+a shot would be fired by any of us for the mere idle sport of killing.
+Shooting these innocent, fearless creatures, who have not learned that
+we are here for their destruction, is too like murder and treachery
+combined. Hunger should be our only excuse. My forbearance, or weakness,
+is a sort of unspoken bond between us. But I am a peasant, too, you
+know. I do not come of the lordly, arms-bearing blood. I shoot at a live
+mark always under protest; and when I fairly catch the look in the great
+eye of a dying elk or black-tail, it knocks me out for that day's hunt.”
+
+“Paul is perfectly happy!” Christine broke in. “He has got one of his
+beloved People to grovel to. They can sleep in the same tent and eat
+from the same plate, if you like. Why, it's better than the East Side!
+He'll be blood brother to Packer John before they leave the woods.”
+
+Moya blushed with anger.
+
+“You have said enough on that subject, Christine.” Mrs. Bogardus bent
+her dark, keen gaze upon her daughter's face. “Come”--she rose. “Come
+with me!”
+
+Christine sat still. “Come!” her mother repeated sternly. “Moya,”--in
+a different voice,--“your letter was lovely. Shall you read it to your
+father?”
+
+“Hardly,” said Moya, flushing. “Father does not care for descriptions,
+and the woods are an old story to him.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus placed her hands on the girl's shoulders and gave her one
+of her infrequent, ceremonious kisses, which, like her finest smile, she
+kept for occasions too nice for words.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+
+Christine followed her mother to their room, and the two faced each
+other a moment in pale silence.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus spoke first. “What does this mean?”--her breath came
+short, perhaps from climbing the stairs. She was a large woman.
+
+“What does what mean? I don't understand you, mother.”
+
+“Ah, child, don't repulse me! Twice you and Moya have nearly quarreled
+about those men. Why were you so rude to her? Why did you behave so
+about her letter?”
+
+“Paul is so intolerant! And the airs he puts on! If he is my own brother
+I must say he's an awful prig about other men.”
+
+“We are not discussing Paul. That is not the question now. Have you
+anything to tell me, Christine?”
+
+“To tell you?--about what, mother?” Christine spoke lower.
+
+“You know what I mean. Which of them is it? Is it Banks?--don't say it
+is Banks!”
+
+“Mother, how can I say anything when you begin like that?”
+
+“Have you any idea what sort of a man Banks Bowen really is? His father
+supports him entirely--six years now, ever since he left the law school.
+He does nothing, never will do anything. He has no will or purpose in
+life, except about trifles like this hunting-trip. As far as I can see
+he is without common sense.”
+
+Christine stood by the dressing-table pleating the cover-frilling with
+her small fingers that were loaded with rings. She pinched the folds
+hard and let them go. “Why did no one ever say these things before?”
+
+“We don't say things about the sons of our friends, unless we are
+compelled to. They were implied in every way possible. When have I asked
+Banks Bowen to the house except when everybody was asked! I would never
+in the world have come out in Mr. Borland's car if I had known the
+Bowens were to be of the party.”
+
+“That made no difference,” said Christine loftily.
+
+“It was all settled before then, was it?”
+
+“Have I said it was settled, mother? He asked me if I could ever care
+for him; and I said that I did--a little. Why shouldn't I? He does what
+I like a man to do. I don't enjoy people who have wills and purposes. It
+may be very horrid of me, but I wouldn't be in Moya's place for worlds.”
+
+“You poor child! You poor, unhappy child!”
+
+“Why am I unhappy? Has Paul added so much to our income since he left
+college?”
+
+“Paul does not make money; neither does he selfishly waste it. He has a
+conscience in his use of what he has.”
+
+“I don't see what conscience has to do with it. When it is gone it's
+gone.”
+
+“You will learn what conscience has to do with a man's spending if ever
+you try to make both ends meet with Banks Bowen. I suppose he will go
+through the form of speaking to me?”
+
+“Mother dear! He has only just spoken to me. How fast you go!”
+
+“Not fast enough to keep up with my children, it seems. Was it you,
+Christine, who asked them to come here?”
+
+Christine was silent.
+
+“Where did you learn such ways?--such want of frankness, of delicacy, of
+the commonest consideration for others? To be looking out for your own
+little schemes at a time like this!” Mrs. Bogardus saw now what must
+have been Paul's reason for doing what, with all her forced explanations
+of the hunting-trip, she had never until now understood. He had taken
+the alarm before she had, and done what he could to postpone this family
+catastrophe.
+
+Christine retreated to a deep-cushioned chair, and threw herself into
+it, her slender hands, palm upwards, extended upon its arms. Total
+surrender under pressure of cruel odds was the expression of her pointed
+eyebrows and drooping mouth. She looked exasperatingly pretty and
+irresponsibly fragile. Her blue-veined eyelids quivered, her breath came
+in distinct pants.
+
+“Perhaps you will not be troubled with my 'ways' for very many years,
+mother. If you could feel my heart now! It jumps like something trying
+to get out. It will get out some day. Have patience!”
+
+“That is a poor way to retaliate upon your mother, Christine. Your
+health is too serious a matter to trifle with. If you choose to make it
+a shield against everything I say that doesn't please you, you can cut
+yourself off from me entirely. I cannot beat down such a defense as
+that. Anger me you never can, but you can make me helpless to help you.”
+
+“I dare say it's better that I should never marry at all,” said
+Christine, her eyes closed in resignation. “You never would like anybody
+I like.”
+
+“I shall say no more. You are a woman. I have protected you as far as
+I was able on account of your weakness. I cannot protect you from the
+weakness itself.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose. She did not offer to comfort her child with
+caresses, but in her eyes as she looked at her there was a profound,
+inalienable, sorrowing tenderness, a depth of understanding beyond
+words.
+
+“I know so well,” the dark eyes seemed to say, “how you came to be the
+poor thing that you are!”
+
+The constraint which she felt towards her mother threw Chrissy back upon
+Moya. Being a lesser power, she was always seeking alliances. Moya had
+put aside their foolish tiff as unworthy of another thought; she was
+embarrassed when at bedtime Christine came humbly to her door, and
+putting her arms around her neck implored her not to be cross with
+her “poor pussy.” It was always the other person who was “cross” with
+Christine.
+
+“Nobody is cross with anybody, so far as I know,” said Moya briskly. A
+certain sort of sentimentality always made her feel like whistling or
+singing or asserting the commonplace side of life in some way.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+THE WHITE PERIL
+
+Mrs. Bogardus received many letters, chiefly on business, and these she
+answered with manlike brevity, in a strong, provincial hand. They took
+up much of her time, and mercifully, for it was now the last week in
+November and the young men did not return.
+
+The range cattle had been driven down into the valleys, deer-tracks
+multiplied by lonely mountain fords; War Eagle and his brethren of the
+Owyhees were taking council under their winter blankets. The nights were
+still, the mornings rimy with hoarfrost. Fogs arose from the river and
+cut off the bases of the mountains, converting the valley before sunrise
+into the likeness of a polar sea.
+
+“You have let your fire go out,” said the colonel briskly. He had
+invaded the sitting-room at an unaccustomed hour, finding the lady at
+her letters as usual. She turned and held her pen poised above her paper
+as she looked at him.
+
+“You did not come to see about the fire?” she said.
+
+“No; I have had letters from the north. Would you step into my study a
+moment?”
+
+Moya was in her father's room when they entered. She had been weeping,
+but at sight of Paul's mother she rose and stood picking at the
+handkerchief she held, without raising her eyes.
+
+“Don't be alarmed at Moya's face,” said the colonel stoutly. “Paul was
+all right at last accounts. We will have a merry Christmas yet.”
+
+“This is not from Paul!” Mrs. Bogardus fixed her eyes upon a letter
+which she held at arm's length, feeling for her glasses. “It's not for
+me--'_Miss_ Bogardus.'”
+
+“Ah, well. I saw it was postmarked Lemhi--Fort Lemhi, you know. Sit
+down, madam. Suppose I give you Mr. Winslow's report first--Lieutenant
+Winslow. You heard of his going to Lemhi?”
+
+“She doesn't know,” whispered Moya.
+
+“True. Well, two weeks ago I gave Mr. Winslow a hunter's leave, as we
+call it in the army, to beat up the trail of those boys. I thought it
+was time we heard from them, but it wasn't worth while to raise a hue
+and cry. He started out with a few picked men from Lemhi, the Indian
+Reservation, you know. I couldn't have sent a better man; the thing
+hasn't got into the local papers even. My object, of course, has been
+to save unnecessary alarm. Mr. Winslow has just got back to Challis. He
+rounded up the Bowen youths and the cook and the helper, in bad shape,
+all of them, but able to tell a story. The details we shall get
+later, but I have Mr. Winslow's report to me. It is short and probably
+correct.”
+
+“Was Paul not with them?” his mother questioned in a hard, dry voice.
+“Where is he then?”
+
+“He is in camp, madam, in charge of the wounded.”
+
+“Dear father! if you would speak plain!” Moya whispered nervously.
+
+“Certainly. There is nothing whatever to hide. We know now that on their
+last day's hunt they met with an accident which resulted in a division
+of the party. A fall of snow had covered the ice on the trails, and
+the guide's horse fell and rolled on him--nature of his injuries not
+described. This happened a day's journey from their camp at Ten-Mile
+cabin, and the retreat with the wounded man was slow and of course
+difficult over such a trail. They put together a sort of horse-litter
+made of pine poles and carried him on that, slung between two mules
+tandem. A beastly business, winding and twisting over fallen timber,
+hugging the cañon wall, near a thousand feet down--'Impassable' the
+trail is marked, on the government military maps. This first day's march
+was so discouraging that at Ten Mile they called a council, and the
+packer spoke up like a man. He disposed of his own case in this way. If
+he were to live, they could send back help to fetch him out. If not,
+no help would be needed. The snows were upon them; there was danger in
+every hour's delay. It was insane to sacrifice four sound men for one,
+badly hurt, with not many hours perhaps to suffer.”
+
+A murmur from the mother announced her appreciation of the packer's
+argument.
+
+“It was no more than a man should do; but as to taking him at his word,
+why, that's another question.” The colonel paused and gustily cleared
+his throat. “They were up against it right then and there, and the party
+split upon it. Three of them went on,--for help, as they put it,--and
+Paul stayed behind with the wounded man.”
+
+“Paul stayed--alone?” Mrs. Bogardus uttered with hoarse emphasis. “Was
+not that a very strange way to divide? Among them all, I should think
+they might have brought the man out with them.”
+
+“Their story is that his injuries were such that he could not have borne
+the pain of the journey. Rather an unusual case,” the colonel added
+dryly. “In my experience, a wounded man will stand anything sooner than
+be left on the field.”
+
+“I cannot understand it,” Mrs. Bogardus repeated, in a voice of
+indignant pain. “Such a strange division! One man left alone--to nurse,
+and hunt, and cook, and keep up fires! Suppose the guide should die!”
+
+“Paul was not _left_, you know,” the colonel said emphatically. “He
+_stayed_. And I should be thankful in your place, madam, that my son was
+the man who made that choice. But setting conduct aside, for we are not
+prepared to judge, it is merely a matter of time our getting in there,
+now that we know where he is.”
+
+“How much time?” Mrs. Bogardus opened her ashen lips to say.
+
+The colonel's face fell. “Mr. Winslow reports heavy snows for the past
+week,--soft, clogging snow,--too deep to wade through and too soft to
+bear. A little later, when the cold has formed a crust, our men can get
+in on snowshoes. There is nothing for it but patience, Mrs. Bogardus,
+and faith in the boy's endurance. The pluck that made him stay behind
+will help him to hold out.”
+
+Moya gave a hurt sob; the colonel stepped to the desk and stood there a
+moment turning over his papers. Behind his back the mother sent a glance
+to Moya expressive of despair.
+
+“Do you know what happened to his father? Did he ever tell you?” she
+whispered.
+
+Moya assented; she could not speak.
+
+“Twice, twice in a lifetime!” said the older woman.
+
+With a gesture, Moya protested against this wild prophecy; but as Paul's
+mother left the room she rushed upon her father, crying: “Tell _me_ the
+truth! What do you think of it? Did you ever hear of such a dastardly
+thing?”
+
+“It was a rout,” said the colonel coolly. “They were in full flight
+before the enemy.”
+
+“What enemy? They deserted a wounded comrade, and a servant at that!”
+
+“The enemy was panic,--panic, my dear. In these woods I've seen strong
+men go half beside themselves with fear of something--the Lord knows
+what! Then, add the winter and what they had seen and heard of that.
+Anyway, you can afford to be easy on the other boys. The honors of the
+day are with Paul--and the old packer, though it's all in the day's work
+to him.”
+
+“And you are satisfied with Paul, father?”
+
+“He didn't desert his command to save his own skin.” The colonel smiled
+grimly.
+
+“When the men of the Fourth discovered those other fellows they had
+literally sat down in the snow to die. Not a man of them knew how to
+pack a mule. Their meat pack slipped, going along one of those high
+trails, and scared the mule, and in trying to kick himself free the
+beast fell off the trail--mule and meat both gone. They got tired of
+carrying their stuff and made a raft to float it down the river, and
+lost that! Paul has been much better off in camp than he would have been
+with them. So cheer up, my girl, and think how you'd like to have your
+bridegroom out on an Indian campaign!”
+
+“Ah, but that would be orders! It's the uselessness that hurts. There
+was nothing to do or to gain. He didn't want to go. Oh, daddy dear, I
+made fun of his shooting,--I did! I laughed at his way with firearms.
+Wretched fool and snob that I was! As if I cared! I thought of what
+other people would say. You remember,--he went shooting up the gulch
+with Mr. Lane, and when he hit but didn't kill he wouldn't--couldn't put
+the birds out of pain. Jephson had to do it for him, and he told it in
+barracks and the men laughed.”
+
+“How did you know that! And what does it all amount to! Blame yourself
+all you like, dear, if it does you any good, but don't make him out a
+fool! There's not much that comes to us straight in this world--not
+even orders, you'll find. But we have to take it straight and leave the
+muddles and the blunders as they are. That's the brave man's courage and
+the brave woman's. Orders are mixed, but duty is clear. And the boy
+out there in the woods has found his duty and done it like a man. That
+should be enough for any soldier's daughter.”
+
+An hour passed in suspense. Moya was disappointed in her expectation of
+sharing in whatever the letter from Fort Lemhi might contain. Christine
+was in bed with a headache, her mother dully gave out, with no apparent
+expectation that any one would accept this excuse for the girl's
+complete withdrawal. The letter, she told Moya, was from Banks Bowen.
+“There was nothing in it of consequence--to us,” she added, and
+Moya took the words to mean “you and me” to the unhappy exclusion of
+Christine.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus's face had settled into lines of anxiety printed years
+before, as the creases in an old garment, smoothed and laid away, will
+reappear with fresh wear. Her plan was to go back to New York with
+Christine, who was plainly unfit to bear a long siege of suspense. There
+she could leave the girl with friends and learn what particulars could
+be gathered from the Bowens, who would have arrived. She would then
+return alone and wait for news at the garrison. That night, with Moya's
+help, she completed her packing, and on the following day the wedding
+party broke up.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+
+Fine, dry snowflakes were drifting past the upper square of a window
+set in a wall of logs. The lower half was obscured by a white bulk
+that shouldered up against the sash in the likeness of a muffled figure
+stooping to peer in.
+
+Lying in his bunk against the wall, the packer watched this sentinel
+snowdrift grow and become human and bold and familiar. His deep-lined
+visage was reduced to its bony structure. The hand was a claw with
+which he plucked at the ancient fever-crust shredding from his lips: an
+occupation at once so absorbing and so exhausting that often the hand
+would drop and the blankets rise upon the arch of the chest in a sigh of
+retarded respiration. The sigh would be followed by a cough, controlled,
+as in dread of the shock to a sore and shattered frame. The snow came
+faster and faster until the dim, wintry pane was a blur. Millions of
+atoms crossed the watcher's weary vision, whirling, wavering, driven
+with an aimless persistence, unable to pause or to stop. And the blind
+white snowdrift climbed, fed, like human circumstance, from disconnected
+atoms impelled by a common law.
+
+There were sounds in the cabin: wet wood sweating on hot coals; a step
+that went to and fro. Outside, a snow-weighted bough let go its load and
+sprang up, scraping against the logs. Some heavy soft thing slid off
+the roof and dropped with a _chug_. Then the door, that hung awry like a
+drooping eyelid, gave a disreputable wink, and the whole front gable of
+the cabin loomed a giant countenance with a silly forehead and an evil
+leer. Now it seemed that a hand was hurling snow against the door, as
+a sower scatters grain,--snow that lay like beach sand on the floor, or
+melted into a crawling pool--red in the firelight, red as blood!
+
+These and other phantasms had now for an unmeasured time been tenants
+of the packer's brain, sharing and often overpowering the reality of
+the human step that went to and fro. To-day the shapes and relations of
+things were more natural, and the step aroused a querulous curiosity.
+
+“Who's there?” the sick man imagined himself to have said. A croaking
+sound in his throat, which was all he could do by way of speech, brought
+the step to his bedside. A young face, lightly bearded, and gaunt almost
+as his own, bent over him. Large, black eyes rested on his; a hand with
+womanish nails placed its fingers on his wrist.
+
+“You are better to-day. Your pulse is down. I wouldn't try to talk.”
+
+“Who's that--outside?”
+
+“There is no one outside,” Paul answered, following the direction of his
+patient's eyes. “That? That is only a snowdrift. It grows faster than I
+can shovel it away.”
+
+The packer had forgotten his own question. He dozed off, and presently
+roused again as suddenly as he had slept. His utterance was clearer, but
+not his meaning.
+
+“What--you want to fetch me back for?”
+
+“Back?” Paul repeated.
+
+“I was most gone, wa'n't I?”
+
+“Back to life, you mean? You came back of yourself. I hadn't much to do
+with it.”
+
+“What's been the matter--gen'ly speaking?”
+
+“You were hurt, don't you remember? Something like wound fever set in.
+The altitude is bad for fevers. You have had a pretty close call.”
+
+“Been here all the time?”
+
+“Have I been here?--yes.”
+
+“'Lone?”
+
+“With you. How is your chest? Does it hurt you still when you breathe?”
+
+The sick man filled his lungs experimentally. “Something busted inside,
+I guess,” he panted. “'Tain't no killing matter, though.”
+
+Nourishment, in a tin cup, warm from the fire was offered him, refused
+with a gesture, and firmly urged upon him. This necessitated another
+rest. It was long before he spoke again--out of some remoter train of
+thought apparently.
+
+“Family all in New York?”
+
+“My family? They were at Bisuka when I left them.”
+
+“You don't _live_ West!”
+
+“No. I was born in the West, though. Idaho is my native state.”
+
+The patient fell to whimpering suddenly like a hurt child. He drew up
+the blanket to cover his face. Paul, interpreting this as a signal for
+more nourishment, brought the sad decoction,--rinds of dried beef cooked
+with rice in snow water.
+
+“Guess that'll do, thank ye. My tongue feels like an old buckskin
+glove.”
+
+“When I was a little fellow,” said the nurse, beguiling the patient
+while he tucked the spoonfuls down, “I was like you: I wouldn't take
+what the doctor ordered, and they used to pretend I must take it for
+the others of the family,--a kind of vicarious milk diet, or gruel, or
+whatever it was. 'Here's a spoonful for mother, poor mother,' they would
+say; and of course it couldn't be refused when mother needed it so much.
+'And now one for Chrissy'”--
+
+“Who?”
+
+“My sister, Christine. And then I'd take one for 'uncle' and one for
+each of the servants; and the cupful would go down to the health of the
+household, and I the dupe of my sympathies! Now you are taking this for
+me, because it's nicer to be shut up here with a live man than a dead
+one; and we haven't the conveniences for a first-class funeral.”
+
+“You never took a spoonful for 'father,'--eh?”
+
+Paul answered the question with gravity. “No. We never used that name in
+common.”
+
+“Dead was he?”
+
+“I will tell you some time. Better try to sleep now.”
+
+Paul returned the saucepan to the fire, after piecing out its contents
+with water, and retired out of his patient's sight.
+
+Again came a murmur, chiefly unintelligible, from the bunk.
+
+“Did you ask for anything?”
+
+The sick man heaved a worried sigh. “See what a mis'rable presumptuous
+piece of work!” he muttered, addressing the logs overhead. “But that
+Clauson--he wa'n't no more fit to guide ye than to go to heaven!
+Couldn't 'a' done much worse than this, though!”
+
+“He has done worse!” Paul came over to the bunk-side to reason on this
+matter. “They started back from here, four strong men with all the
+animals and all the food they needed for a six weeks' trip. We came in
+in one. If they got through at all, where is the help they were to send
+us?”
+
+“Help!” The packer roused. “They helped themselves, and pretty frequent.
+I said to them more than once--they didn't like it any too well: 'We
+can't drink up here like they do down to the coast. The air is too
+light. What a man would take with his dinner down there would fit him
+out with a first-class jag up here, 'leven thousand above the sea!'”
+
+“It's a waste of breath to talk about them--breath burns up food and we
+haven't much to spare. We rushed into this trouble and we dragged you in
+after us. We have hurt you a good deal more than you have us.”
+
+The sick man groaned. He flung one hand back against the logs,
+dislodging ancient dust that fell upon his corpse-like forehead. It was
+carefully wiped away. Helpless tears stole down the rigid face.
+
+“John,” said Paul with animation, “your general appearance just now
+reminds me of those worked-out placer claims we passed in Ruby Gulch,
+the first day out. The fever and my cooking have ground-sluiced you to
+the bone.”
+
+John smiled faintly. “Don't look very fat yourself. Where'd you git all
+that baird on your face?”
+
+“We have been here some time, you know--or you don't know; you have been
+living in places far away from here. I used to envy you sometimes. And
+other times I didn't.”
+
+“You mean I was off my head?”
+
+“At times. But more of the time you were dreaming and talking in your
+dreams; seeing things out loud by the flash-light of fever.”
+
+“Talking, was I? Guess there wa'n't much sense in any of it?” The hazard
+was a question.
+
+“A kind of sense,--out of focus, distorted. Some of it was opium. Didn't
+you coax a little of his favorite medicine out of the cook?”
+
+Packer John apologized sheepishly, “I cal'lated I was going to be left.
+You put it up on me--making out you were off with the rest. _That_ was
+all right. But I wa'n't going to suffer it out; why should I? A gunshot
+would have cured me quicker, perhaps. Then some critter might 'a' found
+me and called it murder. A word like that set going can hang a man. No,
+I just took a little to deaden the pain.”
+
+“The whole discussion was rather nasty, right before the man we were
+talking about,” said Paul. “I wanted to get them off and out of hearing.
+Then we had a few words.”
+
+At intervals during that day and the next, Paul's patient expended his
+strength in questions, apparently trivial. His eyes, whenever they were
+open, followed his nurse with a shrinking intelligence. Paul was on his
+guard.
+
+“What day of the month do you make it out to be?”
+
+“The second of December.”
+
+“December!” The packer lay still considering. “Game all gone down?”
+
+“I am not much of a pot-hunter,” said Paul. “There may be game, but I
+can't seem to get it. The snow is pretty deep.”
+
+“Wouldn't bear a man on snowshoes?”
+
+“He would go out of sight.”
+
+“Snowing a little every day?”
+
+“Right along, quietly, for I don't know how many days! I think the sky
+is packed with it a mile deep.”
+
+“How much grub have we got?”
+
+Paul gave a flattering estimate of their resources. The patient was not
+deceived.
+
+“Where's it all gone to? You ain't eat anything.”
+
+“I've eaten a good deal more than you have.”
+
+“I was livin' on fever.”
+
+“You can't live on fever any longer. The fever has left you, and you'll
+go with it if you don't obey your doctor.”
+
+“But where's all the stuff _gone_ to?”
+
+“There were four of them, and they allowed for some delay in getting
+out,” Paul explained, with a sickly smile.
+
+“Well, they was hogs! I knew how they'd pan out! That was why”--He
+wearied of speech and left the point unfinished.
+
+On the evening following, when the two could no longer see each other's
+faces in the dusk, Paul spoke, controlling his voice:--
+
+“I need not ask you, John, what you think of our chances?”
+
+“I guess they ain't much worth thinking about.” The fire hissed and
+crackled; the soft subsidence of the snow could be heard outside.
+
+“We are 'free among the dead,' how does it go? 'Like unto them that are
+wounded and lie in the grave.' What we say to each other here will stop
+here with our breath. Let us put our memories in order for the last
+reckoning. I think, John, you must, at some time in your life, have
+known my father, Adam Bogardus? He was lost on the Snake River plains,
+twenty-one years ago this autumn.”
+
+Receiving no answer, the pale young inquisitor went on, choosing his
+words with intense deliberation as one feeling his way in the dark.
+
+“Most of us believe in some form of communication that we can't explain,
+between those who are separated in body, in this world, but closely
+united in thought. Do I make myself clear?”
+
+There was a sound of deep breathing from the bunk; it produced a similar
+conscious excitement in the speaker. He halted, recovered himself, and
+continued:--
+
+“After my father's disappearance, my mother had a distinct
+presentiment--it haunted her for years--that something had happened to
+him at a place called One Man Station. Did you ever know the place?”
+
+“I might have.” The words came huskily.
+
+“Father had left her at this place, and to her knowledge he never came
+back. But she had this intimation--and suffered from it--that he did
+come back and was foully dealt with there--wronged in body or mind. The
+place had most evil associations for her; it was not strange she should
+have connected it with the great disaster of her life. As you lay
+talking to yourself in your fever, you took me back on that lost
+trail that ended, as we thought, in the grave. But we might have been
+mistaken. Is there anything it would not be safe for you and me to speak
+of now? Do you know any tie between men that should be closer than the
+tie between us? Any safer place where a man could lay off the secret
+burdens of his life and be himself for a little while--before the end
+answers all? I know you have a secret. I believe that a share of it
+belongs to me.”
+
+“We are better off sometimes if we don't get all that belongs to us,”
+ said John gratingly.
+
+“It doesn't seem to be a matter of choice, does it? If you were not
+meant to tell me--what you have partly told me already--where is there
+any meaning in our being here at all? Let us have some excuse for this
+senseless accident. Do you believe much in accidents? How foolish”--Paul
+sighed--“for you and me to be afraid of each other! Two men who have
+parted with everything but the privilege of speaking the truth!”
+
+The packer raised himself in his bunk slowly, like one in pain. He
+looked long at the listless figure crouching by the fire; then he sank
+back again with a low groan. “What was it you heared me say? Come!”
+
+“I can't give you the exact words. The words were nothing. Haven't you
+watched the sparks blow up, at night, when the wind goes searching over
+the ashes of an old camp-fire? It was the fever made you talk, and
+your words were the sparks that showed where there had been fire once.
+Perhaps I had no right to track you by your own words when you lay
+helpless, but I couldn't always leave you. Now I'd like to have my share
+of that--whatever it was--that hurt you so, at One Man Station.”
+
+“You ought to been a lawyer,” said the packer, releasing his breath.
+There was less strain in his voice. It broke with feeling. “You put up a
+mighty strong case for your way of looking at it. I don't say it's best.
+There, if you will have it! Sonny--my son! It--it's like startin' a
+snow-slide.”
+
+The sick man broke down and sobbed childishly.
+
+“Take it quietly! Oh, take it quietly!” Paul shivered. “I have known it
+a long time.”
+
+Hours later they were still awake, the packer in his bunk, Paul in his
+blankets by the winking brands. The pines were moving, and in pauses of
+the wind they could hear the incessant soft crowding of the snow.
+
+“When they find us here in the spring,” said the packer humbly, “it
+won't matter much which on us was 'Mister' and which was 'John.'”
+
+“Are you thinking of that!” Paul answered with nervous irritation. “I
+thought you had lived in the woods long enough to have got rid of all
+that nonsense!”
+
+“I guess there was some of it where you've been living.”
+
+“We are done with all that now. Go to sleep,--Father.” He pronounced
+the word conscientiously to punish himself for dreading it. The darkness
+seemed to ring with it and give it back to him ironically. “Father!”
+ muttered the pines outside, and the snow, listening, let fall the
+word in elfin whispers. Paul turned over desperately in his blankets.
+“Father!” he repeated out loud. “Do _you_ believe it? Does it do you any
+good?”
+
+“I wouldn't distress myself, one way or t' other, if it don't come
+natural,” the packer spoke, out of his corner in the darkness. “Wait
+till you can feel to say it. The word ain't nothing.”
+
+“But do you feel it? Is it any comfort to you at all?”
+
+“I ain't in any hurry to feel it. We'll get there. Don't worry. And
+s'pose we don't! We're men. Man to man is good enough for me.”
+
+Paul spent some wakeful hours after that, trying not to think of Moya,
+of his mother and Christine. They were of another world,--a world that
+dies hard at twenty-four. Towards morning he slept, but not without
+dreams.
+
+He was in the pent-road at Stone Ridge. It was sunset and long shadows
+striped the lane. A man stood, back towards him, leaning both arms on
+the stone fence that bounds the lane to the eastward,--a plain farmer
+figure, gazing down across the misty fields as he might have stood a
+hundred times in that place at that hour. Paul could not see his face,
+but something told him who it must be. His heart stood still, for he saw
+his mother coming up the lane. She carried something in her hand covered
+with a napkin, and she smiled, walking carefully as if carrying a treat
+to a sick child. She passed the man at the fence, not appearing to have
+seen him.
+
+“Won't you speak to him, mother? Won't you speak to”--He could not utter
+the name. She looked at him bewildered. “Speak? who shall I speak to?”
+ The man at the fence had turned and he watched her, or so Paul imagined.
+He felt himself choking, faint, with the effort to speak that one word.
+Too late! The moment passed. The man whom he knew was his father, the
+solemn, quiet figure, moved away up the road unquestioned. He never
+looked back. Paul grew dizzy with the lines of shadow; they stretched on
+and on, they became the ties of a railroad--interminable. He awoke,
+very faint and tired, with a lost feeling and the sense upon him of some
+great catastrophe. The old man was sleeping deeply in his bunk, a ray
+of white sunlight falling on his yellow features. He looked like one who
+would never wake again. But as Paul gazed at him he smiled, and sighed
+heavily. His lips formed a name; and all the blood in Paul's body dyed
+his face crimson. The name was his mother's.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+THE BLOOD-WITE
+
+A few hours seemed days, after the great disclosure. Both men had
+recoiled from it and were feeling the strain of the new relation. Three
+times since their first meeting the elder had adjusted himself quietly
+to a change in the younger's manner to him. First there had been
+respectful curiosity in the presence of a new type, combined with the
+deference due a leader and an expert in strange fields. Then indignant
+partisanship, pity, and the slight condescension of the nurse. This had
+hurt the packer, but he took it as he accepted his physical downfall.
+The last change was hardest to bear; for now the time was short, and, as
+Paul himself had said, they were in the presence of the final unveiling.
+
+So when Paul made artificial remarks to break the pauses, avoiding his
+father's eye and giving him neither name nor title, the latter became
+silent and lay staring at the logs and picking at his hands.
+
+“If I was hunting up a father,” he said to himself aloud one day, “I'd
+try to find a better lookin' one. I wouldn't pa'm off on myself no such
+old warped stick as I be.” The remark seemed a tentative one.
+
+“I had the choice, to take or leave you,” Paul responded. “You were an
+unconscious witness. Why should I have opened the subject at all?”
+
+Both knew that this answer was an evasion. By forcing the tie they had
+merely marked the want of ease and confidence between them. As “Packer
+John” Paul could have enjoyed, nay, loved this man; as his father, the
+sum and finality of his filial dreams, the supplanter of that imaginary
+husband of his mother's youth, the thing was impossible. And the father
+knew it and did not resent it in the least, only pitied the boy for
+his needless struggle. He was curious about him, too. He wanted to
+understand him and the life he had come out of: his roundabout way of
+reaching the simplest conclusions; his courage in argument, and his
+personal shying away from the truth when found. More than all he longed
+for a little plain talk, the exile's hunger for news from home. It
+pleased him when Paul, rousing at this deliberate challenge, spoke up
+with animation, as if he had come to some conclusion in his own mind. It
+could not be expected he would express it simply. The packer had become
+used to his oddly elaborate way of putting things.
+
+“If we had food enough and time, we might afford to waste them
+discussing each other's personal appearance. _I_ propose we talk to some
+purpose.”
+
+“Talking sure burns up the food.” The packer waited.
+
+“I wish I knew what my father was doing with himself, all those years
+when his family were giving him the honors of the dead.”
+
+“I warned ye about this pumping out old shafts. You can't tell what
+you'll find in the bottom. I suppose you know there are things in this
+world, Boy, a good deal worse than death?”
+
+“Desertion is worse. It is not my father's death I want explained, it
+is his life, your life, in secret, these twenty years! Can you explain
+that?”
+
+The packer doubled his bony fist and brought it down on the bunk-side.
+“Now you talk like a man! I been waiting to hear you say that. Yes, I
+can answer that question, if you ain't afeard of the answer!”
+
+“I am keeping alive to hear it!” said Paul in a guarded voice.
+
+“You might say you're keeping me alive to tell it. It's a good thing to
+git off of one's mind; but it's a poor thing to hand over to a son. All
+I've got to leave ye, though: the truth if you can stand it! Where do
+you want I should begin?”
+
+“At the night when you came back to One Man Station.”
+
+“How'd you know I come back?”
+
+“You were back there in your fever, living over something that happened
+in that place. There was a wind blowing and the door wouldn't shut. And
+something had to be lifted,”--the old man's eyes, fixed upon his son,
+took a look of awful comprehensions,--“something heavy.”
+
+“Yes; great Lord, it was heavy! And I been carrying it ever since!” His
+chest rose as if the weight of that load lay on it still, and his breath
+expired with a hoarse “haugh.” “I got out of the way because it was _my_
+load. I didn't want no help from them.” He paused and sat picking at his
+hands. “It's a dreadful ugly story. I'd most as soon live it over again
+as have to tell it in cold blood. I feel sometimes it _can't be!_”
+
+“You need not go back beyond that night. I know how my mother was left,
+and what sort of a man you were forced to leave her with. Was it--the
+keeper?”
+
+“That's what it was. That was the hard knot in my thread. Nothing
+wouldn't go past that. Some, when they git things in a tangle, they just
+reach for the shears an' cut the thread. I wa'n't brought up that way.
+I was taught to leave the shears alone. So I went on stringin' one year
+after another. But they wouldn't join on to them that went before. There
+was the knot.”
+
+“It was between you and him--and the law?” said Paul.
+
+“You've got it! I was there alone with it,--witness an' judge an' jury;
+I worked up my own case. Manslaughter with extenuatin' circumstances,
+I made it--though he was more beast than man. I give myself the outside
+penalty,--imprisonment for life. And I been working out my sentence
+ever since. The Western country wa'n't home to me then--more like a big
+prison. It's been my prison these twenty-odd years, while your mother
+was enjoying what belonged to her, and making a splendid job of your
+education. If I had let things alone I might have finished my time out:
+but I didn't, and now the rest of it's commuted--for the life of my
+son!”
+
+“Don't put it that way! I am no lamb of sacrifice. Why, how can we let
+things alone in this world! Should I have stood off from this secret and
+never asked my father for his defense?”
+
+“Do you mean to say a boy like you can take hold of this thing and
+understand it?”
+
+“I can,” said Paul. “I could almost tell the story myself.”
+
+“Put it up then!” said the packer. The fascination of confession was
+strong upon him.
+
+“You had been out in the mountains--how long?”
+
+“Two days and three nights, just as I left camp.”
+
+“You were crazed with anxiety for us. You came back to find your camp
+empty, the wife and baby gone. You had reason to distrust the keeper.
+Not for what he did--for what you knew he meant to do.”
+
+“For what he meant and tried to do. I seen it in his eye. The devil that
+wanted him incited him to play with me and tell me lies about my wife.
+She scorned the brute and he took his mean revenge. He kep' back her
+letter, and he says to me, leerin' at me out of his wicked eyes, 'Your
+livestock seems to be the strayin' kind. The man she went off with
+give me that,'--he lugged a gold piece out of his clothes and showed
+me,--'give me that,' he says, 'to keep it quiet.' He kep' it quiet! Half
+starved and sick's I was, the strength was in me. But vengeance in the
+hand of a man, it cuts both ways, my son! His bunk had a sharp edge
+to it like this. He fell acrost it with my weight on top of him and he
+never raised up again. There wasn't a mark on him. His back was broke.
+He died slow, his eyes mocking me.
+
+“'You fool,' he says. 'Go look in that coat hangin' on the wall.' I
+found her letter there inside of one from Granger. He watched me read it
+and he laughed. 'Now, go tell her you've killed a man!' He knew I didn't
+come of a killin' breed. There was four hours to think it over. Four
+hours! I thought hard, I tell you! 'T was six of one and half a dozen of
+t' other 'twixt him and me, but I worked it back 'n' forth a good long
+while about her. First, taking her away from her father, an old man
+whose bread I'd eat. She was like a child of my own raising. I always
+had felt mean about that. We'd had bad luck from the start,--my
+luck,--and now disgrace to cap it all. Whether I hid it or told her and
+stood my trial, I'd never be a free man again. There he lay! And a sin
+done in secret, it's like a drop of nitric acid: it's going to eat its
+way out--and in!
+
+“I knew she'd have friends enough, once she was quit of me. That was the
+case between us. The thing that hurt me most was to put her letter
+back where I found it, and leave it, there with him. Her little cry to
+me--and I couldn't come! I read the words over and over, I've said 'em
+to myself ever since. I've lived on them. But I had to leave the letter
+there to show I'd never come back. I put it back after he was dead.
+
+“The sins of the parents shall be visited,--when it's in the blood! But
+I declare to the Almighty, murder wa'n't in my blood! It come on me like
+a stroke of lightning hits a tree, and I had a clear show to fall alone.
+
+“That's the answer. Maybe I didn't see all sides of it, but there never
+was no opening to do different, after that night. Now, you've had an
+education. I should be glad to hear your way of looking at it?”
+
+“I should think you might stand your trial, now, before any judge or
+jury, in this world or the next,” Paul answered.
+
+“There is only one Judge.” The packer smiled a beautiful quiet smile
+that covered a world of meanings. “What a man re'ly wants, if he'd own
+up it, is a leetle shade of partiality. Maybe that's what we're all
+going to need, before we git through.”
+
+Paul was glad to be saved the necessity of speech, and he felt the swift
+discernment with which the packer resumed his usual manner. “Got any
+more of that stuff you call soup? Divide even! I won't be made no baby
+of.”
+
+“We might as well finish it up. It's hardly worth making two bites of a
+cherry.”
+
+“Call this 'cherry'! It's been a good while on the bough. What's it
+mostly made of?”
+
+“Rind of bacon, snow water,--plenty of water,--and a tablespoonful of
+rice.”
+
+“Good work! Hungry folks can live on what the full bellies throw away.”
+
+“Oh, I can save. But there comes a time when you can't live by saving
+what you haven't got.”
+
+“That's right! Well, let's talk, then, before the bacon-rind fades out
+of us.”
+
+The packer's face and voice, his whole manner, showed the joy of a soul
+that has found relief. Paul was not trying now to behave dutifully; they
+were man to man once more. The quaint, subdued humor asserted itself,
+and the narrator's speech flowed on in the homely dialect which
+expressed the man.
+
+“I stayed out all that winter, workin' towards the coast. One day, along
+in March, I fetched a charcoal burner's camp, and the critter took me in
+and nursed my frost-bites and didn't ask no questions, nor I of him. We
+struck up a trade, my drivin' stock, mostly skin and bone, for a show in
+his business. He wa'n't gettin' rich at it, that was as plain as the hip
+bones on my mules. I kep' in the woods, cuttin' timber and tendin' kiln,
+and he hauled and did the sellin'. Next year he went below to Portland
+and brought home smallpox with him. It broke out on him on the road. He
+was a terrible sick man. I buried him, and waited for my turn. It didn't
+come. I seemed kind o' insured. I've been in lots of trouble since then,
+but nothing ever touched me till now. I banked on it too strong, though.
+I sure did! My pardner was just such another lone bird like me. If
+he had any folks of his own he kep' still about them. So I took his
+name--whether it was his name there's no knowing. Guess I've took full
+as good care of it as he would. 'Hagar?' folk would say, sort o' lookin'
+me over. 'You ain't Jim Hagar.' No, but I was John, and they let it go
+at that.
+
+“I heard of your mother that summer, from a prospector who came up past
+my camp. He'd wintered in Mountain Home. He told me my own story, the
+way they had it down there, and what straits your mother was in. I had
+scraped up quite a few dollars by then, and was thinking how I'd shove
+it into a bank like an old debt coming to Adam Bogardus. I was studying
+how I was going to rig it. There wasn't any one who knew me down there,
+so I felt safe to ventur' a few inquiries. What I heard was that she'd
+gone home to her folks and was as well off as anybody need be. That
+broke me all up at first. I must have had a sneakin' notion that maybe
+some day I could see my way to go back to her, but that let me out
+completely. I quit then, and I've stayed quit. The only break I made was
+showin' up here at the 'leventh hour, thinking I could be some use to my
+son!”
+
+“It was to be,” said Paul. “For years our lives have been shaping
+towards this meeting. There were a thousand chances against it. Yet here
+we are!”
+
+“Here we are!” the packer repeated soberly. “But don't think that I lay
+any of my foolishness on the Almighty! Maybe it was meant my son should
+close my eyes, but it's too dear at the price. Anybody would say so, I
+don't care who.”
+
+“But aside from the 'price,' is it something to you?”
+
+“More--more than I've got words to say. And yet it grinds me, every
+breath I take! Not that I wish you'd done different--you couldn't and be
+a man. I knew it even when I was kickin' against it. Oh, well! It ain't
+no use to kick. I thought I'd learned something, but I ain't--learned--a
+thing!”
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+CURTAIN
+
+A greater freedom followed this confession, as was natural. It became
+the basis for lighter confidences and bits of autobiography that came to
+the surface easily after this tremendous effort at sincerity. Paul found
+that he could speak even of the family past, into which by degrees he
+began to fit the real man in place of that bucolic abstraction which
+had walked the fields of fancy. He had never dared to actuate the “hired
+man,” his father, on a basis of fact. He knew the speech and manners of
+the class from which he came,--knew men of that class, and talked with
+them every summer at Stone Ridge; but he had brooded so deeply over the
+tragic and sentimental side of his father's fate as to have lost sight
+of the fact that he was a man.
+
+Reality has its own convincing charm, not inconsistent with plainness or
+even with commonness. To know it is to lose one's taste for toys of
+the imagination. Paul, at last, could look back almost with, a sense of
+humor at the doll-like progenitor he had played with so long. But when
+it came to placing the real man, Adam Bogardus, beside that real woman,
+once his wife, their son could but own with awe that there is mercy in
+extinction, after all; in the chance, however it may come to us, for
+slipping off those cruel disguises that life weaves around us.
+
+In the strange, wakeful nights, full of starvation dreams, he saw his
+mother as she would look on state occasions in the hostess's place at
+her luxurious table; the odor of flowers, the smell of meats and wines,
+tantalized and sickened him. Christine would come in her dancing frocks,
+always laughing, greedy in her mirth; but Moya, face to face, he could
+never see. It was torture to feel her near him, a disembodied embrace.
+Passionate panegyrics and hopeless adjurations he would pour out to
+that hovering loveliness just beyond his reach. The agony of
+frustration would waken him, if indeed it were sleep that dissolved his
+consciousness, and he would be irritable if spoken to.
+
+The packer broke in, one morning, on these unnerving dreams. “You
+wouldn't happen to have a picture of her along with you?”
+
+Paul stared at him.
+
+“No, of course you wouldn't! And I'd be 'most afeard to look at it, if
+you had. She must have changed considerable. Time hasn't stood still
+with her any more than the rest of us.”
+
+“I have no picture of my mother,” Paul replied.
+
+The packer saw that his question had jarred; he had waited weeks to ask
+it. He passed it off now with one of his homely similes. “If you was to
+break a cup clean in two, and put the halves together again while the
+break was fresh, they'd knit so you wouldn't hardly see a crack. But you
+take one half and set it in the chainy closet and chuck the other half
+out on the ash-heap,--them halves won't look much like pieces of the
+same cup, come a year or two. The edges won't jine no more than the lips
+of an old cut that's healed without stitches. No; married folks they
+grow together or they grow apart, and they're a-doing of the one or the
+other every minute of the time, breaks or no breaks. Does she go up to
+the old place summers?”
+
+“Not lately, except on business,” said Paul. “A company was formed to
+open slate quarries on the upper farm, a good many years ago. They are
+worth more than all the land forty times over.”
+
+“I always said so; always told the old man he had a gold mine in that
+ridge. Was this before he died?”
+
+“Long after. It was my mother's scheme mainly. She controls it now. She
+is a very strong business woman.”
+
+“She got her training, likely, from that uncle in New York. He had the
+business head. The old man had no more contrivance than one of the bulls
+in his pastures. He could lock horns and stay there, but it wa'nt no
+trouble to outflank him. More than once his brother Jacob got to the
+windward of him in a bargain. He was made a good deal like his own land.
+Winters of frost it took to break up that ground, and sun and rain to
+meller it, and then't was a hatful of soil to a cartful of stone. The
+plough would jump the furrows if you drew it deep. My arms used to ache
+as if they'd been pounded, with the jar of them stones. They used to
+tell us children a story how Satan, he flew over the earth a-sowing
+it with rocks and stones, and as he was passing over our county a hole
+bu'st through his leather apron and he lost his whole load right slam
+there. I could 'a' p'inted out the very spot where the heft on it fell.
+Ten Stone meadow, so-called. Ten million stone! I was pickin' stone in
+that field all of one summer when I was fifteen year old. We built a
+mile of fence with it.
+
+“Them quarries must have brought a mint of money into the country.
+Different sort of labor, too. Well, the world grows richer and poorer
+every year. More difference every year between the way rich folks and
+poor folks live. I wouldn't know where I belonged, 't ain't likely, if
+I was to go back there. I'd be way off! One while I used to think a
+good deal about going back, just to take a look around. It comes over
+me lately like hunger and thirst. I think about the most curious things
+when I'm asleep--foolish, like a child! I can smell all the good home
+smells of a frosty morning: apple pomace, steaming in the barnyard;
+sausage frying; Becky scouring the brass furnace-kittle with salt and
+vinegar. Killin' time, you know--makes you think of boiling souse and
+head-cheese. You ever eat souse?” The packer sucked in his breath with a
+lean smile. “It ain't best to dwell on it. But you can't help yourself,
+at night. I can smell Becky's fresh bread, in my dreams, just out of the
+brick oven. Never eat bread cooked in a stove till I came out here. I
+never drunk any water like that spring on the ridge. Last night I was
+back there, and the maples were all yellow like sunshine. Once it
+was spring, and apple-blooms up in the hill orchard. And little Emmy,
+a-setting on the fence, with her bunnit throwed back on her neck.
+'Addy!' she called, way across the lot; 'Addy, come, help me down!' She
+was a master hand for venturin' up on places, but she didn't like the
+gettin' down.
+
+“Well, she 'a learned the ups and downs by this time. She don't need
+Addy to help her. I'd have helped a big sight more if I had kep' my
+distance. It's a thing so con-demned foolish and unnecessary--I can't be
+reconciled to it noway!”
+
+“You see only one side of it,” said Paul. Unspeakable thoughts had kept
+pace with his father's words. “Nothing that happens, happens through
+us--or to us--alone. There was a girl I knew, outside. She was as happy,
+when I knew her first, as you say my mother used to be. Then she met
+some one--a man--and the shadow of his life crossed hers. He would have
+wrapped her up in it and put out her sunshine if he had stayed in the
+same world. Now she can be herself again, after a while. It cannot take
+long to forget a person you have known only a little over a year.”
+
+The packer rose on one elbow. He reached across and shook his son.
+
+“Where is that girl? Answer me! Take your face out of your hands!”
+
+“At Bisuka Barracks. She is the commandant's daughter. I came out to
+marry her.”
+
+“What possessed ye not to tell me?”
+
+“Why should I tell you? We buried the wedding-day months back, in the
+snow.”
+
+“Boy, boy!” the packer groaned.
+
+“What difference can it make now?”
+
+“_All_ the difference--all the difference there is! I thought you were
+out here touring it with them fool boys and they were all the chance
+you had for help outside. You suppose her father is going to see her git
+left? _They_'ll get in here, if they have to crawl on their bellies or
+climb through the tree-limbs. They know how! And we've wasted the grub
+and talked like a couple of women!”
+
+“Oh, don't--don't torment me!” Paul groaned. “It was all over. Can't you
+leave the dead in peace!”
+
+“We are not the dead! I 'most wish we were. Boy, I've got a big word to
+say to you about that. Come closer!” The packer's speech hoarsened and
+failed. They could only hear each other breathe. Then it seemed to the
+packer that his was the only breath in the darkness. He listened. A
+faint cheer arose in the forest and a crashing of the dead underlimbs of
+the pines.
+
+He turned frantically upon his son, but no pledge could be extorted now.
+Paul's lips were closed. He had lost consciousness.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+KIND INQUIRIES
+
+The colonel's drawing-room was as hot as usual the first hour after
+dinner, and as usual it was full of kindly participant neighbors who had
+dropped in to repeat their congratulations on the good news, now almost
+a week old. Mrs. Bogardus had not come down, and, though asked after by
+all, the talk was noticeably freer for her absence.
+
+Mrs. Creve, in response to a telegram from her brother, had arrived from
+Fort Sherman on the day before, prepared for anything, from frozen feet
+to a wedding. She had spent the afternoon in town doing errands for
+Moya, and being late for dinner had not changed her dress. There never
+was such a “natural” person as aunt Annie. At present she was addressing
+the company at large, as if they were all her promising children.
+
+“Nobody talks about their star in these days. I used to have a star. I
+forget which it was. I know it was a pretty lucky one. Now I trust in
+Providence and the major and wear thick shoes.” She exhibited the shoes,
+a particularly large and sensible kind which she imported from the East.
+Everybody laughed and longed to embrace her. “Has Moya got a star?” she
+asked seriously.
+
+“The whole galaxy!” a male voice replied. “Doesn't the luck prove it?”
+
+“Moya has got a 'temperament,'” said Doctor Fleming, the Post surgeon.
+“That's as good as having a star. You know there are persons who attract
+misfortune just as sickly children catch all the diseases that are
+going. I knew that boy was sure to be found. Anything of Moya's would
+be.”
+
+“So you think it was Moya's 'temperament' that pulled him out of the
+snow?” said the colonel, wheeling his chair into the discussion.
+
+“How about Mr. Winslow's temperament? I prefer to leave a little of the
+credit to him,” said Moya sweetly.
+
+A young officer, who had been suffering in the corner by the fire,
+jumped to his feet and bowed, then blushed and sat down again,
+regretting his rashness. Moya continued to look at him with steadfast
+friendliness. Winslow had led the rescue that brought her lover home.
+A glow of sympathy united these friends and neighbors; the air was
+electrical and full of emotion.
+
+“I suppose no date has been fixed for the wedding?” Mrs. Dawson, on the
+divan, murmured to Mrs. Creve. The latter smiled a non-committal assent.
+
+“I should think they would just put the doctor aside and be married
+anyhow. My husband says he ought to go to a warmer climate at once.”
+
+“My dear, a young man can't be married in his dressing-gown and
+slippers!”
+
+“No! It's not as bad as that?”
+
+“Well, not quite. He's up and dressed and walks about, but he doesn't
+come down to his meals,--he can eat so very little at a time, and
+it tires him to sit through a dinner. It isn't one of those ravenous
+recoveries. It went too far with him for that.”
+
+“His mother was perfectly magnificent through it all, they say.”
+
+“Have you seen much of Mrs. Bogardus?”
+
+“No; we left them alone, poor things, when the pinch came. But I used to
+see her walking the porch, up and down, up and down. Moya would go off
+on the hills. They couldn't walk together! That was after Miss Chrissy
+went home. Her mother took her back, you know, and then returned alone.
+Perfectly heroic! They say she dressed every evening for dinner as
+carefully as if she were in New York, and led the conversation. She used
+to make Moya read aloud to her--history, novels--anything to pretend
+they were not thinking. The strain must have begun before any of us
+knew. The colonel kept it so quiet. What is the dear man doing with your
+bonnet?”
+
+The colonel had plucked his sister's walking-hat, a pert piece of
+millinery froward in feathers, from the trunk of the headless Victory,
+where she had reposed it in her haste before dinner.
+
+“Mustn't be disrespectful to the household Lar,” he kindly reminded her.
+
+“Where am I to put my hats, then? I shall wear them on my head and come
+down to breakfast in them. Moya, dear, will you please rescue my hat?
+Put it anywhere, dear,--under your chair. There is not really a place
+in this house to put a thing. A wedding that goes off on time is bad
+enough, but one that hangs on from month to month--and doesn't even take
+care of its clothes! Forgive me, dear! The clothes are very pretty.
+I open a bureau-drawer to put away my middle-aged bonnet--a puff of
+violets! A pile of something white, and, behold, a wedding veil! There
+isn't a hook in the closet that doesn't say, 'Standing-room only,' and
+the standing-room is all stood on by a regiment of new shoes.”
+
+“My dear woman, go light on our sore spots. We are only just out of the
+woods.”
+
+“Isn't it bad to coddle your sore spots, Doctor? Like a saddle-gall,
+ride them down!” Mrs. Creve and Dr. Fleming exchanged a friendly smile
+on the strength of this nonsense. On the doctor's side it covered a
+suspicion: “'The lady, methinks, protests too much'!” The colonel, too,
+was restless, and Moya's sweet color came and went. She appeared to be
+listening for steps or sounds from some other part of the house.
+
+The men all rose now as Mrs. Bogardus entered; one or two of the ladies
+rose also, compelled by something in her look certainly not intended.
+She was careful to greet everybody; she even crossed the room and gave
+her hand to Lieutenant Winslow, whom she had not seen since the night of
+his return. The doctor she casually passed over with a bow; they had met
+before that day. It was in the mind of each person present not of the
+family, and excepting the doctor, to ask her: 'How is your son this
+evening?' But for some reason the inquiry did not come off.
+
+The company began suddenly to feel itself _de trop_. Mrs. Dawson, who
+had come under the doctor's escort, glanced at him, awaiting the moment
+when it would do to make the first move.
+
+“I hear you lost a patient from the hospital yesterday?” said Lieutenant
+Winslow, at the doctor's side.
+
+“_From_, did you say? That's right! He was to have been operated on
+to-day.” The doctor shrugged his shoulders.
+
+“What!”
+
+“Two broken ribs. One grown fast to the lung.”
+
+“Wh-ew!”
+
+“He just walked out. Said I had ordered him to have fresh air. There was
+a new hall-boy, a greenhorn.”
+
+“He can't go far in that shape, can he?”
+
+“Oh, there's no telling. The constitution of those men is beyond
+anything. You can't kill him. He'll suffer of course, suffer like an
+animal, and die like one--away from the herd. Maybe not this time,
+though.”
+
+“Was he afraid of the operation?”
+
+“I can't say. He did not seem to be either afraid or anxious for help.
+Not used to being helped. He would be taken to the Sisters' Hospital.
+Wouldn't come up here as the guest of the Post, not a bit! I believe
+from the first he meant to give us the slip, and take his chance in his
+own way.”
+
+“Did you hear,”--Mrs. Creve spoke up from the opposite side of the room
+under that hypnotic influence by which a dangerous topic spreads,--“did
+you hear about the poor guide who ran away from the hospital to escape
+from our wicked doctor here? What a reputation you must have, Doctor!”
+
+“All talk, my dear; town gossip,” said the colonel. “You gave him his
+discharge, didn't you, Doctor?” The colonel looked hard at the medical
+officer; he had prepared the way for a statement suited to a mixed
+company, including ladies. But Doctor Fleming stated things usually to
+suit himself.
+
+“There was a man who left the Sisters' Hospital rather informally
+yesterday. I won't say he is not just as well off to-day as if he had
+stayed.”
+
+“Who was it? Was it our man, father?”
+
+“The doctor has more than one patient at the hospital.” Colonel
+Middleton looked reproachfully at the doctor, who continued to put aside
+as childish these clumsy subterfuges. “I think you ladies frightened him
+away with your attentions. He knew he was under heavy liabilities for
+all your flowers and fancy cookery.”
+
+“Attentions! Are we going to let him die on the road somewhere?” cried
+Moya.
+
+“Miss Moya?” Lieutenant Winslow spoke up with a mixture of embarrassment
+and resolution to be heard, though every voice in the room conspired
+against him. “Those men are a big fraternity. They have their outfitting
+places where they put in for repairs. Packer John had his blankets sent
+to the Green Meadow corral. They know him there. They say he had money
+at one of the stores. They all have a little money cached here and
+there. And they _can't_ get lost, you know!”
+
+Moya's eyes shone with a suspicious brightness.
+
+ “'When the forest shall mislead me;
+ When the night and morning lie.'”
+
+She turned her swimming eyes upon Paul's mother, who would be sure to
+remember the quotation.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus remained perfectly still, her lips slightly parted. She
+grew very pale. Then she rose and walked quickly to the door.
+
+“Just a breath of cold air!” she panted. The doctor, Moya, and Mrs.
+Creve had followed her into the hall. Moya placed herself on the settle
+beside her and leaned to support her, but she sat back rigidly with her
+eyes closed. Mrs. Creve looked on in quiet concern. “Let me take you
+into the study, Mrs. Bogardus!” the doctor commanded. “A glass of water,
+Moya, please.”
+
+“How is she? What is it? Can we do anything?” The company crowded
+around Mrs. Creve on her return to the drawing-room. She glanced at
+her brother. There was no clue there. He stood looking embarrassed and
+mystified. “It is only the warm welcome we give our friends,” she said
+aloud, smiling calmly. “Mrs. Bogardus found the room too hot. I think I
+should have succumbed myself but for that little recess in the hall.”
+
+The colonel attacked his fire. He thought he was being played with.
+Things were not right in the house, and no one, not the doctor, or even
+Annie, was frank with him. His kind face flushed as he straightened up
+to bid his guests good-night.
+
+“Well, if it's not anything serious, you think. But you'll be sure
+to let us know?” said Mrs. Dawson. “Well, good-night, Mrs. Creve.
+_Good_-night, Colonel! You'll say good-night to Moya? Do let us know if
+there is anything we can do.”
+
+Dr. Fleming was in the hall looking for his cape. The colonel touched
+him on the shoulder. “Don't be in a hurry, Doctor. Mrs. Dawson will
+excuse you.”
+
+“I don't think you need me any more to-night. Moya is with Mrs.
+Bogardus. She is not ill. The room was a little close.”
+
+“Never mind the _room_! Come in here. I want a word with you.”
+
+The doctor laughed oddly, and obeyed.
+
+“Annie, you needn't leave us.”
+
+“Why, thank you, dear boy! It's awfully good of you,” Annie mocked him.
+“But I must go and relieve Moya.”
+
+“I don't believe you are wanted in there,” said Doctor Fleming.
+
+“It's more than obvious that I'm not in here.”
+
+“Oh, do sit down,” said the teased colonel.
+
+The fire sulked and smoked a trifle with its brands apart. Doctor
+Fleming leaned forward upon his knees and regarded it thoughtfully. The
+colonel sat fondling the tongs. In a deep chair Mrs. Creve lay back and
+shaded her face with the end of her lace scarf. By her manner she might
+have been alone in the room, yet she was keenly observant of the men,
+for she felt that developments were taking place.
+
+“What is the matter with your patient upstairs, Doctor?” the colonel
+began his cross-examination. Doctor Fleming raised his eyebrows.
+
+“He's had nothing to eat to speak of for six weeks, at an altitude”--
+
+“Yes; we know all that. But he's twenty-four years old. They made an
+easy trip back, and he has been here a week, nearly. He's not as strong
+as he was when they brought him in, is he?”
+
+“That was excitement. You have to allow for the reaction. He has had
+a shock to the entire system,--nerves, digestion,--must give him time.
+Very nervous temperament too much controlled.”
+
+“Make it as you like. But I'm disappointed in his rallying powers,
+unless you are keeping something back. A boy with the grit to do what he
+did, and stand it as he did--why isn't he standing it better now?”
+
+“We are all suffering from reaction, I think,” said Mrs. Creve
+diplomatically; “and we show it by making too much of little things.
+Tom, we oughtn't to keep the doctor up here talking nonsense. He wants
+to go to bed.”
+
+“_I_'m not talking nonsense,” said the doctor. “I should be if I
+pretended there was anything mysterious about that boy's case upstairs.
+He has had a tremendous experience, say what you will; and it's pulled
+him down nervously, and every other way. He isn't ready or able to
+talk of it yet. And he knows as soon as he comes down there'll be forty
+people waiting to congratulate him and ask him how it was. I don't
+wonder he fights shy. If he could take his bride by the hand and walk
+out of the house with her I believe he could start to-morrow; but if
+there must be a wedding and a lot of fuss”--
+
+Mrs. Creve nodded her head approvingly. The three had risen and stood
+around the hearth, while the colonel put the brands delicately together
+with the skill of an old campaigner. The flames breathed again.
+
+“I don't offer this as a professional opinion,” said the doctor. “But a
+case like his is not a disease, it's a condition”--
+
+“Of the mind, perhaps?” the colonel added significantly. He glanced at
+Mrs. Creve. “You've thought about that, Doctor? The letter his mother
+consulted you about?”
+
+“Have you been worrying about that, Colonel? Why didn't you say so?
+There is nothing in it whatever. Why, it's so plain a case the other
+way--any one can see where the animus comes from!”
+
+“Now you _are_ getting mysterious, and I'm going to bed!” said Mrs.
+Creve.
+
+“No; we're coming to the point now,” said the colonel.
+
+“What is it you want Bogardus to do?” asked Doctor Fleming. “Want him to
+get up and walk out of the house as my patient did at the hospital? Dare
+say he could do it, but what then? Will you let me speak out, Colonel?
+No regard to anybody's feelings? Now, this may be gossip, but I think
+it has a bearing on the case upstairs. I'm going to have it off my mind
+anyhow! When Mrs. Bogardus came to see the guide,--Packer John,--day
+before yesterday, was it?--he asked to see her alone. Said he had
+something particular to say to her about her son. We thought it a queer
+start, but she was willing to humor him. Well, she wasn't in there above
+ten minutes, but in that time something passed between them that hit
+her very hard, no doubt of that! Now, Bogardus holds his tongue like
+a gentleman as to what happened in the woods. He doesn't mention
+his comrades' names. And the packer has disappeared; so he can't be
+questioned. Seems to me a little bird told me there was an attachment
+between one of those Bowen boys and Miss Christine?
+
+“Now we, who know what brutes brute fear will make of men, are not going
+to deny that those boys behaved badly. There are some things that can't
+be acknowledged among men, you know, if there is a hole to crawl out of.
+Cowardice is one of them. Well then, they lied, that's the whole of
+it. The little boys lied. They wrote Mrs. Bogardus a long letter from
+Lemhi,”--the doctor was reviewing now for Mrs. Creve's benefit,--“when
+they first got out. They probably judged, by the time they had had,
+that Paul and the packer would never tell their own story. Very well: it
+couldn't hurt Paul, it might be the saving of them, if they could show
+that something had queered him in the woods. They asked his mother
+if she had heard of the effects of altitude upon highly sensitive
+organizations. They recounted some instances--I will mention them later.
+One of the boys is a lawyer, isn't he? They are a pair of ingenious
+youths. Bogardus, they claim, avoided them almost from the time they
+entered the woods,--almost lived with the packer, behaved like a crank
+about the shooting. Whereas they had gone there to kill things, he made
+it a personal matter whenever they pursued this intention in a natural
+and undisguised manner. He had pangs, like a girl, when the creatures
+expired. He hated the carcases, the blood--forgive me, Mrs. Creve. In
+short, he called the whole business butchery.”
+
+“Do you make _that_ a sign of lunacy?” Mrs. Creve flung in.
+
+“I am quoting, you know.” The doctor smiled indulgently. “They declare
+that they offered--even begged--to stay behind with him, one of them, at
+least, but he rejected their company in a manner so unpleasant that they
+saw it would only be courting a quarrel to remain. And so, treating him
+perforce like a child _or_ a lunatic _pro tem._, and having but little
+time to decide in, they cut loose and hurried back for help. This is the
+tale, composed on reflection. They said nothing of this to Winslow--to
+save publicity, of course! Mrs. Bogardus's lips are doubly sealed, for
+her son's sake and for the sake of the young scamp who is to be her
+son, by and by! I saw she winced at my opinion, which I gave her
+plainly--brutally, perhaps. And she asked me particularly to say
+nothing, which I am particularly not doing.
+
+“This, I think, you will find is the bitter drop in the cup of rejoicing
+upstairs. And they are swallowing it in silence, those two, for the sake
+of the little girl and the old friends in New York. Of course she has
+kept from Paul that last shot in the back from those sweet boys! The
+packer had some unruly testimony he was bursting with, which he had
+sense enough to keep for her alone, and she doesn't want the case to
+spread. It is singular how a man in his condition could get out of
+the way as suddenly as he did. You might think he'd been taken up in a
+cloud.”
+
+“Doctor, what do you mean by such an insinuation as that?”
+
+“Colonel, have I insinuated anything? Did I say she had oiled the wheels
+of his departure?”
+
+“Come, come! You go too far!”
+
+“Not at all. That's your own construction. I merely say that I am not
+concerned about that man's disappearance. I think he'll be looked after,
+as a valuable witness should be.”
+
+“Well,” the colonel grumbled uneasily, “I don't like mysteries myself,
+and I don't like family quarrels nor skeletons at the feasts of old
+friends. But I suppose there must be a drop in every cup. What were your
+altitude cases, Doctor?”
+
+“The same old ones; poor Addison, you know. All those stories they tell
+an Easterner. As I pointed out to Mrs. Bogardus, in every case there was
+some predisposing cause. Addison had been too long in the mountains, and
+he was frightfully overworked; short of company officers. He came to me
+about an insect he said had got into his ear; buzzed, and bothered him
+day and night. The story got to the men's quarters. They joked about the
+colonel's 'bug.' I knew it was no joke. I condemned him for duty, but
+the Sioux were out. They thought at Washington no one but Addison could
+handle an Indian campaign. He was on the ground, too. So they sent him
+up higher where it was dry, with a thousand men in his hands. I knew
+he'd be a madman or a dead man in a month! There were a good many of the
+dead! By Jove! The boys who took his orders and loved the old fellow and
+knew he was sending them to their death! Well for him that he'll never
+know.”
+
+“The 'altitude of heartbreak,'” sighed Mrs. Creve. The phrase was her
+own, for many a reason deeply known unto herself, but she gave it the
+effect of a quotation before the men.
+
+“Then you think there is no 'altitude' in ours?”
+
+“No; nor 'heartbreak' either,” said the doctor, helping himself to one
+of the colonel's cigars. “But I don't say there isn't enough to keep a
+woman awake nights, and to make those young men avoid the sight of each
+other for a time. Thanks, I won't smoke now. I'm going to take a look at
+Mrs. Bogardus as I go out.”
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+
+The doctor had taken his look, feeling a trifle guilty under his
+patient's counter gaze, yet glad to have relieved the good colonel's
+anxiety. If he loved to gossip, at least he was particular as to whom he
+gossiped with.
+
+Moya closed the door after him and silently resumed her seat. Mrs.
+Bogardus helped herself to a sip of water. She was struggling with a
+dry constriction of the throat, and Moya protested a little, seeing the
+effort that it cost her to speak, even in the hoarse, unnatural tone
+which was all the voice she had left.
+
+“I want to finish now,” she said, “and never speak of this again. It was
+I who accused them first--and then I asked him:--if there was anything
+he could say in their defense, to say it, for Chrissy's sake! 'I will
+never break bread with them again,' said he,--'either Banks or Horace.
+I will not eat with them, or drink with them, or speak with them again!'
+Think of it! How are we to live? How are they to inhabit the same
+city? He thinks I have been weak. I am weak! The only power I have is
+through--the property. Banks will never marry a poor girl. But that
+would be a dear-bought victory. Let her keep what faith in him she can.
+No; in families, the ones who can control themselves have to give in--to
+those who can't. If you argue with Christine she simply gives way, and
+then she gets hysterical, and then she is ill. It's a disease. Mothers
+know how their children--Christine was marked--marked with trouble! I
+am thankful she has any mind at all. She needs me more than Paul does. I
+cannot be parted from my power to help her--such as it is.”
+
+“When she is Banks Bowen's wife she will need you more than ever!” said
+Moya.
+
+“She will. I could prevent the marriage, but I am afraid to. I am
+afraid! So, as the family is cut in two--in three, for I--” Mrs. Bogardus
+stopped and moistened her lips again. “So--I think you and Paul had
+better make your arrangements and go as soon as you can wherever it
+suits you, without minding about the rest of us.”
+
+Moya gave a little sobbing laugh. “You don't expect me to make the first
+move!”
+
+“Doesn't he say anything to you--anything at all?”
+
+“He is too ill.”
+
+“He is not ill!” Mrs. Bogardus denied it fiercely. “Who says he is ill?
+He is starved and frozen. He is just out of the grave. You must be good
+to him, Moya. Warm him, comfort him! You can give him the life he needs.
+Your hands are as soft as little birds. They comfort even me. Oh, don't
+you understand!”
+
+“Of course I understand!” Moya answered, her face aflame. “But I cannot
+marry Paul. He has got to marry me.”
+
+“What nonsense that is! People say to a girl: 'You can't be too cold
+before you are married or too kind after!' That does not mean you and
+Paul. If you are not kind to him _now_, you will make a great mistake.”
+
+“He is not thinking of marriage,” said Moya. “Something weighs on him
+all the time. I cannot ask him questions. If he wanted to tell me he
+would. That is why I come downstairs and leave him. But he won't come
+down! Is it not strange? If we could believe such things I would say a
+Presence came with, him out of that place. It is with him when I find
+him alone. It is in his eyes when he looks at me. It is not something
+past and done with, it is here--now--in this house! _What_ is it? What
+do _you_ believe?”
+
+The eyes she sought to question hardened under her gaze. Here, too, was
+a veil. Mrs. Bogardus sat with her hands clasped in her lap. She was
+motionless, but the creaking of her silks could be heard as her bosom
+rose and fell. After a moment she said: “Paul's tray is on the table in
+the dining-room. Will you take it when you go up?”
+
+Moya altered her own manner instantly. “But you?” she hesitated. “I must
+not crowd you out of all your mother privileges. You have handed over
+everything to me.”
+
+“A mother's privilege is to see herself no longer needed. I can do
+nothing more for my son”--her smile was hard--“except take care of his
+money.”
+
+“Paul's mother!”
+
+“My dear, do you suppose we mind? It is a very great privilege to be
+allowed to step aside when your work is done.”
+
+“Paul's _mother!_” Moya insisted.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose. “You don't remember your own mother, my dear. You
+have an exaggerated idea of the--the importance of mothers. They are
+only a temporary arrangement.” She put out her hands and the girl's
+cheek touched hers for an instant; then she straightened herself and
+walked calmly out of the room. Moya remained a little longer, afraid
+to follow her. “If she would not smile! If she would do anything but
+smile!”
+
+Paul was walking about his room, half an hour later, when Moya stopped
+outside his door. She placed the tray on a table in the hall. The door
+was opened from within. Paul had heard his mother go up before, heard
+her pause at the stairs, and, after a silence, enter her own room.
+
+“She knows that I know,” he said to himself. “That knowledge will be
+always between us; we can never look each other in the face again.” To
+Moya he endeavored to speak lightly.
+
+“It sounded very gay downstairs to-night. You must have had a houseful.”
+
+“I have been with your mother the last hour,” answered Moya, vaguely on
+the defensive. Since Paul's return there had been little of the old free
+intercourse in words between them, and without this outlet their mutual
+consciousness became acute. Often as they saw each other during the day,
+the keenest emotion attached to the first meeting of their eyes.
+
+Paul was unnerved by his sudden recall from death to life. Its contrasts
+were overwhelming to his starved senses: from the dirt and dearth and
+grimy despair of his burial hutch in the snow to this softly lighted,
+close-curtained room, warm and sweet with flowers; from the gaunt,
+unshaven spectre of the packer and his ghostly revelations, to Moya,
+meekly beautiful, her bright eyes lowered as she trailed her soft skirts
+across the carpet; Moya seated opposite, silent, conscious of him
+in every look and movement. Her lovely hands lay in her lap, and the
+thought of holding them in his made him tremble; and when he recalled
+the last time he had kissed her he grew faint. He longed to throw
+off this exhausting self-restraint, but feared to betray his helpless
+passion which he deemed an insult to his soul's worship of her.
+
+And she was thinking: “Is this all it is going to mean--his coming
+home--our being together? And I was almost his wife!”
+
+“So it was my mother you were talking to in the study? I thought I heard
+a man's voice.”
+
+“It was the doctor. Your mother was not quite herself this evening. He
+came in to see her, but he does not think she is ill. 'Rest and change,'
+he says she needs.”
+
+Paul gave the words a certain depth of consideration. “Are you as well
+as usual, Moya?”
+
+“Oh, I am always well,” she answered cheerlessly. “I seem to thrive on
+anything--everything,” she corrected herself, and blushed.
+
+The blush made him gasp. “You are more beautiful than ever. I had
+forgotten that beauty is a physical fact. The sight of you confuses me.”
+
+“I always told you you were morbid.” Moya's happy audacity returned.
+“Now, how long are you going to sit and think about that?”
+
+“Do I sit and think about things?” His reluctant, boyish smile, which
+all women loved, captured his features for a moment. “It is very rude of
+me.”
+
+“Suppose I should ask you what you are thinking about?”
+
+“Ah! I am afraid you would say 'morbid' again.”
+
+“Try me! You ought to let me know at once if you are going to break out
+in any new form of morbidness.”
+
+“I wish it might amuse you, but it wouldn't. Let me put you a
+case--seriously.”
+
+Moya smiled. “Once we were serious--ages ago. Do you remember?”
+
+“Do I remember!”
+
+“Well? You are you, and I am I, still.”
+
+“Yes; and as full of fateful surprises for each other.”
+
+“I bar 'fateful'! That word has the true taint of morbidness.”
+
+“But you can't 'bar' fate. Listen: this is a supposing, you know.
+Suppose that an accident had happened to our leader on the way home--to
+your Lieutenant Winslow, we'll say”--
+
+“_My_ lieutenant!”
+
+“Your father's--the regiment's--Lieutenant Winslow 'of ours.' Suppose we
+had brought him back in a state to need a surgeon's help; and without a
+word to any one he should get up and walk out of the hospital with his
+hurts not healed, and no one knew why, or where he had gone? There would
+be a stir about it, would there not? And if such a poor spectre of a
+bridegroom as I were allowed to join the search, no one would think it
+strange, or call it a slight to his bride if the fellow went?”
+
+“I take your case,” said Moya with a beaming look. “You want to go after
+that poor man who suffered with you.”
+
+“Who went with us to save us from our own headstrong folly, and would
+have died there alone”--
+
+“Yes; oh, yes!--before you begin to think about yourself, or me. Because
+he is nobody 'of ours,' and no one seems to feel responsible, and we go
+on talking and laughing just the same!”
+
+“Do they talk of this downstairs?”
+
+“To-night they were talking--oh, with such philosophy! But how came you
+to know it?”
+
+Paul did not answer this question. “Then”--he drew a long breath,--“then
+you could bear it, dear?--the comment, even if they called it a slight
+to you and a piece of quixotic lunacy? Others will not take my case,
+remember.”
+
+“What others?”
+
+“They will say: 'Why doesn't he send a better man? He is no trailer.' It
+is true. Money might find him and bring him back, but all the money
+in the world could not teach him to trust his friends. There is a
+misunderstanding here which is too bitter to be borne. It is hard to
+explain,--the intimacy that grows up between men placed as we were. But
+as soon as help reached us, the old lines were drawn. I belonged with
+the officers, he with the men. We could starve together, but we could
+not eat together. He accepted it--put himself on that basis at once.
+He would not come up here as the guest of the Post. He is done with us
+because he thinks we are done with him. And he knows that I must know
+his occupation is gone. He will never guide nor pack a mule again.”
+
+“Your mother and my father, they will understand. What do the others
+matter?”
+
+“I must tell you, dear, that I do not propose to tell them--especially
+them--why I go. For I am going. I must go! There are reasons I cannot
+explain.” He sighed, and looked wildly at Moya, whose smile was becoming
+mechanical. “I hate the excuse, but it will have to be said that I go
+for a change--for my health. My health! Great God! But it's 'orders,'
+dear.”
+
+“Your orders are my orders. You are never going anywhere again without
+me,” said Moya slowly. Her smile was gone. She stood up and faced him,
+pale and beautiful. He rose, too, and stooped above her, taking her
+hands and gazing into her full blue eyes arched like the eyes of angels.
+
+“I thought she was a girl! But she is a woman,” he said in a voice of
+caressing wonder. “A woman, and not afraid!”
+
+“I am afraid. I will not be left--I will not be left again! Oh, you
+won't take me, even when I offer myself to you!”
+
+“Don't--don't tempt me!” Paul caught her to him with a groan. “You don't
+know me well enough to be afraid of _me!_”
+
+“You! You will not let me know you.”
+
+“Oh, hush, dear--hush, my darling! This isn't thinking. We must think
+for our lives. I must take care of you, precious. We don't know where
+this search may take us, or where it will end, or what the end will be.”
+ He kissed the sleeve of her dress, and put her gently from him, so that
+he could look her in the eyes. She gave him her full pure gaze.
+
+“It is the poor man again. You said he would spoil our lives.”
+
+“He is _our_ poor man. You didn't go out of your way to find him. And
+your way is mine.”
+
+“It is so heavenly to be convinced! Who taught you to see things at a
+glance,--things I have toiled and bungled over and don't know now if I
+am right! _Who_ taught you?”
+
+“Do you think I stood still while you were away! Oh, my heart was sifted
+out by little pieces.”
+
+“You shall sift mine. You shall tell me what to do. For I know nothing!
+Not even if I may dare to take this angel at her word!”
+
+“I knew you would not take me!” the girl whispered wildly. “But I shall
+go.”
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+
+“Your tray! It is after ten o'clock. Your 'angel' is a bad nurse.” Moya
+brought the tray and set it on a little stand beside Paul's chair. He
+watched her shy, excited preparations as she moved about, conscious of
+his eyes. The saucepan staggered upon the coals and they both sprang
+to save the broth, and pouring it she burnt her thumb a little, and he
+behaved quite like any ordinary young man. They were ecstatic to find
+themselves at ease with each other once more. Moya became disrespectful
+to her charge; such sweet daring looked from her eyes into his as made
+him riotous with joy.
+
+“Won't you take some with me?” He turned the cup towards her and watched
+her as she sipped.
+
+“'It was roast with fire,'” he pronounced softly and dreamily, 'because
+of the dreadful pains. It was to be eaten with bitter herbs'”--
+
+“What _are_ you saying?”--
+
+“'To remind them of their bondage.'”
+
+“I object to your talking about bondage and bitter herbs when you are
+eating aunt Annie's delicious consommé.”
+
+He gravely sipped in turn, still with his eyes in hers. “Can you
+remember what you were doing on the second of November?”
+
+“Can I remember!”
+
+“Yes; tell me. I have a reason for asking.”
+
+“Tell _me_ the reason first.”
+
+“May we have a little more fire, darling? It gives me chills to think of
+that day. It was the last of my wretched pot-hunting. There was nothing
+to hunt for--the game had all gone down, but I did not know that.
+Somewhere in the woods, a long way from the cabin, it began to occur to
+me that I should not make shelter that night. A fool and his strength
+are soon parted. It was a little hollow with trees all around so deep
+that in the distance their trunks closed in like a wall. Snow can make
+a wonderful silence in the woods. I seemed to hear the thoughts of
+everybody I loved in the world outside. There had been a dullness over
+me for weeks. I could not make it true that I had ever been happy--that
+you really loved me. All that part of my life was a dream. Now, in that
+silence suddenly I felt you! I knew that you cared. It was cruel to
+die so if you did love me! It brought the 'pang and spur'! I fought the
+drowsiness that was taking away my pain. I had begun to lean on it as
+a comfortable breast. I woke up and tore myself away from that siren
+sleep. It was my darling,--her love that saved me. Without that thought
+of you, I never would have stirred again. Where were you, what were you
+thinking that brought you so close to me?”
+
+“Ah,” said Moya in a whisper. “I was in that room across the hall,
+alone. They were good to me that day; they made excuses and left me to
+myself. In the afternoon a box came,--from poor father,--white roses,
+oh, sweet and cold as snow! I took them up to that room and forced
+myself to go in. It was where my things were kept, the trunks half
+packed, all the drawers and closets full. And my wedding dress laid
+out on the bed. We girls used to go up there at first and look at the
+things, and there was laughing and joking. Sometimes I went up alone and
+tried on my hats before the glass, and thought where I should be when
+I wore them, and--Well! all that stopped. I dreaded to pass the door.
+Everything was left just as it was; the shutters open, the poor dress
+covered with a sheet on the bed. The room was a death-chamber. I went
+in. I carried the roses to my dead. I drew down the sheet and put my
+face in that empty dress. It was my selfish self laid out there--the
+girl who knew just what she wanted and was going to get it if she could.
+Happiness I dared not even pray for--only remembrance--everlasting
+remembrance. That we might know each other again when no more life
+was left to part us--_my_ life. It seemed long to wait, but that was
+my--marriage vow. I gave you all I could, remembrance, faith till
+death.”
+
+“Then you are my own!” said Paul, his face transformed. “God was our
+witness. Life of my life--for life and death!” Solemnly he took a
+bridegroom's kiss from her lips.
+
+“How do _you_ know that it is life that parts?”
+
+“Speak so I can understand you!” Moya cried. “Ah, if I might! A man
+must not have secrets from his wife. Secrets are destruction, don't you
+think?”
+
+Moya waited in silence.
+
+“Now we come to this bondage!” He let the words fall like a load from
+his breast. “This is a hideous thing to tell you, but it will cut us
+apart unless you know it. It compels me to do things.” He paused, and
+they heard a door down the passage open,--the door of his mother's room.
+A step came forward a few paces. Silence; it retreated, and the door
+closed again stealthily.
+
+“She has not slept,” Paul murmured. “Poor soul, poor soul! Now, in what
+I am going to say, please listen to the facts, Moya dear. Try not to
+infer anything from my way of putting things. I shall contradict myself,
+but the facts do that.
+
+“The--the guide--John, we will call him, had a long fever in the woods.
+It would come on worse at night, and then--he talked--words, of a
+shocking intimacy. They say that nothing the mind has come in contact
+with under strong emotion is ever lost, no matter how long in the past.
+It will return under similar excitement. This man had kept stored away
+in his mind, under some such pressure, the words of a woman's message,
+a woman in great distress. Over and over, as his pulse rose, countless
+times he would repeat that message. I went out of the hut at night and
+stood outside in the snow not to hear it, but I knew it as well as he
+did before we got through. Now, this was what he said, word for word.
+
+“'Do not blame me, my dear husband. I have held out in this place as
+long as I can. Don't wait for anything. Don't worry about anything. Come
+back to me with your bare hands. Come!--to your loving Emmy!'
+
+“'Come, come!' he would shout out loud. Then in another voice he would
+whisper, 'Come back to me with your bare hands!' And he would stare at
+his hands and his face would grow awful.”
+
+Moya drew a long sigh of scared attention.
+
+“Those words were all over the cabin walls. I heard them and saw them
+everywhere. There was no rest from them. I could have torn the roof down
+to stop his talking, but the words it was not possible to forget. And
+where was the horror of it? Was not this what we had asked, for years,
+to know?”
+
+“You need not explain to me,” said Moya, shuddering.
+
+“Yes; but all one's meanest motives were unearthed in a place like that.
+Would I have felt so with a different man? Some one less uncouth? Was it
+the man himself, or his”--
+
+“Paul, if anything could make you a snob, it would be your deadly fear
+of being one!”
+
+“Well, if they had found us then, God knows how that fight would have
+ended. But I won it--when there was nothing left to fight for. I owned
+him--in the grave. We owned each other and took a bashful sort of
+comfort in it, after we had shuffled off the 'Mister' and 'John.' I grew
+quite fond of him, when we were so near death that his English didn't
+matter, or his way of eating. I thought him a very remarkable man,
+you remember, when he was just material for description. He was, he is
+remarkable. Most remarkable in this, he was not ashamed of his son.”
+
+“Do please let that part alone. I want to know what he was doing, hiding
+away by himself all these years? I believe he is an impostor!”
+
+“We came to that, of course; though somehow I forgave him before he
+could answer the question. In the long watch beside him I got very close
+to him. It was not possible to believe him a deserter, a sneak. Can you
+take my word for his answer? It was given as a death-bed confession and
+he is living.”
+
+“I would take your word for anything except yourself!” Moya did not
+smile, or think what she was saying.
+
+“That answer cleared him, in my mind, with something over to the credit
+of blind, stupid heroism. He is not a clever man. But, speaking as one
+who has teen face to face with the end of things, I can say that I know
+of no act of his that should prevent his returning to his family--if he
+had a family--not even his deserting them for twenty years. _If_, I say!
+
+“When the soldiers found us we were too far gone to realize the issue
+that was upon us. He was the first to take it in. It was on the march
+home, at night, he touched me and began speaking low in our corner of
+the tent. 'As we came in here, so we go out again, and so we stay,' he
+said. I told him it could not be. To suppress what I had learned would
+make the whole of life a lie, a coward's lie. That knowledge belonged to
+my mother. I must render it up to her. To do otherwise would be to treat
+her like a child and to meddle with the purposes of God. 'No honest man
+robs another of his secrets,' he said. He was very much excited. She
+was the only one now to be considered--and what did I know about God's
+purposes? He refused to take my scruples into consideration, except such
+as concerned her. But, after a long argument, very painful, weak as we
+were and whispering in the dark, he yielded this much. If I were bent on
+digging up the dead, as he called it, it must be done in such a way as
+to leave her free. Free she was in law, and she must be given a chance
+to claim her freedom without talk or publicity. Absolute secrecy he
+demanded of me in the mean time. I begged him to see how unfair it was
+to her to bring her face to face with such a discovery without one word
+of preparation, of excuse for him. She would condemn him on the very
+fact of his being alive. So she would, he said, if she were going
+to judge him; not if she felt towards him as--as a wife feels to her
+husband. It was that he wanted to know. It was that or nothing he would
+have from her. 'Bring me face to face with her alone, and as sudden as
+you like. If she knows me, I am the man. And if she wants me back, she
+will know me--and that way I'll come and no other way.' Was not that
+wonderful? A gentleman could hardly have improved on that. Whatever
+feeling he might be supposed to have towards her in the matter we
+could never touch upon. But I think he had his hopes. That decision was
+hanging over us--and I trembled for her. Day before yesterday, was it, I
+persuaded her to see the sick guide. She wondered why I was faint as
+she kissed me good-by. I ought to have prepared her. It was a horrible
+snare. And yet he meant it all in delicacy, a passionate consideration
+for her. Poor fool. How could I prepare _him!_ How could he keep
+pace with the changes in her! After all, it is externals that make
+us,--habits, clothes. Great God! Things you could not speak of to a
+naked soul like him. But he would have it 'straight,' he said--and
+straight he got it. And he is gone; broke away like an animal out of
+a trap. And I am going to find him, to see at least that he has a roof
+over his head. God knows, he may not die for years!”
+
+“She has got years before her too.”
+
+“She!--What am I saying! We have plunged into those damnable inferences
+and I haven't given you the facts. Wait. I shall contradict all this in
+a moment. I thought, she must have done this for her children. She
+must be given another chance. And I approached the thing on my very
+knees--not to let her know that I knew, only to hint that I was not
+unprepared, had guessed--could meet it, and help her to meet the
+problems it would bring into our lives. Help her! She stood and faced
+me as if I had insulted her. 'I have been your father's widow for
+twenty-two years. If that fact is not sacred to you, it is to me. Never
+dare to speak of this to me again!'”
+
+“Ah,” said Moya in a long-drawn sigh, “then she did not”--
+
+“Oh, she did, explicitly! For I went on to speak of it. It was my last
+chance. I asked her how she--we--could possibly go through with it; how
+with this knowledge between us we could look each other in the face--and
+go on living.
+
+“'Put this hallucination out of your mind,' she said. 'That man and I
+are strangers.'”
+
+“Was that--would you call that a lie?” asked Moya fearfully.
+
+“You can see your answer in her face. I do not say that hers was the
+first lie. It must always be foolish, I think, to evade the facts of
+life as we make them for ourselves. He refused to meet his facts, from
+the noblest motives;--but now I'm tangling you all up again! Rest your
+head here, darling. This is such a business! It is a pity I cannot tell
+you his whole story. Half the meaning of all this is lost. But--here is
+a solemn declaration in writing, signed John Hagar, in which this man we
+are speaking of says that Adam Bogardus was his partner, who died in the
+woods and was buried by his hand; that he knew his story, all the scenes
+and circumstances of his life in many a long talk they had together, as
+well as he knew his own. In his delirium he must have confused himself
+with his old partner, and half in dreams, he said, half in the crazy
+satisfaction of pretending to himself he had a son, he allowed the
+delusion to go on; saw it work upon me, and half feared it, half
+encouraged it. Afterwards he was frightened at the thought of meeting
+my mother, who would know him for an impostor. His seeming scruples were
+fear of exposure, not consideration for her. This was why he guarded
+their interview so carefully. 'No harm's been done,' he says, 'if you'll
+act now like a sensible man. I'll be disappointed in you if you make
+your mother any trouble about this. You've treated me as square as any
+man could treat another. Remember, I say so, and think as kindly as
+you can of a harmless, loony old impostor'--and he signs himself 'John
+Hagar,'--which shows again how one lie leads to another. We go to find
+'John Hagar.'”
+
+“Have you shown your mother this letter? You have not? Paul, you will
+not rob her of her just defense!”
+
+“I will not heap coals of fire on her head! This letter simply completes
+his renunciation, and he meant it for her defense. But when a man signs
+himself 'John Hagar' in the handwriting of my father, it shows that
+somebody is not telling the truth. I used to pore over the old farm
+records in my father's hand at Stone Ridge in the old account books
+stowed away in places where a boy loves to poke and pry. I know it as
+well as I know yours. Do you suppose she would not know it? When a man
+writes as few letters as he does, the handwriting does not change.” Paul
+laid the letter upon the coals. “It is the only witness against her, but
+it loses the case.”
+
+“She never could have loved him. I never believed she did!” said Moya.
+
+“She thinks she can live out this deep-down, deliberate--But it will
+kill her, Moya. Her life is ended from this on. How could I have
+driven her to that excruciating choice! I ought to have listened to him
+altogether or not at all. There is a hell for meddlers, and the ones who
+meddle for conscience' sake are the deepest damned, I think.”
+
+Moya came and wreathed her arm in his, and they paced the room in
+silence. At length she said, “If we go to find John Hagar, shall we not
+be meddling again? A man who respects a woman's freedom must love his
+own. It is the last thing left him. Don't hunt him down. I believe
+nothing could hurt him now like seeing you again.”
+
+“He shall not see me unless he wants to, but he shall know where I stand
+on this question of the Impostor. It shall be managed so that even he
+can see I am protecting her. No, call himself what he will, the tie
+between him and me is another of those facts.”
+
+“But do you love him, Paul?”
+
+“Oh--I cannot forget him! He is--just as he used to be--'poor father out
+there in the cold.' We must find him and comfort him somehow.”
+
+“For our own peace of mind? Forgive me for arguing when everything is so
+difficult. But he is a man--a brave man who would rather be forever out
+in the cold than be a burden. Do not rob him of his right to _be_ John
+Hagar if he wants to, for the sake of those he loves. You do not tell me
+it was love, but I am sure it was, in some mistaken way, that drove him
+into exile. Only love as pure as his can be our excuse for dragging him
+back. He did not want shelter and comfort from her. Only one thing. Have
+we got that to give him?”
+
+“Well then, I go for my own sake--it is a physical necessity; and I go
+for hers. She has put it out of her own power to help him. It will ease
+her a little to know I am trying to reach him in his forlorn disguise.”
+
+“But you were not going to tell her?”
+
+“In words, no. But she will understand. There is a strange clairvoyance
+between us, as if we were accomplices in a crime!”
+
+Moya reflected silently. This search which Paul had set his heart upon
+would equally work his own cure, she saw. Nor could she now imagine for
+themselves any lover's paradise inseparable from this moral tragedy,
+which she saw would be fibre of their fibre, life of their life. A
+family is an organism; one part may think to deny or defy another, but
+with strange pains the subtle union exerts itself; distance cannot break
+the thread.
+
+They kissed each other solemnly like little children on the eve of a
+long journey full of awed expectancy.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stood holding her door ajar as Moya passed on her way
+downstairs. “You are very late,” she uttered hoarsely. “Is nothing
+settled yet?”
+
+“Everything!” Moya hesitated and forced a smile, “everything but where
+we shall go. We will start--and decide afterwards.”
+
+“You go together? That is right. Moya, you have a genius for happiness!”
+
+“I wish I had a genius for making people sleep who lie awake hours in
+the night thinking about other people!”
+
+“If you mean me, people of my age need very little sleep.”
+
+“May I kiss you good-night, Paul's mother?”
+
+“You may kiss me because I am Paul's mother, not because I do not
+sleep.”
+
+Moya's lips touched a cheek as white and almost as cold as the frosted
+window-panes through which the moon was glimmering. She thought of the
+icy roses on her wedding dress.
+
+Downstairs her father was smoking his bedtime cigar. Mrs. Creve, very
+sleepy and cosy and flushed, leaned over the smouldering bed of coals.
+She held out her plump, soft hand to Moya.
+
+“Come here and be scolded! We have been scolding you steadily for the
+last hour.”
+
+“If you want that young man to get his strength back, you'd better not
+keep him up talking half the night,” the colonel growled softly. “Do you
+see what time it is?”
+
+Moya knelt and leaned her head against her father. She reached one hand
+to Mrs. Creve. They did not speak again till her weak moment had passed.
+“It will be very soon,” she said, pressing the warm hand that stroked
+her own. “You will help me pack, aunt Annie; and then you'll stay--with
+father? I know you are glad to have me out of the way at last!”
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+
+Because they had set forth on a grim and sorrowful quest, it need not
+be supposed that Paul and Moya were a pair of sorrowful pilgrims. It was
+their wedding journey. At the outset Moya had said: “We are doing the
+best we know. For what we don't know, let us leave it and not brood.”
+
+They did not enter at once upon the more eccentric stages of the search.
+They went by way of the Great Northern to Portland, descending from snow
+to roses and drenching rains. At Pendleton, which is at the junction
+of three great roads, Paul sent tracers out through express agents
+and train officials along the remotest slender feeders of these lines.
+Through the same agents it was made known that for any service rendered
+or expense incurred on behalf of the person described, his friends would
+hold themselves gratefully responsible.
+
+At Portland, Paul searched the steamer lists and left confidential
+orders in the different transportation offices; and Moya wrote to his
+mother--a woman's letter, every page shining with happiness and as free
+from apparent forethought as a running brook.
+
+They returned by the Great Northern and Lake Coeur d'Alene, stopping
+over at Fort Sherman to visit Mrs. Creve, who was giddy with joy
+over the wholesome change in Paul. She, too, wrote a woman's letter
+concerning that visit, to the colonel, which cleared a crowd of shadows
+from his lonely hearth.
+
+Thence again to Pendleton came the seekers, and Paul gathered in his
+lines, but found nothing; so cast them forth again. But through all
+these distant elaborations of the search, in his own mind he saw the
+old man creeping away by some near, familiar trail and lying hid in some
+warm valley in the hills, his prison and his home.
+
+It was now the last week in March. The travelers' bags were in the
+office, the carriage at the door, when a letter--pigeon-holed and
+forgotten since received some three weeks before--was put into Paul's
+hand.
+
+I run up against your ad. in the Silver City Times [the communication
+began]. If you haven't found your man yet, maybe I can put you onto
+the right lead. I'm driving a jerky on the road from Mountain Home to
+Oriana, but me and the old man we don't jibe any too well. I've got
+a sort of disgust on me. Think I'll quit soon and go to mining. Jimmy
+Breen he runs the Ferry, he can tell you all I know. Fifty miles from
+Mountain Home good road can make it in one day. Yours Respecfully,
+
+J. STRATTON.
+
+It was in following up this belated clue that the pilgrims had come to
+the Ferry inn, crossing by team from valley to valley, cutting off a
+great bend of the Oregon Short Line as it traverses the Snake River
+desert; those bare high plains escarped with basalt bluffs that
+open every fifty miles or so to let a road crawl down to some little
+rope-ferry supported by sheep-herders, ditch contractors, miners,
+emigrants, ranchmen, all the wild industries of a country in the dawn of
+enterprise.
+
+Business at the Ferry had shrunk since the railroad went through. The
+house-staff consisted of Jimmy Breen, a Chinese cook of the bony, tartar
+breed, sundry dogs, and a large bachelor cat that mooned about the empty
+piazzas. In a young farming country, hungry for capital, Jimmy could not
+do a cash business, but everything was grist that came to his mill; and
+he was quick to distinguish the perennial dead beat from a genuine case
+of hard luck.
+
+“That's a good axe ye have there,” pointing suggestively to a new one
+sticking out of the rear baggage of an emigrant outfit. “Ye better l'ave
+that with me for the dollar that's owing me. If ye have money to buy
+new axes ye can't be broke entirely.” Or: “Slip the halter on that calf
+behind there. The mother hasn't enough to keep it alive. There's har'ly
+a dollar's wort' of hide on its bones, but I'll take it to save it
+droppin' on the road.” Or, he would try sarcasm: “Well, we'll be
+shuttin' her down in the spring. Then ye can go round be Walter's Ferry
+and see if they'll trust ye there.” Or: “Why wasn't ye workin' on the
+Ditch last winter? Settin' smokin' your poipe in the tules, the wife and
+young ones packin' sagebrush to kape ye warm!”
+
+On the morning after their distinguished arrival, Jimmy's guests came
+down late to a devastated breakfast-table. Little heaps of crumbs here
+and there showed where earlier appetites had had their destined hour and
+gone their way. At an impartial distance from the top and the foot of
+the table stood the familiar group of sauce and pickle bottles, every
+brand dear to the cowboy, including the “surrup-jug” adhering to its
+saucer. There was a fresh-gathered bunch of wild phlox by Moya's plate
+in a tumbler printed round the edge with impressions of a large moist
+male thumb.
+
+“Catchee plenty,” the Chinaman grinned, pointing to the plain outside
+where the pale sage-brush quivered stiffly in the wind. “Bymbye plenty
+come. Pretty col' now.”
+
+“You'll be getting a large hump on yourself, Han, me boy. 'T is a cash
+crowd we have here--and a lady, by me sowl!” Thus Jimmy exhorted his
+household. Times were looking up. They would be a summer resort before
+the Ditch went through; it should be mentioned in the Ditch company's
+prospectus. Jimmy had put his savings into land-office fees and had a
+hopeful interest in the Ditch.
+
+A spur in the head is worth two in the heel. Without a word from “the
+boss” Han had found time to shave and powder and polish his brown
+forehead and put on his whitest raiment over his baggiest trousers.
+There was loud panic among the fowls in the corral. The cat had
+disappeared; the jealous dogs hung about the doors and were pushed out
+of the way by friends of other days.
+
+Seated by the office fire, Paul was conferring with Jimmy, who was
+happy with a fresh pipe and a long story to tell to a patient and paying
+listener. He rubbed the red curls back from his shining forehead,
+took the pipe from his teeth, and guided a puff of smoke away from his
+auditor.
+
+“I seen him settin' over there on his blankets,”--he pointed with
+his pipe to the opposite shore plainly visible through the office
+windows,--“but he niver hailed me, so I knowed he was broke. Some, whin
+they're broke, they holler all the louder. Ye would think they had an
+appointment wit' the Governor and he sint his car'iage to meet them. But
+he was as humble, he was, as a yaller dog.--Out! Git out from here--the
+pack of yez! Han, shut the dure an' drive thim bloody curs off the
+piazzy. They're trackin' up the whole place.--As I was sayin', sor,
+there he stayed hunched up in the wind, waitin' on the chanst of a team
+comin', and I seen he was an ould daddy. I stud the sight of him as long
+as I cud, me comin' and goin'. He fair wore me out. So I tuk the boat
+over for 'im. One of his arrums he couldn't lift from the shoulder, and
+I give him a h'ist wit' his bundle. Faith, it was light! 'Twinty years
+a-getherin',' he cackles, slappin' it. 'Ye've had harrud luck,' I says.
+''T is not much of a sheaf ye are packin' home.' 'That's as ye look at
+it,' he says.
+
+“I axed him what way was he goin'. He was thinking to get a lift as far
+as Oriana, if the stages was runnin' on that road. 'Then ye 'll have to
+bide here till morning,' I says, 'for ye must have met the stage
+goin' the other way.' 'I met nothing,' says he; 'I come be way of the
+bluffs,'--which is a strange way for one man travelin' afoot.
+
+“The grub was on the table, and I says, 'Sit by and fill yourself up.'
+His cheeks was fallin' in wit' the hunger. With that his poor ould eye
+begun to water. 'Twas one weak eye he had that was weepin' all the time.
+'I've got out of the habit of reg'lar aitin',' he says. 'It don't take
+much to kape me goin'.' 'Niver desave yourself, sor! 'T is betther feed
+three hungry men than wan “no occasion.”' His appetite it grew on him
+wit' every mouthful. There was a boundless emptiness to him. He lay
+there on the bench and slep' the rest of the evening, and I left him
+there wit' a big fire at night. And the next day at noon we h'isted him
+up beside of Joe Stratton. A rip-snorter of a wind was blowin' off the
+Silver City peaks. His face was drawed like a winter apple, but he wint
+off happy. I think he was warm inside of himself.”
+
+“Did you ask him his name?”
+
+“Sure. Why not? John Treagar he called himself.”
+
+“Treagar? Hagar, you mean!”
+
+“It was Treagar he said.”
+
+“John Hagar is the man I am looking for.”
+
+“Treagar--Hagar? 'T is comin' pretty close to it.”
+
+“About what height and build was he?”
+
+“He was not to say a tall man; and he wasn't so turrible short neither.
+His back was as round as a Bible. A kind of pepper and saltish beard he
+had, and his hair was blacker than his beard but white in streaks.”
+
+“A _dark_ man, was he?”
+
+“He would be a _dark_ man if he was younger.”
+
+“The man I want is blue-eyed.”
+
+“His eyes was blue--a kind of washed-out gray that maybe was blue wanst;
+and one of them always weepin' wit' the cold.”
+
+“And light brown hair mixed with gray, like sand and ashes--mostly
+ashes; and a thin straggling beard, thinner on the cheeks? A high head
+and a tall stooping figure--six feet at least; hands with large joints
+and a habit of picking at them when”--
+
+“Ye are goin' too fast for me now, sor. He was not that description of
+a man, nayther the height nor the hair of him. Sure't is a pity for ye
+comin' this far, and him not the man at all. Faith, I wish I was the man
+meself! I wonder at Joe Stratton anyhow! He's a very hasty man, is Joe.
+He jumps in wit' both feet, so he does. I could have told ye that.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Moya, always helplessly natural, and now very tired as well, when Paul
+described with his usual gravity this anti-climax, fell below all the
+dignities at once in a burst of childish giggling. Paul looked on
+with an embarrassed smile, like a puzzled affectionate dog at the
+incomprehensible mirth of humans. Paul was certainly deficient in humor
+and therefore in breadth. But what woman ever loved her lover the less
+for having discovered his limitations? Humor runs in families of the
+intenser cultivation. The son of the soil remains serious in the face of
+life's and nature's ironies.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+THE STAR IN THE EAST
+
+So the search paused, while the searchers rested and revised their
+plans. Spring opened in the valley as if for them alone. There were
+mornings “proud and sweet,” when the humblest imagination could have
+pictured Aurora and her train in the jocund clouds that trooped along
+the sky,--wind-built processions which the wind dispersed. Wild flowers
+spread so fast they might have been spilled from the rainbow scarf of
+Iris fleeting overhead. The river was in flood, digging its elbows into
+its muddy banks. The willow and wild-rose thickets stooped and washed
+their spring garments in its tide.
+
+Primeval life and love were all around them. Meadow larks flung their
+brief jets of song into the sunlight; the copses rustled with wings;
+wood-doves cooed from the warm sunny hollows, and the soft booming of
+their throaty call was like a beating in the air,--the pulse of spring.
+They had found their Garden. Humanity in the valley passed before them
+in forms as interesting and as alien as the brother beasts to Adam:
+the handsome driver of the jerky, Joe Stratton's successor, who sat at
+dinner opposite and combed his flowing mustache with his fork in a lazy,
+dandified way; the darkened faces of sheep-herders enameled by sun and
+wind, their hair like the winter coats of animals; the slow-eyed farmers
+with the appetites of horses; the spring recruits for the ranks of labor
+footing it to distant ranches, each with his back-load of bedding, and
+the dust of three counties on his garments.
+
+The sweet forces of Nature shut out, for a season, Paul's _cri du
+coeur_. One may keep a chamber sacred to one's sadder obligations and
+yet the house be filled with joy. Further ramifications of the search
+were mapped out with Jimmy's indifferent assistance. For good reasons of
+his own, Jimmy did little to encourage an early start. He would explain
+that his maps were of ancient date and full of misinformation as to
+stage routes. “See that now! The stages was pulled off that line five
+year ago, on account of the railroad cuttin' in on them. Ye couldn't
+make it wid'out ye took a camp outfit. There's ne'er a station left, and
+when ye come to it, it's ruins ye'll find. A chimbly and a few rails,
+if the mule-skinners hasn't burned them. 'Tis a country very devoid
+of fuel; sagebrush and grease-wood, and a wind, bedad! that blows the
+grass-seeds into the next county.”
+
+When these camping-trips were proposed to Moya, she hesitated and
+responded languidly; but when Paul suggested leaving her even for a day,
+her fears fluttered across his path and wiled him another way. Vaguely
+he felt that she was unlike herself--less buoyant, though often
+restless; and sometimes he fancied she was pale underneath her
+sun-burned color like that of rose-hips in October. Various causes kept
+him inert, while strength mounted in his veins, and life seemed made for
+the pure joy of living.
+
+The moon of May in that valley is the moon of roses, for the heats once
+due come on apace. The young people gave up their all-day horseback
+rides and took morning walks instead, following the shore-paths lazily
+to shaded coverts dedicated to those happy silences which it takes two
+to make. Or, they climbed the bluffs and gazed at the impenetrable
+vast horizon, and thought perhaps of their errand with that pang
+of self-reproach which, when shared, becomes a subtler form of
+self-indulgence.
+
+But at night, all the teeming life of the plain rushed up into the sky
+and blazed there in a million friendly stars. After the languor of the
+sleepy afternoons, it was like a fresh awakening--the dawn of those
+white May nights. The wide plain stirred softly through all its miles
+of sage. The river's cadenced roar paused beyond the bend and outbroke
+again. All that was eerie and furtive in the wild dark found a curdling
+voice in the coyote's hunting-call.
+
+In a hollow concealed by sage, not ten minutes' walk from the Ferry inn,
+unknown to the map-maker and innocent of all use, lay a perfect floor
+for evening pacing with one's eyes upon the stars. It was the death mask
+of an ancient lake, done in purest alkali silt, and needing only the
+shadows cast by a low moon to make the illusion almost unbelievable.
+Slow precipitation, season after season, as the water dried, had left
+the lake bed smooth as a cast in plaster. Subsequent warpings had lifted
+the alkali crust into thin-lipped wavelets. But once upon the floor
+itself the resemblance to water vanished. The warpings and Grumblings
+took the shape of earth as made by water and baked by fire. Moya
+compared it to a bit of the dead moon fallen to show us what we are
+coming to. They paced it soft-footed in tennis shoes lest they should
+crumble its talc-like whiteness. But they read no horoscopes, for they
+were shy of the future in speaking to each other,--and they made no
+plans.
+
+One evening Moya had said to Paul: “I can understand your mother so much
+better now that I am a wife. I think most women have a tendency towards
+the state of being _un_married. And if one had--children, it would
+increase upon one very fast. A widow and a mother--for twenty years. How
+could she be a wife again?”
+
+Paul made no reply to this speech which long continued to haunt him;
+especially as Moya wrote more frequently to his mother and did not offer
+to show him her letters. In their evening walks she seemed distrait, and
+during the day more restless.
+
+One night of their nightly pacings she stopped and stood long, her head
+thrown back, her eyes fixed upon the dizzy star-deeps. Paul waited a
+step behind her, touching her shoulders with his hands. Suddenly she
+reeled and sank backwards into his arms. He held her, watching her
+lovely face grow whiter; her eyelids closed. She breathed slowly,
+leaning her whole weight upon him.
+
+Coming to herself, she smiled and said it was nothing. She had been that
+way before. “But--we must go home. We must have a home--somewhere.
+I want to see your mother. Paul, be good to her--forgive her--for my
+sake!”
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+
+Aunt Polly Lewis was disappointed in the latest of her beneficiaries.
+It was nine years since her husband had locked up his savings in the
+Mud Springs ranch, a neglected little health-plant at the mouth of the
+Bruneau. If you were troubled with rheumatism, or a crick in the back,
+or your “pancrees” didn't act or your blood was “out o' fix, why, you'd
+better go up to Looanders' for a spell and soak yourself in that blue
+mud and let aunt Polly diet ye and dost ye with yerb tea.”
+
+When Leander courted aunt Polly in the interests of his sanitarium, she
+was reputed the best nurse in Ada County. The widow--by desertion--of a
+notorious quack doctor of those parts: it was an open question whether
+his medicine had killed or her nursing had cured the greater number of
+confiding sick folk. Leander drove fifty miles to catechise this notable
+woman, and finding her sound on the theory of packs hot and cold, and
+skilled in the practice of rubbing,--and having made the incidental
+discovery that she was a person not without magnetism,--he decided on
+the spot to add her to the other attractions of Mud Springs ranch; and
+she drove home with him next day, her trunk in the back of his wagon.
+
+The place was no sinecure. Bricks without straw were a child's pastime
+to the cures aunt Polly and the Springs effected without a pretense
+to the comforts of life in health, to say nothing of sickness. Modern
+conveniences are costly, and how are you to get the facilities for “pay
+patients” when you have no patients that pay! Prosperity had overlooked
+the Bruneau, or had made false starts there, through detrimental schemes
+that gave the valley a bad name with investors. The railroad was still
+fifty miles away, and the invalid public would not seek life itself,
+in these days of luxurious travel, at the cost of a twelve hours'
+stage-ride. However, as long as the couple had a roof over their
+heads and the Springs continued to plop and vomit their strange,
+chameleon-colored slime, Leander would continue to bring home the sick
+and the suffering for Polly and the Springs to practice on. Health
+became his hobby, and in time, with isolation thrown in, it began to
+invade his common sense. He tried in succession all the diet fads of the
+day and wound up a convert to the “Ralston” school of eating. Aunt Polly
+had clung a little longer to the flesh-pots, but the charms of a system
+that abolished half the labor of cooking prevailed with her at last, and
+in the end she kept a sharper eye upon Leander at mealtime than ever he
+had upon her.
+
+The ignorant gorgings of their neighbors were a head-shaking and a
+warning to them, and more than once Leander's person was in jeopardy
+through his zealous but unappreciated concern for the brother who eats
+in darkness.
+
+He had started out one winter morning from Bisuka, a virtuous man. His
+team had breakfasted, but not he. A Ralstonite does not load up his
+stomach at dawn after the manner of cattle, and such pious substitutes
+for a cup of coffee as are permitted the faithful cannot always be had
+for a price. At Indian Creek he hauled up to water his team, and to
+make for himself a cinnamon-colored decoction by boiling in hot water
+a preparation of parched grains which he carried with him. This he
+accomplished in an angle of the old corral fence out of the wind. There
+is no comfort nor even virtue in eating cold dust with one's sandwiches.
+Leander sunk his great white tushes through the thick slices of
+whole-wheat bread and tasted the paste of peanut meal with which they
+were spread. He ate standing and slapped his leg to warm his driving
+hand.
+
+A flutter of something colored, as a garment, caught his eye, directing
+it to the shape of a man, rolled in an old blue blanket, lying
+motionless in a corner of the tumble-down wall. “Drunk, drunk as a hog!”
+ pronounced Leander. For no man in command of himself would lie down to
+sleep in such a place. As if to refute this accusation, the wind
+turned a corner of the blanket quietly off a white face with closed
+eyelids,--an old, worn, gentle face, appealing in its homeliness, though
+stamped now with the dignity of death. Leander knelt and handled the
+body tenderly. It was long before he satisfied himself that life was
+still there. Another case for Polly and the Springs. A man worth saving,
+if Leander knew a man; one of the trustful, trustworthy sort. His heart
+went out to him on the instant as to a friend from home.
+
+It was closing in for dusk when he reached the Ferry. Jimmy was away,
+and Han, in high dudgeon, brought the boat over in answer to Leander's
+hail. He had grouse to dress for supper, inconsiderately flung in upon
+him at the last moment by the stage, four hours late.
+
+“Huh! Why you no come one hour ago? All time 'Hullo, hullo'! Je' Cli'!
+me no dam felly-man--me dam cook! Too much man say 'Hullo'!”
+
+The prospect was not good for help at the Ferry inn, so, putting his
+trust in Polly and the Springs, Leander pushed on up the valley.
+
+When Aunt Polly's patients were of the right sort, they stayed on after
+their recovery and helped Leander with the ranch work. But for the most
+part they “hit the trail” again as soon as their ills were healed,
+not forgetting to advertise the Springs to other patients of their own
+class. The only limit to this unenviable popularity was the size of the
+house. Leander saw no present advantage in building.
+
+But in case they ever did build--and the time was surely coming!--here
+was the very person they had been looking for. Cast your bread upon the
+waters. The winter's bread and care and shelter so ungrudgingly bestowed
+had returned to them many-fold in the comfortable sense of dependence
+and unity they felt in this last beneficiary, the old man of Indian
+Creek whom they called “Uncle John.”
+
+“The kindest old creetur' ever lived! Some forgitful, but everybody's
+liable to forgit. Only tell him one thing at once, and don't confuse
+him, and he'll git through an amazin' sight of chores in a day.”
+
+“Just the very one we'll want to wait on the men patients,” Aunt Polly
+chimed in. “He can carry up meals and keep the bathrooms clean, and wash
+out the towels, and he's the best hand with poultry. He takes such good
+care of the old hens they're re'lly ashamed not to lay!”
+
+It was spring again; old hopes were putting forth new leaves. Leander
+had heard of a capitalist in the valley; a young one, too, more prone to
+enthusiasm if shown the right thing.
+
+“I'm going down to Jimmy's to fetch them up here!” Leander announced.
+
+“Are there two of them?”
+
+“He has brought his wife out with him. They are a young couple. He's the
+only son of a rich widow in New York, and Jimmy says they've got money
+to burn. Jimmy don't take much stock in this 'ere 'wounded guide'
+story--thinks it's more or less of a blind. He's feeling around for
+a good investment--desert land or mining claims. Jimmy thinks he
+represents big interests back East.”
+
+Aunt Polly considered, and the corners of her mouth moistened as she
+thought of the dinner she would snatch from the jaws of the system on
+the day these young strangers should visit the ranch.
+
+“By Gum!” Leander shouted. “I wonder if Uncle John wouldn't know
+something about the party they're advertising for. That'd be the way
+to find out if they're really on the scent. I'll take him down with
+me--that's what I'll _do_--and let him have a talk with the young man
+himself. It'll make a good opening. Are you listening, Polly?” She was
+not. “I wish you'd git him to fix himself up a little. Layout one o'
+my clean shirts for him, and I'll take him down with me day after
+to-morrow.”
+
+“I'll have a fresh churning to-morrow,” Aunt Polly mused. “You can take
+a little pat of it with you. I won't put no salt in it, and I'll send
+along a glass or two of my wild strawberry jam. It takes an awful time
+to pick the berries, but I guess it'll be appreciated after the table
+Jimmy sets. I don't believe Jimmy'll be offended?”
+
+“Bogardus is their name,” continued Leander. “Mr. and Mrs. Bogardus,
+from New York. Jimmy's got it down in his hotel book and he's showing
+it to everybody. Jimmy's reel childish about it. I tell him one swallow
+don't make a summer.”
+
+Uncle John had come into the room and sat listening, while a yellow
+pallor crept over his forehead and cheeks. He moved to get up once, and
+then sat down again weakly.
+
+“What's the matter, Uncle?” Aunt Polly eyed him sharply. “You been out
+there chopping wood too long in this hot sun. What did I tell you?”
+
+She cleared the decks for action. Paler and paler the old man grew. He
+was not able to withstand her vigorous sympathies. She had him tucked up
+on the calico lounge and his shoes off and a hot iron at his feet; but
+while she was hurrying up the kettle to make him a drink of something
+hot, he rose and slipped up the outside stairs to his bedroom in the
+attic. There he seated himself on the side of his neat bed which he
+always made himself camp fashion,--the blankets folded lengthwise with
+just room for one quiet sleeper to crawl inside; and there he sat,
+opening and clinching his hands, a deep perplexity upon his features.
+
+Aunt Polly called to him and began to read the riot act, but Leander
+said: “Let him be! He gits tired o' being fussed over. You're at him
+about something or other the whole blessed time.”
+
+“Well, I have to! My gracious! He'd forgit to come in to his meals if I
+didn't keep him on my mind.”
+
+“It just strikes me--what am I going to call him when I introduce him to
+those folks? Did he ever tell you what his last name is?”
+
+“I wouldn't be surprised,” Aunt Polly lowered her voice, “if he couldn't
+remember it himself! I've heard of such cases. Whenever I try to draw
+him out to talk about himself and what happened to him before you found
+him, it breaks him all up; seemingly gives him a back-set every time.
+He sort of slinks into himself in that queer, lost way--just like he was
+when he first come to.”
+
+“He's had a powerful jar to his constitution, and his mind is taking a
+rest.” Leander was fond of a diagnosis. “There wasn't enough life left
+in him to keep his faculties and his bod'ly organs all a-going at once.
+The upper story's to let.”
+
+“I wish you'd go upstairs, and see what he is doing up there.”
+
+“Aw, no! Let him be. He likes to go off by himself and do his thinking.
+I notice it rattles him to be talked to much. He sets out there on the
+choppin'-block, looking at the bluffs--ever notice? He looks and
+don't see nothin', and his lips keep moving like he was learning a
+spellin'-lesson. If I speak to him sharp, he hauls himself together and
+smiles uneasy, but he don't know what I said. I tell you he's waking up;
+coming to his memories, and trying to sort 'em out.”
+
+“That's just what _I_ say,” Aunt Polly retorted, “but he's got to eat
+his meals. He can't live on memories.”
+
+Uncle John was restless that evening, and appeared to be excited. He
+waited upon Aunt Polly after supper with a feverish eagerness to be of
+use. When all was in order for bedtime, and Leander rose to wind the
+clock, he spoke. It was getting about time to roll up his blankets
+and pull out, he said. Leander felt for the ledge where the clock-key
+belonged, and made no answer.
+
+“I was saying--I guess it's about time for me to be moving on. The grass
+is starting”--
+
+“Are you cal'latin' to live on grass?” Leander drawled with cutting
+irony. “Gettin' tired of the old woman's cooking? Well, she ain't much
+of a cook!”
+
+Uncle John remained silent, working at his hands. His mouth, trembled
+under his thin straggling beard. “I never was better treated in my life,
+and you know it. It ain't handsome of you, Lewis, to talk that way!”
+
+“He don't mean nothing, Uncle John! What makes you so foolish, Looander!
+He just wants you to know there's no begrudgers around here. You're
+welcome, and more than welcome, to settle down and camp right along with
+us.”
+
+“Winter and summer!” Leander put in, “if you're satisfied. There's
+nobody in a hurry to see the last of ye.”
+
+Uncle John's mild but determined resistance was a keen disappointment
+to his friends. Leander thought himself offended. “What fly's stung you,
+anyhow! Heard from any of your folks lately?”
+
+The old man smiled.
+
+“Got any money salted down that needs turning?”
+
+“Looander! Quit teasing of him!”
+
+“Let him have his fun, ma'am. It's all he's likely to get out of me. I
+have got a little money,” he pursued. “'T would be an insult to name it
+in the same breath with what you've done for me. I'd like to leave it
+here, though. You could pass it on. You'll have chances enough. 'T ain't
+likely I'll be the last one you'll take in and do for, and never git
+nothing out of it in return.”
+
+There was a mild sensation, as the speaker, fumbling in his loose
+trousers, appeared to be seeking for that money. Aunt Polly's eyes
+flamed indignation behind her tears. She was a foolish, warm-hearted
+creature, and her eyes watered on the least excuse.
+
+“Looander, you shouldn't have taunted him,” she admonished her husband,
+who felt he had been a little rough.
+
+“Look here, Uncle John, d'you ever know anybody who wasn't by way of
+needing help some time in their lives? We don't ask any one who comes
+here”--
+
+“He didn't come!” Aunt Polly corrected.
+
+“Well, who was brought, then! We don't ask for their character, nor
+their private history, nor their bank account. I don't know but you're
+the first one for years I've ever took a real personal shine to, and
+we've h'isted a good many up them stairs that wasn't able to walk much
+further. I'd like you to stay as a favor to us, dang it!”
+
+Leander delivered this invitation as if it were a threat. His
+straight-cut mustache stiffened and projected itself by the pressure of
+his big lips; his dark red throat showed as many obstinate creases as an
+old snapping-turtle's.
+
+“I'm much obliged to you both. I want you to remember that. We--I--I'll
+talk with ye in the morning.”
+
+“That means he's going all the same,” said Leander, after Uncle John had
+closed the outside door.
+
+Sure enough, next morning he had made up his little pack, oiled his
+boots, and by breakfast-time was ready for the road. They argued the
+point long and fiercely with him whether he should set out on foot or
+wait a day and ride with Leander to the Ferry. It was not supposed he
+could be thinking of any other road. By to-morrow, if he would but wait,
+Aunt Polly would have comfortably outfitted him after the custom of the
+house; given his clothes a final “going over” to see everything taut
+for the journey, shoved a week's rations into a corn-sack, choosing such
+condensed forms of nourishment as the system allowed--nay, straining a
+point and smuggling in a nefarious pound or two of real miner's coffee.
+
+Aunt Polly's distress so weighed with her patient that he consented
+to remain overnight and ride with Leander as far as the dam across the
+Bruneau, at its junction with the Snake. There he would cross and take
+the trail down the river, cutting off several miles of the road to the
+Ferry. As for going on to see Jimmy or Jimmy's “folks,” the nervous
+resistance which this plan excited warned the good couple not to press
+the old man too far, or he might give them the slip altogether.
+
+A strangeness in his manner which this last discussion had brought out,
+lay heavy on aunt Polly's mind all day after the departure of the team
+for the Ferry. She watched the two men drive off in silence, Leander's
+bush beard reddening in the sun, his big body filling more than his half
+of the seat.
+
+“Well, by Gum! If he ain't the blamedest, most per-sistent old fool!”
+ he complained to his wife that night. Their first words were of the old
+man, already missed like one of the family from the humble place he had
+made for himself. Leander was still irritable over his loss. “I set him
+down with his grub and blankets, and I watched him footing it acrost the
+dam. He done it real handsome, steady on his pins. Then he set down
+and waited, kind o' dreaming, like he used to, settin' on the
+choppin'-block. I hailed him. 'What's the matter?' I says. 'Left
+anything?' No: every time I hailed he took off his hat and waved to me
+real pleasant. Nothing the matter. There he set. Well, thinks I, I can't
+stay here all day watching ye take root. So I drove on a piece. And, by
+Gum! when I looked back going around the bend, there he went a-pikin'
+off up the bluffs--just a-humping himself for all he was worth. I
+wouldn't like to think he was cunning, but it looked that way for
+sure,--turning me off the scent and then taking to the bluffs like he
+was sent for! Where in thunder is he making for? He knows just as well
+as I do--you have heard me tell him a dozen times--the stages were
+hauled off that Wood River road five year and more ago. He won't git
+nowhere! And he won't meet up with a team in a week's walking.”
+
+“His food will last him a week if he's careful; he's no great eater. I
+ain't afraid his feet will get lost; he's to home out of doors almost
+anywhere;--it's his head I'm afraid of. He's got some sort of a skew on
+him. I used to notice if he went out for a little walk anywhere, he'd
+always slope for the East.”
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+A STATION IN THE DESERT
+
+That forsworn identity which Adam Bogardus had submitted to be clothed
+in as a burial garment was now become a thing for the living to flee
+from. He had seen a woman in full health whiten and cower before
+it;--she who stood beside his bed and looked at him with dreadful eyes,
+eyes of his girl-wife growing old in the likeness of her father. Hard,
+reluctant eyes forced to own the truth which the ashen lips denied.
+Are we responsible for our silences? He had not spoken to her. Nay, the
+living must speak first, or the ghostly dead depart unquestioned. He
+asked only that he might forget her and be himself forgotten. If it were
+that woman's right to call herself Emily Bogardus, then was there no
+Adam her husband. Better the old disguise which left him free to work
+out his own sentence and pay his forfeit to the law. He had never
+desired that one breath of it should be commuted, or wished to accept an
+enslaving pardon from those for whose sake he had put himself out of the
+way. If he could have taken his own comparative spiritual measurement,
+he might have smiled at the humor of that forgiveness promised him in
+the name of the Highest by his son.
+
+For many peaceful years solitude had been the habit of his soul. Gently
+as he bore with human obligations, he escaped from them with a sense of
+relief which shamed him somewhat when he thought of the good friends to
+whom he owed this very blessed power to flee. It was quite as
+Leander had surmised. He could not command his faculties--memory
+especially--when a noise of many words and questions bruised his brain.
+
+The stillness of the desert closed about him with delicious healing.
+He was a world-weary child returned to the womb of Nature. His old
+camp-craft came back; his eye for distance, his sense of the trail, his
+little pet economies with food and fire. There was no one to tell him
+what to eat and when to eat it. He was invisible to men. Each day's
+march built up his muscle, and every night's deep sleep under the great
+high stars steadied his nerves and tightened his resolve.
+
+He thought of the young man--his son--with a mixture of pain and
+tenderness. But Paul was not the baby-boy he had put out of his arms
+with a father's smile at One Man station. Paul was himself a man now; he
+had coerced him at the last, neither did he understand.
+
+The blind instinct of flight began after a while to shape its own
+direction. It was no new leaning with the packer. As many times as he
+had crossed this trail he never had failed to experience the same pull.
+He resisted no longer. He gave way to strange fancies and made them his
+guides.
+
+At some time during his flight from the hospital, in one of those blanks
+that overtook him, he knew not how, he had met with a great loss. The
+words had slipped from his memory--of that message which had kept him in
+fancied touch with his wife all these many deluding years. Without them
+he was like a drunkard deprived of his habitual stimulant. The craving
+to connect and hold them--for they came to him sometimes in tantalizing
+freaks of memory, and slipped away again like beads rolling off a
+broken thread--was almost the only form of mental suffering he was now
+conscious of. What had become of the message itself? Had they left it
+exposed to every heartless desecration in that abandoned spot?--a scrap
+of paper driven like a bit of tumble-weed before the wind, snatched at
+by spikes of sage, trampled into the mire of cattle, nuzzled by wild
+beasts? Or, had they put it away with that other beast where he lay with
+the scoff on his dead face? Out of dreams and visions of the night that
+place of the parting ways called to him, and the time was now come when
+he must go.
+
+He approached it by one of those desert trails that circle for miles
+on the track of water and pounce as a bird drops upon its prey into the
+trampled hollow at One Man station--a place for the gathering of hoofs
+in the midst of the plain.
+
+He could trace what might have been the foundation of a house, a few
+blackened stones, a hearthstone showing where a chimney perhaps had
+stood, but these evidences of habitation would never have been marked
+except by one who knew where to look. He searched the ground over for
+signs of the tragedy that bound him to that spot--a smiling desolation,
+a sunny nothingness. The effect of this careless obliteration was
+quieting. Nature had played here once with two men and a woman. One of
+the toy men was lost, the other broken. She had forgotten where she
+put the broken one. There were mounds which looked like graves, but the
+seeker knew that artificial mounds in a place like this soon sink into
+hollows; and there were hollows like open graves, filled with unsightly
+human rubbish, washed in by the yearly rains.
+
+He spent three days in the hollow, doing nothing, steeped in sunshine,
+lying down to rest broad awake in the tender twilight, making his peace
+with this place of bitter memory before bidding it good-by. His thoughts
+turned eastward as the planets rose. Time he was working back towards
+home. He would hardly get there if he started now, before his day was
+done. He saw his mother's grave beside his father's, in the southeast
+corner of the burying-ground, where the trees were thin. All who drove
+in through the big gate of funerals could see the tall white shafts of
+the Beviers and Brodericks and Van Eltens, but only those who came on
+foot could approach his people in the gravelly side-hill plots. “I'd
+like to be put there alongside the old folks in that warm south corner.”
+ He could see their names on the plain gray slate stones, rain-stained
+and green with moss.
+
+On the third May evening of his stay the horizon became a dust-cloud,
+the setting sun a ball of fire. Loomed the figure of a rider topping
+the heaving backs of his herd. All together they came lumbering down
+the slopes, all heading fiercely for the water. The rider plunged down
+a side-draw out of the main cloud. Clanking bells, shuffling hoofs, the
+“Whoop-ee-youp!” came fainter up the gulch. The cowboy was not pleased
+as he dashed by to see an earlier camp-fire smoking in the hollow. But
+he was less displeased, being half French, than if he had been pure-bred
+American.
+
+The old man, squatting by his cooking-fire, gave him a civil nod, and
+he responded with a flourish of his quirt. The reek of sage smoke, the
+smell of dust and cattle rose rank on the cooling air. It was good to
+Boniface, son of the desert; it meant supper and bed, or supper and
+talk, for “Bonny” Maupin (“Bonny Moppin,” it went in the vernacular)
+would talk every other man to sleep, full or empty, with songs thrown
+in. To-night, however, he must talk on an empty stomach, for his chuck
+wagon was not in sight.
+
+“W'ich way you travelin'?” he began, lighting up after a long pull at
+his flask. The old man had declined, though he looked as if he needed a
+drink.
+
+“East about,” was the answer.
+
+“Goin' far?”
+
+“Well; summer's before us. I cal'late to keep moving till snow falls.”
+
+“Shucks! You ain' pressed for time. Maybe you got some friend back
+there. Goin' back to git married?” He winked genially to point the jest
+and the old man smiled indulgently.
+
+“Won't you set up and take a bite with me? You don't look to have much
+of a show for supper along.”
+
+“Thanks, very much! I had bully breakfast at Rock Spring middlin' late
+this morning. They butcherin' at that place. Five fat hog. My chuck
+wagon he stay behin' for chunk of fresh pig. I won' spoil my appetide
+for that tenderloin. Hol' on yourself an' take supper wis me. No?--That
+fellah be 'long 'bout Chris'mas if he don' git los'! He always behin',
+pig or no pig!”
+
+Bonny strolled away collecting fire-wood. Presently he called back,
+pointing dramatically with his small-toed boot. “Who's been coyotin'
+round here?” The hard ground was freshly disturbed in spots as by the
+paws of some small inquisitive animal. There was no answer.
+
+“What you say? Whose surface diggin's is these? I never know anybody do
+some mining here.”
+
+“That was me”--Bonny backed a little nearer to catch the old man's
+words. “I was looking round here for something I lost.”
+
+“What luck you have? You fin' him?”
+
+“Well, now, doos it reely matter to you, sonny?”
+
+“Pardner, it don' matter to me a d--n, if you say so! I was jus' askin'
+myself what a man _would_ look for if he los' it here. Since I strike
+this 'ell of a place the very groun' been chewed up and spit out
+reg'lar, one hundred times a year. 'T'is a gris' mill!”
+
+“I didn't gretly expect to find what I was lookin' for. I was just
+foolin' around to satisfy myself.”
+
+“That satisfy me!” said Bonny pleasantly; and yet he was a trifle
+discomfited. He strolled away again and began to sing with a boyish show
+of indifference to having been called “sonny.”
+
+“Oh, Sally is the gal for me! Oh, Sally's the gal for me! On moonlight
+night when the star is bright--Oh”--
+
+“Halloa! This some more your work, oncle? You ain' got no chicken wing
+for arm if you lif' this.--Ah, be dam! I see what you lif' him with.
+All same stove-lid.” Talking and swearing to himself cheerfully, Bonny
+applied the end of a broken whiffletree to the blunt lip of the old
+hearthstone which marked the stage-house chimney. He had tried a
+step-dance on it and found it hollow. More fresh digging, and marks upon
+the stone where some prying tool had taken hold and slipped, showed he
+was not the first who had been curious.
+
+“There you go, over on you' back, like snap' turtle; I see where you lay
+there before. What the dev'! I say!” Bonny, much excited with his find,
+extracted a rusty tin tobacco-box from the hole, pried open the spring
+lid and drew forth its contents: a discolored canvas bag bulging with
+coin and whipped around the neck with a leather whang. The canvas was
+rotten; Bonny supported its contents tenderly as he brought it over to
+the old man.
+
+“Oncle, I ask you' pardon for tappin' that safe. Pretty good lil'
+nest-egg, eh? But now you got to find her some other place.”
+
+“That don't belong to me,” said the old man indifferently.
+
+“Aw--don't be bashful! I onderstan' now what you los'. You dig
+here--there--migs up the scent. I just happen to step on that
+stone--ring him, so, with my boot-heel!”
+
+“That ain't my pile,” the other persisted. “I started to build a fire
+on that stone two nights ago. It rung hollow like you say. I looked and
+found what you found--”
+
+“And put her back! My soul to God! An' you here all by you'self!”
+
+“Why not? The stuff ain't mine.”
+
+“Who _is_ she? How long since anybody live here?”
+
+“I don't know,--good while, I guess.”
+
+“Well, sar! Look here! I open that bag. I count two hondre' thirteen
+dolla'--make it twelve for luck, an' call it you' divvee! You strike her
+first. What you say: we go snac'?”
+
+“I haven't got any use for that money. You needn't talk to me about it.”
+
+“Got no h'use!--are you a reech man? Got you' private car waitin' for
+you out in d' sagebrush? Sol' a mine lately?”
+
+“I don't know why it strikes you so funny. It's no concern of mine if a
+man puts his money in the ground and goes off and leaves it.”
+
+“Goes off and die! There was one man live here by himself--he die, they
+say, 'with his boots on.' He, I think, mus' be that man belong to this
+money. What an old stiff want with two hondre' thirteen dolla'? That
+money goin' into a live man's clothes.” Bonny slapped his chappereros,
+and the dust flew.
+
+“I've no objection to its going into _your_ clothes,” said the old man.
+
+“You thing I ain' particular, me? Well, eef the party underground was
+my frien', and I knew his fam'ly, and was sure the money was belong to
+him--I'd do differend--perhaps. Mais,--it is going--going--gone! You
+won' go snac'?”
+
+The old man smiled and looked steadily away.
+
+“Blas' me to h--l! but you aire the firs' man ever I strike that jib at
+the sight of col' coin. She don' frighten me!”
+
+Bonny always swore when he felt embarrassed.
+
+“Well, sar! Look here! You fin' you'self so blame indifferend--s'pose
+you _so_ indifferend not to say nothing 'bout this, when my swamper
+fellah git in. I don' wish to go snac' wis him. I don' feel oblige'.
+See?”
+
+“What you want to pester me about this money for!” The old man was
+weary. “I didn't come here, lookin' for money, and I don't expect to
+take none away with me. So I'll say good-night to ye.”
+
+“Hol' on, hol' on! Don' git mad. What time you goin' off in the
+morning?”
+
+“Before you do, I shouldn't wonder.”
+
+“But hol'! One fine idea--blazin' good idea--just hit me now in the
+head! Wan' to come on to Chicago wis me? I drop this fellah at Felton.
+He take the team back, and I get some one to help me on the treep. Why
+not you? Ever tek' care of stock?”
+
+“Some consid'able years ago I used to look after stock. Guess I'd know
+an ox from a heifer.”
+
+“Ever handle 'em on cattle-car?”
+
+“Never.”
+
+“Well, all there is, you feed 'em, and water 'em, and keep 'em on their
+feets. If one fall down, all the others they have too much play. They
+rock”--Bonny exhibited--“and fall over and pile up in heap. I like to
+do one turn for you. We goin' the same way--you bring me the good luck,
+like a bird in the han'. This is my clean-up, you understand. You bring
+me the beautiful luck. You turn me up right bower first slap. Now it's
+goin' be my deal. I like to do by you!”
+
+The packer turned over and looked up at the cool sky, pricked through
+with early stars. He was silent a long time. His pale old face was like
+a fine bit of carving in the dusk.
+
+“What you think?” asked Moppin, almost tenderly. “I thing you better
+come wis me. You too hold a man to go like so--alone.”
+
+“I'll have to think about it first;--let you know in the morning.”
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+
+A Rush of wheels and a spatter of hoofs coming up the drive sent
+Mrs. Dunlop to the sitting-room window. She tried to see out through
+streaming showers that darkened the panes.
+
+“Isn't that Mrs. Bogardus? Why, it is! Put on your shoes, Chauncey,
+quick! Help her in 'n' take her horse to the shed. Take an umbrella with
+you.” Chauncey the younger, meekly drying his shoes by the kitchen
+fire, put them on, not stopping to lace them, and slumped down the
+porch steps, pursued by his mother's orders. She watched him a moment
+struggling with a cranky umbrella, and then turned her attention to
+herself and the room.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus made her calls in the morning, and always plainly on
+business. She had not seen the inside of Cerissa's parlor for ten years.
+This was a grievance which Cerissa referred to spasmodically, being
+seized with it when she was otherwise low in her mind.
+
+“My sakes! Can't I remember my mother telling how _her_ mother used
+to drive over and spend the afternoon, and bring her sewing and the
+baby--whichever one was the baby. They called each other Chrissy and
+Angevine, and now she don't even speak of her own children to us by
+their first names. It's 'Mrs. Bowen' and 'Mr. Paul;' just as if she was
+talking to her servants.”
+
+“What's that to us? We've got a good home here for as long as we want to
+stay. She's easy to work for, if you do what she says.”
+
+Chauncey respected Mrs. Bogardus's judgment and her straightforward
+business habits. Other matters he left alone. But Cerissa was ambitious
+and emotional, and she stayed indoors, doing little things and thinking
+small thoughts. She resented her commanding neighbor's casual manners.
+There was something puzzling and difficult to meet in her plainness of
+speech, which excluded the personal relation. It was like the cut and
+finish of her clothes--mysterious in their simplicity, and not to be
+imitated cheaply.
+
+When the two met, Cerissa was immediately reduced to a state of
+flimsy apology which she made up for by being particularly hot and
+self-assertive in speaking of the lady afterward.
+
+“There is the parlor, in perfect order,” she fretted, as she stood
+waiting to open the front door; “but of course she wouldn't let me take
+her in there--that would be too much like visiting.”
+
+The next moment she had corrected her facial expression, and was
+offering smiling condolences to Mrs. Bogardus on the state of her
+attire.
+
+“It is only my jacket. You might put that somewhere to dry,” said the
+lady curtly. Raindrops sparkled on the wave of thick iron-gray hair that
+lifted itself, with a slight turn to one side, from her square low brow.
+Her eyes shone dark against the fresh wind color in her cheeks. She had
+the straight, hard, ophidian line concealing the eyelid, which gives
+such a peculiar strength to the direct gaze of a pair of dark eyes. If
+one suspects the least touch of tenderness, possibly of pain, behind
+that iron fold, it lends a fascination equal to the strength. There was
+some excitement in Mrs. Bogardus's manner, but Cerissa did not know her
+well enough to perceive it. She merely thought her looking handsomer,
+and, if possible, more formidable than usual.
+
+She sat by the fire, folding her skirts across her knees, and showing
+the edges of the most discouragingly beautiful petticoats,--a taste
+perhaps inherited from her wide-hipped Dutch progenitresses. Mrs.
+Bogardus reveled in costly petticoats, and had an unnecessary number of
+them.
+
+“How nice it is in here!” she said, looking about her. Cerissa, with the
+usual apologies, had taken her into the kitchen to dry her skirts.
+There was a slight taint of steaming shoe leather, left by Chauncey when
+driven forth. Otherwise the kitchen was perfection,--the family room
+of an old Dutch farmhouse, built when stone and hardwood lumber were
+cheap,--thick walls; deep, low window-seats; beams showing on the
+ceiling; a modern cooking-stove, where Emily Bogardus could remember
+the wrought brass andirons and iron backlog, for this room had been her
+father's dining-room. The brick tiled hearth remained, and the color of
+those century and a half old bricks made a pitiful thing of Cerissa's
+new oil-cloth. The woodwork had been painted--by Mrs. Bogardus's orders,
+and much to Cerissa's disgust--a dark kitchen green,--not that she liked
+the color herself, but it was the artistic demand of the moment,--and
+the place was filled with a green golden light from the cherry-trees
+close to the window, which a break in the clouds had suddenly illumined.
+
+“You keep it beautifully,” said Mrs. Bogardus, her eyes shedding
+compliments as she looked around. “I should not dare go in my own
+kitchen at this time of day. There are no women nowadays who know how to
+work in the way ladies used to work. If I could have such a housekeeper
+as you, Cerissa.”
+
+Cerissa flushed and bridled. “What would Chauncey do!”
+
+“I don't expect you to be my housekeeper,” Mrs. Bogardus smiled. “But I
+envy Chauncey.”
+
+“She has come to ask a favor,” thought Cerissa. “I never knew her
+so pleasant, for nothing. She wants me to do up her fruit, I guess.”
+ Cerissa was mistaken. Mrs. Bogardus simply was happy--or almost
+happy--and deeply stirred over a piece of news which had come to her in
+that morning's mail.
+
+“I have telephoned Bradley not to send his men over on Monday. My son is
+bringing his wife home. They may be here all summer. The place belongs
+to them now. Did Chauncey tell you? Mr. Paul writes that he has some
+building plans of his own, and he wishes everything left as it is for
+the present, especially this house. He wants his wife to see it first
+just as it is.”
+
+“Well, to be sure! They've been traveling a long time, haven't they? And
+how is his health now?”
+
+“Oh, he is very well indeed. You will be glad not to have the trouble of
+those carpenters, Cerissa? Pulling down old houses is dirty work.”
+
+“Oh, dear! I wouldn't mind the dirt. Anything to get rid of that old
+rat's nest on top of the kitchen chamber. I hate to have such out of the
+way places on my mind. I can't get around to do every single thing,
+and it's years--years, Mrs. Bogardus, since I could get a woman to do a
+half-day's cleaning up there in broad daylight!”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stared. What was the woman talking about!
+
+“I call it a regular eyesore on the looks of the house besides. And it
+keeps all the old stories alive.”
+
+“What stories?”
+
+“Why, of course your father wasn't out of his head--we all know
+that--when he built that upstairs room and slep' there and locked
+himself in every night of his life. It was only on one point he was a
+little warped: the fear of bein' robbed. A natural fear, too,--an old
+man over eighty livin' in such a lonesome place and known to be well
+off. But--you'll excuse my repeating the talk--but the story goes now
+that he re'ly went insane and was confined up there all the last years
+of his life. And that's why the windows have got bars acrost them.
+Everybody notices it, and they ask questions. It's real embarrassin',
+for of course I don't want to discuss the family.”
+
+“Who asks questions?” Mrs. Bogardus's eyes were hard to meet when her
+voice took that tone.
+
+“Why, the city folks out driving. They often drive in the big gate and
+make the circle through the grounds, and they're always struck when they
+see that tower bedroom with windows like a prison. They say, 'What's the
+story about that room, up there?'”
+
+“When people ask you questions about the house, you can say you did
+not live here in the owner's time and you don't know. That's perfectly
+simple, isn't it?”
+
+“But I do know! Everybody knows,” said Cerissa hotly. “It was the talk
+of the whole neighborhood when that room was put up; and I remember how
+scared I used to be when mother sent me over here of an errand.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose and shook out her skirts. “Will Chauncey bring my
+horse when it stops raining? By the way, did you get the furniture down
+that was in that room, Cerissa?--the old secretary? I am going to have
+it put in order for Mr. Paul's room. Old furniture is the fashion now,
+you know.”
+
+Cerissa caught her breath nervously. “Mrs. Bogardus--I couldn't do a
+thing about it! I wanted Chauncey to tell you. All last week I tried
+to get a woman, or a man, to come and help me clear out that place,
+but just as soon as they find out what's wanted--'You'll have to get
+somebody else for that job,' they say.”
+
+“What is the matter with them?”
+
+“It's the room, Mrs. Bogardus; if I was you--I'm doing now just as I'd
+be done by--I would not take Mrs. Paul Bogardus up into that room--not
+even in broad daylight; not if it was my son's wife, in the third month
+of her being a wife.”
+
+“Well, upon my word!” said Mrs. Bogardus, smiling coldly. “Do you mean
+to say these women are afraid to go up there?”
+
+“It was old Mary Hornbeck who started the talk. She got what she called
+her 'warning' up there. And the fact is, she was a corpse within six
+months from that day. Chauncey and me, we used to hear noises, but old
+houses are full of noises. We never thought much about it; only, I must
+say I never had any use for that part of the house. Chauncey keeps his
+seeds and tools in the lower room, and some of the winter vegetables,
+and we store the parlor stove in there in summer.”
+
+“Well, about this 'warning'?” Mrs. Bogardus interrupted.
+
+“Yes! It was three years ago in May, and I remember it was some such a
+day as this--showery and broken overhead, and Mary disappointed me; but
+she came about noon, and said she'd put in half a day anyhow. She got
+her pail and house-cloths; but she wasn't gone not half an hour when
+down she come white as a sheet, and her mouth as dry as chalk. She set
+down all of a shake, and I give her a drink of tea, and she said: 'I
+wouldn't go up there again, not for a thousand dollars.' She unlocked
+the door, she said, and stepped inside without thinkin'. Your father's
+old rocker with the green moreen cushions stood over by the east window,
+where he used to sit. She heard a creak like a heavy step on the floor,
+and that empty chair across the room, as far as from here to the window,
+begun to rock as if somebody had just rose up from them cushions. She
+watched it till it stopped. Then she took another step, and the step she
+couldn't see answered her, and the chair begun to rock again.”
+
+“Was that all?”
+
+“No, ma'am; that wasn't all. I don't know if you remember an old wall
+clock with a brass ball on top and brass scrolls down the sides and a
+painted glass door in front of the pendulum with a picture of a castle
+and a lake? The paint's been wore off the glass with cleaning, so the
+pendulum shows plain. That clock has not been wound since we come to
+live here. I don't believe a hand has touched it since the night he was
+carried feet foremost out of that room. But Mary said she could count
+the strokes go tick, tick, tick! She listened till she could have
+counted fifty, for she was struck dumb, and just as plain as the clock
+before her face she could see the minute-hand and the pendulum, both of
+'em dead still. Now, how do you account for that!
+
+“I told Chauncey about it, and he said it was all foolishness. Do all I
+could he would go up there himself, that same evening. But he come down
+again after a while, and he was almost as white as Mary. 'Did you see
+anything?' I says. 'I saw what Mary said she saw,' says he, 'and I heard
+what she heard.' But no one can make Chauncey own up that he believes it
+was anything supernatural. 'There is a reason for everything,' he says.
+'The miracles and ghosts of one generation are just school-book learning
+to the next; and more of a miracle than the miracles themselves.'”
+
+“Chauncey shows his sense,” Mrs. Bogardus observed.
+
+“He was real disturbed, though, I could see; and he told me particular
+not to make any talk about it. I never have opened the subject to a
+living soul. But when Mary died, within six months, folks repeated what
+she had been saying about her 'warning.' The 'death watch' she called
+it. We can't all of us control our feelings about such things, and she
+was a lonely widow woman.”
+
+“Well, do you believe that ticking is going on up there now?” asked Mrs.
+Bogardus.
+
+Cerissa looked uneasy.
+
+“Is the door locked?”
+
+“I re'ly couldn't say,” she confessed.
+
+“Do you mean to say that all you sensible people in this house have
+avoided that room for three years? And you don't even know if the door
+is locked?”
+
+“I--I don't use that part for anything, and cleaning is wasted on a
+place that's never used, and I can't _get_ anybody”--
+
+“I am not criticising your housekeeping. Will you go up there with me
+now, Cerissa? I want to understand about this.”
+
+“What, just now, do you mean? I'm afraid I haven't got the time this
+morning, Mrs. Bogardus. Dinner's at half-past twelve. It's a quarter to
+eleven”--
+
+“Very well. You think the door is not locked?”
+
+“If it is, the key must be in the door. Oh, don't go, please, Mrs.
+Bogardus. Wait till Chauncey conies in”--
+
+“I wish you'd send Chauncey up when he does come in. Ask him to bring a
+screw-driver.” Mrs. Bogardus rose and examined her jacket. It was still
+damp. She asked for a cape, or some sort of wrap, as her waist was thin,
+and the rain had chilled the morning air.
+
+For the sake of decency, Cerissa escorted her visitor across the hall
+passage into the loom-room--a loom-room in name only for upwards of
+three generations. Becky had devoted it to the rough work of the
+house, and to certain special uses, such as the care of the butchering
+products, the making of soft soap and root beer. Here the churning was
+done, by hand, with a wooden dasher, which spread a circle of white
+drops, later to become grease-spots. The floor of the loom-room was
+laid in large brick tiles, more or less loose in their sockets, with
+an occasional earthy depression marking the grave of a missing tile.
+Becky's method of cleaning was to sluice it out and scrub it with an old
+broom. The seepage of generations before her time had thus added their
+constant quota to the old well's sum of iniquity.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus had not visited this part of the old house for many years.
+After her father's death she had shrunk from its painful associations.
+Later she grew indifferent; but as she passed now into the gloomy
+place--doubly dark with the deep foliage of June on a rainy morning--she
+was afraid of her own thoughts. Henceforth she was a woman with a
+diseased consciousness. “What can't be cured must be _seared_,” flashed
+over her as she set her face to the stairway.
+
+These stairs, leading up into the back attic or “kitchen chamber,” being
+somewhat crowded for space, advanced two steps into the room below. As
+the stair door opened outward, and the stairs were exceedingly steep
+and dark, every child of the house, in turn, had suffered a bad fall in
+consequence; but the arrangement remained in all its natural depravity,
+for “children must learn.”
+
+Little Emmy of the old days had loved to sit upon these steps, a trifle
+raised above the kitchen traffic, yet cognizant of all that was going
+on, and ready to descend promptly if she smelled fresh crullers frying,
+or baked sweet apples steaming hot from the oven. If Becky's foot were
+heard upon the stairs above, she would jump quick enough; but if the
+step had a clumping, boyish precipitancy, she sat still and laughed,
+and planted her back against the door. Often she had teased Adam in this
+way, keeping him prisoner from his duties, helpless in his good nature
+either to scold her or push her off. But once he circumvented her,
+slipping off his shoes and creeping up the stairs again, and making his
+escape by the roof and the boughs of the old maple. Then it was Emmy who
+was teased, who sat a foolish half hour on the stairs alone and missed a
+beautiful ride to the wood lot; but she would not speak to Adam for two
+days afterward.
+
+Becky's had been the larger of the two bedrooms in the attic, Adam's the
+smaller--tucked low under the eaves, and entered by crawling around the
+big chimney that came bulking up to the light like a great tree caught
+between house walls. The stairs hugged the chimney and made use of
+its support. Adam would warm his hands upon it coming down on bitter
+mornings. From force of habit, Emily Bogardus laid her smooth white hand
+upon the clammy bricks. No tombstone could be colder than that heart of
+house warmth now.
+
+The roof of the kitchen chamber had been raised a story higher, and the
+chimney as it went up contracted to quite a modern size. This elevation
+gave room for the incongruous tower bedroom that had hurt the symmetry
+of the old house, spoiled its noble sweep of roof, and given rise to so
+much unpleasant conjecture as to its use. It was this excrescence, the
+record of those last unloved and unloving years of her father's life,
+which Mrs. Bogardus would have removed, but was prevented by her son.
+
+“You go back now, Cerissa,” she said to the panting woman behind her. “I
+see the key is in the lock. You may send Chauncey after a while; there
+is no hurry.”
+
+“Oh!” gasped Cerissa. “Do you see _that!_”
+
+“What?”
+
+“I thought there was something--something behind that slit.”
+
+“There isn't. Step this way. There, can't you see the light?”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus grasped Cerissa by the shoulders and held her firmly in
+front of a narrow loophole that pierced the partition close beside
+the door. Light from the room within showed plainly; but it gave an
+unpleasantly human expression to the entrance, like a furtive eye on the
+watch.
+
+“He would always be there,” Cerissa whispered.
+
+“Who?”
+
+“Your father. If anybody wanted to see him after he shut himself in
+there for the night, they had to stand to be questioned through that
+wall-slit before he opened the door. Yes, ma'am! He was on the watch in
+there the whole time like a thing in a trap.”
+
+“Are you afraid to go back alone?” Mrs. Bogardus spoke with chilling
+irony.
+
+Cerissa backed away in silence, her heart thumping. “She's putting it
+on,” she said to herself. “I never see her turn so pale. Don't tell _me_
+she ain't afraid!”
+
+There was a hanging shelf against the chimney on which a bundle of dry
+herbs had been left to turn into dust. Old Becky might have put them
+there the autumn before she died; or some successor of hers in the years
+that were blank to the daughter of the house. As she pushed open the
+door a sighing draught swept past her and seemed to draw her inward.
+It shook the sere bundle. Its skeleton leaves, dissolving into motes,
+flickered an instant athwart the light. They sifted down like ashes on
+the woman's dark head as she passed in. Her color had faded, but not
+through fear of ghost clocks. It was the searing process she had to
+face. And any room where she sat alone with certain memories of her
+youth was to her a torture chamber.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“She's been up there an awful long time. I wouldn't wonder if she's
+fainted away.”
+
+“What would she faint at? I guess it's pretty cold, though. Give me some
+more tea; put plenty of milk so I can drink it quick.”
+
+Chauncey's matter of fact tone always comforted Cerissa when she was
+nervous. She did not mind that he jeered or that his words were often
+rude; no man of her acquaintance could say things nicely to women, or
+ever tried. A certain amount of roughness passed for household wit.
+Chauncey put the screw-driver in his pocket, his wife and son watching
+him with respectful anxiety. He thought rather well of his own courage
+privately. But the familiar details of the loom-room cheered him on his
+way, the homely tools of his every-day work were like friendly faces
+nodding at him. He knocked loudly on the door above, and was answered by
+Mrs. Bogardus in her natural voice.
+
+“Bosh--every bit of it bosh!” he repeated courageously.
+
+She was seated by the window in the chair with the green cushions. Her
+face was turned towards the view outside. “What a pity those cherries
+were not picked before the rain,” she observed. “The fruit is bursting
+ripe; I'm afraid you'll lose the crop.”
+
+Chauncey moved forward awkwardly without answering.
+
+“Stop there one moment, will you?” Mrs. Bogardus rose and demonstrated.
+“You notice those two boards are loose. Now, I put this chair
+here,”--she laid her hand on the back to still its motion. “Step this
+way. You see? The chair rocks of itself. So would any chair with a
+spring board under it. That accounts for _that_, I think. Now come over
+here.” Chauncey placed himself as she directed in front of the high
+mantel with the clock above it. She stood at his side and they listened
+in silence to that sound which Mary Hornbeck, deceased, had deemed a
+spiritual warning.
+
+“Would you call that a 'ticking'? Is that like any sound an insect could
+make?” the mistress asked.
+
+“I should call it more like a 'ting,'” said Chauncey. “It comes kind o'
+muffled like through the chimbly--a person might be mistaken if they was
+upset in their nerves considerable.”
+
+“What old people call the 'death-watch' is supposed to be an insect that
+lives in the walls of old houses, isn't it? and gives warning with a
+ticking sound when somebody is going to be called away? Now to me that
+sounds like a soft blow struck regularly on a piece of hollow iron--say
+the end of a stove-pipe sticking in the chimney. When I first came up
+here, there was only a steady murmur of wind and rain. Then the clouds
+thinned and the sun came out and drops began to fall--distinctly. Your
+wife says the ticking was heard on a day like this, broken and showery.
+Now, if you will unscrew that clock, I think you will find there's a
+stove-pipe hole behind it; and a piece of pipe shoved into the chimney
+just far enough to catch the drops as they gather and fall.”
+
+Chauncey went to work. He sweated in the airless room. The powerful
+screws blunted the lips of his tool but would not start.
+
+“I guess I'll have to give it up for to-day. The screws are rusted in
+solid. Want I should pry her out of the woodwork?”
+
+“No, don't do that,” said Mrs. Bogardus. “Why should we spoil the panel?
+This seems a very comfortable room. My son is right. It would be foolish
+to tear it down. Such a place as this might be very useful if you people
+would get over your notions about it.”
+
+“I never had no notions,” Chauncey asserted. “When the women git talkin'
+they like to make out a good story, and whichever one sees the most and
+hears the most makes the biggest sensation.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus waited till he had finished without appearing to have
+heard what he was saying.
+
+“Where is the key to this door?” she laid her hand over a knob to the
+right of the stairs.
+
+“I guess if there is one it's on the other side. Yes, it's in the
+key-hole.” Chauncey turned the knob and shoved and lifted. The door
+yielded to his full strength, and he allowed Mrs. Bogardus to precede
+him. She stepped into a room hardly bigger than a closet with one
+window, barred like those in the outer room. It was fitted up with
+toilet conveniences according to the best advices of its day. Over all
+the neat personal arrangements there was the slur of neglect, a sad
+squalor which even a king's palace wears with time.
+
+Chauncey tested the plumbing with a noise that was plainly offensive
+to his companion, but she bore with it--also with his reminiscences
+gathered from neighborhood gossip. “He wa'n't fond of spending money,
+but he didn't spare it here: this was his ship cabin when he started
+on his last voyage. It looked funny--a man with all his land and houses
+cooped up in a place like this; but he wanted to be independent of the
+women. He hated to have 'em fussin' around him. He had a woman to come
+and cook up stuff for him to help himself to; but she wouldn't stay here
+overnight, nor he wouldn't let her. As for a man in the house,--most
+men were thieves, he thought, or waiting their chance to be. It was real
+pitiful the way he made his end.”
+
+“Open that window and shut the door when you come out,” said Mrs.
+Bogardus. “I will send some one to help you down with that secretary.
+Cerissa knows about it. It is to be sent up on the Hill.”
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+THE CASE STRIKES IN
+
+Christine's marriage took place while Paul and Moya were lingering in
+the Bruneau, for Paul's health ostensibly. Banks and Horace had been
+left to the smiling irony of justice. They never had a straight chance
+to define their conduct in the woods; for no one accused them. No
+awkward questions were asked in the city drawing-rooms or at the clubs.
+For a tough half hour or so at Fort Lemhi they had realized how they
+stood in the eyes of those unbiased military judges. The shock had a
+bracing effect for a time. Both boys were said to be much improved
+by their Western trip and by the hardships of that frightful homeward
+march.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus had matched her gift of Stone Ridge to her son, which
+was a gift of sentiment, with one of more substantial value to her
+daughter,--the income from certain securities settled upon her and her
+heirs. Banks was carefully unprovided for. The big house in town was
+full of ghosts--the ghosts that haunt such homes, made desolate by a
+breach of hearts. The city itself was crowded with opportunities for
+giving and receiving pain between mother and daughter. Christine had
+developed all the latent hardness of her mother's race with a sickly
+frivolity of her own. She made a great show of faith in her marriage
+venture. She boomed it in her occasional letters, which were full of
+scarce concealed bravado as graceful as snapping her fingers in her
+mother's face.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus leased her house in town, and retired before the ghosts,
+but not escaping them; Stone Ridge must be put in order for its new
+master and mistress, and Stone Ridge had its own ghosts. She informed
+her absentees that, before their return, she should have left for
+Southern California to look after some investments which she had
+neglected there of late. It was then she spoke of her plan for restoring
+the old house by pulling down that addition which disfigured it; and
+Paul had objected to this erasure. It would take from the house's
+veracity, he said. The words carried their unintentional sting.
+
+But it was Moya's six lines at the bottom of his page that changed
+and softened everything. Moya--always blessed when she took the
+initiative--contrived, as swiftly as she could set them down, to say the
+very words that made the home-coming a coming home indeed.
+
+“Will Madam Bogardus be pleased to keep her place as the head of her
+son's house?” she wrote. “This foolish person he has married wants to be
+anything rather than the mistress of Stone Ridge. She wants to be always
+out of doors, and she needs to be. Oh, must you go away now--now when we
+need you so much? It cannot be said here on paper how much _I_ need you!
+Am I not your motherless daughter? Please be there when we come, and
+please stay there!”
+
+“For a little while then,” said the lonely woman, smiling at the image
+of that sweet, foolish person in her thoughts. “For a little while, till
+she learns her mistake.” Such mistakes are the cornerstone of family
+friendship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was an uneventful summer on the Hill, but one of rather wearing
+intensity in the inner relations of the household, one with another; for
+nothing could be quite natural with a pit of concealment to be avoided
+by all, and an air of unconsciousness to be carefully preserved in
+avoiding it. Moya's success in this way was so remarkable that Paul half
+hated it. How was it possible for her to speak to his mother so lightly;
+never the least apparent premeditation or fear of tripping; how look at
+her with such sweet surface looks that never questioned or saw beneath?
+He could not meet his mother's eyes at all when they were alone
+together, or endure a silence in her company.
+
+Both women were of the type called elemental. They understood each other
+without knowing why. Moya felt the desperate truth contained in the
+mother's falsehood, and broke forth into passionate defense of her as
+against her husband's silence.
+
+He answered her one day by looking up a little green book of fairy tales
+and reading aloud this fragment of “The Golden Key.”
+
+“'I never tell lies, even in fun.' (The mysterious Grandmother speaks.)
+
+“'How good of you!' (says the Child in the Wood.)
+
+“'I couldn't if I tried. It would come true if I said it, and then I
+should be punished enough.'”
+
+Moya's eyes narrowed reflectively.
+
+“How constantly you are thinking of this! I think of it only when I
+am with you. As if a woman like your mother, who has done _one thing_,
+should be all that thing, and nothing more to us, her children!”
+
+Moya was giving herself up, almost immorally, Paul sometimes thought,
+to the fascination Mrs. Bogardus's personality had for her. In a keenly
+susceptible state herself, at that time, there was something calming and
+strengthening in the older woman's perfected beauty, her physical poise,
+and the fitness of everything she did and said and wore to the given
+occasion. As a dark woman she was particularly striking in summer
+clothing. Her white effects were tremendous. She did not pretend to
+study these matters herself, but in years of experience, with money to
+spend, she had learned well in whom to confide. When women are shut up
+together in country houses for the summer, they can irritate each other
+in the most foolish ways. Mrs. Bogardus never got upon your nerves.
+
+But, for Paul, there was a poison in his mother's beauty, a dread in
+her influence over his impressionable young wife, thrilled with the
+awakening forces of her consonant being. Moya would drink deep of every
+cup that life presented. Motherhood was her lesson for the day. “She is
+a queen of mothers!” she would exclaim with an abandon that was painful
+to Paul; he saw deformity where Moya was ready to kneel. “I love her
+perfect love for you--for me, even! She is above all jealousy. She
+doesn't even ask to be understood.”
+
+Paul was silent.
+
+“And oh, she knows, she knows! She has been through it all--in such
+despair and misery--all that is before me, with everything in the world
+to make it easy and all the beautiful care she gives me. She is the
+supreme mother. And I never had a mother to speak to before. Don't,
+don't, please, keep putting that dreadful thing between us now!”
+
+So Paul took the dreadful thing away with him and was alone with it, and
+knew that his mother saw it in his eyes when their eyes met and avoided.
+When, after a brief household absence, he would see her again he
+wondered, “Has she been alone with it? Has it passed into another
+phase?”--as of an incurable disease that must take its time and course.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus did not spare her conscience in social ways all this time.
+It was a part of her life to remember that she had neighbors--certain
+neighbors. She included Paul without particularly consulting him
+whenever it was proper for him to support her in her introduction of his
+wife to the country-house folk, many of whom they knew in town.
+
+All his mother's friends liked Paul and supposed him to be very clever,
+but they had never taken him seriously. “Now, at last,” they said, “he
+has done something like other people. He is coming out.” Experienced
+matrons were pleased to flatter him on his choice of a bride. The
+daughters studied Moya, and decided that she was “different,” but “all
+right.” She had a careless distinction of her own. Some of her “things”
+ were surprisingly lovely--probably heirlooms; and army women are so
+clever about clothes.
+
+Would they spend the winter in town?
+
+Paul replied absently: they had not decided. Probably they would not go
+down till after the holidays.
+
+What an attractive plan? What an ideal family Christmas they would have
+all together in the country! Christine had not been up all summer,
+had she? Here Moya came to her husband's relief, through a wife's dual
+consciousness in company, and covered his want of spirits with a flood
+of foolish chatter.
+
+The smiling way in which women the most sincere can posture and prance
+on the brink of dissimulation was particularly sickening to Paul at this
+time. Why need they put themselves in situations where it was required?
+The situations were of his mother's creation. He imagined she must
+suffer, but had little sympathy with that side of her martyrdom. Moya
+seemed a trifle feverish in her acceptance of these affairs of which
+she was naturally the life and centre. A day of entertaining often faded
+into an evening of subtle sadness.
+
+Paul would take her out into the moonlight of that deep inland country.
+The trees were dark with leaves and brooded close above them; old
+water-fences and milldams cast inky shadows on the still, shallow ponds
+clasped in wooded hills. No region could have offered a more striking
+contrast to the empty plains. Moya felt shut in with old histories. The
+very ground was but moulding sand in which generations of human lives
+had been poured, and the sand swept over to be reshaped for them.
+
+“We are not living our own life yet,” Paul would say; not adding, “We
+are protecting her.” Here was the beginning of punishment helplessly
+meted out to this proud woman whose sole desire was towards her
+children--to give, and not to receive.
+
+“But this is our Garden?” Moya would muse. “We are as nearly two alone
+as any two could be.”
+
+“If you include the Snake. We can't leave out the Snake, you know.”
+
+“Snake or Seraph--I don't believe I know the difference. Paul, I cannot
+have you thinking things.”
+
+“I?--what do I think?”
+
+“You are thinking it is bad for me to be so much with her. You, as a man
+and a husband, resent what she, as a woman and a wife, has dared to do.
+And I, as another woman and wife, I say she could do nothing else and be
+true. For, don't you see? She never loved him. The wifehood in her has
+never been reached. She was a girl, then a mother, then a widow. How
+could she”--
+
+“Do you think he would have claimed her as his wife? Oh, you do not know
+him;--she has never known him. If we could be brave and face our duty
+to the whole truth, and leave the rest to those sequences, never dreamed
+of, that wait upon great acts. Such surprises come straight from God.
+Now we can never know how he would have risen to meet a nobler choice
+in her. He had not far to rise! Well, we have our share of blessings,
+including piazza teas; but as a family we have missed one of the
+greatest spiritual opportunities,--such as come but once in a lifetime.”
+
+“Ah, if she was not ready for it, it was not _her_ opportunity. God is
+very patient with us, I believe.”
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+RESTIVENESS
+
+Mothers and sons are rarely very personal in their intimacy after
+the son has taken to himself a wife. Apart from certain moments
+not appropriate to piazza teas, Paul and his mother were perhaps as
+comfortable together as the relation averages. It was much that they
+never talked emotionally. Private judgments which we have refrained from
+putting into words may die unfruitful and many a bitter crop be spared.
+
+“This is Paul's apology for being happy in spite of himself--and of
+us!” Moya teased, as she admired the beautifully drawn plans for the
+quarrymen's club-house.
+
+“It doesn't need any apology; it's a very good thing,” said Mrs.
+Bogardus, ignoring double meanings. No caps that were flying around ever
+fitted her head. Paul's dreams and his mother's practical experience
+had met once more on a common ground of philanthropy. This time it was
+a workingmen's club in which the interests of social and mental
+improvement were conjoined with facilities for outdoor sport. Up to date
+philanthropy is an expensive toy. Paul, though now a landowner, was far
+from rich in his own right. His mother financed this as she had many
+another scheme for him. She was more openhanded than heretofore, but all
+was done with that ennuyéd air which she ever wore as of an older
+child who has outgrown the game. It was in Moya and Moya's prospective
+maternity that her pride reinstated itself. Her own history and
+generation she trod underfoot. Mistakes, humiliations, whichever way she
+turned. Paul had never satisfied her entirely in anything he did until
+he chose this girl for the mother of his children. Now their house might
+come to something. Moya moved before her eyes crowned in the light of
+the future. And that this noble and innocent girl, with her perfect
+intuitions, should turn to _her_ now with such impetuous affection was
+perhaps the sweetest pain the blighted woman had ever known. She lay
+awake many a night thinking mute blessings on the mother and the child
+to be. Yet she resisted that generous initiative so dear to herself,
+aware with a subtle agony of the pain it gave her son.
+
+One day she said to Paul (they were driving home together through a
+bit of woodland, the horses stepping softly on the mould of fallen
+leaves)--“I don't expect you to account for every dollar of mine you
+spend in helping those who can be helped that way. You have a free
+hand.”
+
+“I understand,” said Paul. “I have used your money freely--for a purpose
+that I never have accounted for.”
+
+“Don't you need more?”
+
+“No; there is no need now.”
+
+“Why is there not?”
+
+Paul was silent. “I cannot go into particulars. It is a long story.”
+
+“Does the purpose still exist?” his mother asked sharply.
+
+“It does; but not as a claim--for that sort of help.”
+
+“Let me know if such a claim should ever return.”
+
+“I will, mother,” said Paul.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There came a day when mother and son reaped the reward of their mutual
+forbearance. There was a night and a day when Paul became a boy again in
+his mother's hands, and she took the place that was hers in Nature. She
+was the priestess acquainted with mysteries. He followed her, and hung
+upon her words. The expression of her face meant life and death to him.
+The dreadful consciousness passed out of his eyes; tears washed it out
+as he rose from his knees by Moya's bed, and his mother kissed him, and
+laid his son in his arms.
+
+The following summer saw the club-house and all its affiliations in
+working order. The beneficiaries took to it most kindly, but were
+disposed to manage it in their own way: not in all respects the way of
+the founder's intention.
+
+“To make a gift complete, you must keep yourself out of it,” Mrs.
+Bogardus advised. “You have done your part; now let them have it and run
+it themselves.”
+
+Paul was not hungry for leadership, but he had hoped that his interest
+in the men's amusements would bring him closer to them and equalize the
+difference between the Hill and the quarry.
+
+“You have never worked with them; how can you expect to play with them?”
+ was another of his mother's cool aphorisms. Alas! Paul, the son of the
+poor man, had no work, and hence no play.
+
+It was time to be making winter plans again. Mrs. Bogardus knew that
+her son's young family was now complete without her presence. Moya had
+gained confidence in the care of her child; she no longer brought every
+new symptom to the grandmother. Yet Mrs. Bogardus put off discussing the
+change, dreading to expose her own isolation, a point on which she was
+as sensitive as if it were a crime. Paul was never entirely frank with
+her: she knew he would not be frank in this. They never expressed their
+wills or their won'ts to each other with the careless rudeness of a
+sound family faith, and always she felt the burden of his unrelenting
+pity. She began to take long drives alone, coming in late and excusing
+herself for dinner. At such times she would send for her grandson in
+his nurse's arms to bid him good-night. The mother would put off her
+own good-night, not to intrude at these sessions. One evening, going up
+later to kiss her little son, she found his crib empty, the nurse gone
+to her dinner. He was fast asleep in his grandmother's arms, where she
+had held him for an hour in front of the open fire in her bedroom. She
+looked up guiltily. “He was so comfortable! And his crib is cold. Will
+he take cold when Ellen puts him back?”
+
+“I am sure he won't,” Moya whispered, gathering up the rosy sleeper. But
+she was disturbed by the breach of bedtime rules.
+
+In the drawing-room a few nights later she said energetically to Paul.
+
+“One might as well be dead as to live with a grudge.”
+
+“A good grudge?”
+
+“There are no good grudges.”
+
+“There are some honest ones--honestly come by.”
+
+“I don't care how they are come by. Grudges 'is p'ison.'” She laughed,
+but her cheeks were hot.
+
+“Do you know that Christine has been at death's door? Your mother heard
+of it--through Mrs. Bowen! Was that why you didn't show me her letter?”
+
+“It was not in my letter from Mrs. Bowen.”
+
+“I think she has known it some time,” said Moya, “and kept it to
+herself.”
+
+“Mrs. Bowen!”
+
+“Your mother. Isn't it terrible? Think how Chrissy must have needed her.
+They need each other so! Christine was her constant thought. How can
+all that change in one year! But she cannot go to Banks Bowen's house
+without an invitation. We must go to New York and make her come with
+us--we must open the way.”
+
+“Yes,” said Paul, “I have seen it was coming. In the end we always do
+the thing we have forsworn.”
+
+“_I_ was the one. I take it back. Your work is there. I know it calls
+you. Was not Mrs. Bowen's letter an appeal?”
+
+Paul was silent.
+
+“She must think you a deserter. And there is bigger work for you, too!
+Here is a great political fight on, and my husband is not in it. Every
+man must slay his dragon. There is a whole city of dragons!”
+
+“Yes,” smiled Paul; “I see. You want me to put my legs under the same
+cloth with Banks and ask him about his golf score.”
+
+“If you want to fight him, have it out on public grounds; fight him in
+politics.”
+
+“We are on the same side!”
+
+Moya laughed, but she looked a little dashed.
+
+“Banks comes of gentlemen. He inherited his opinions,” said Paul.
+
+“He may have inherited a few other things, if we could have patience
+with him.”
+
+“Are you sorry for Banks?”
+
+“I shall be sorry for him--when he meets you. He has been spared that
+too long.”
+
+“Dispenser of destinies, I bow as I always do!”
+
+“You will speak to your mother at once?”
+
+“I will.”
+
+“And do it beautifully?”
+
+“As well as I know how.”
+
+“Ah, you have had such practice! How good it would be if we could only
+dare to quarrel in this family! You and I--of course!”
+
+“_We_ quarrel, of course!” laughed Paul.
+
+“I _love_ to quarrel with you!”
+
+“You do it beautifully. You have had such practice!”
+
+“I am so happy! It is clear to me now that we shall live down this
+misery. Christine will love to see me again; I know she will. A wife is
+a very different thing from a girl--a haughty girl!”
+
+“I should think the wife of Banks Bowen might be.”
+
+“And we'll part with our ancient and honorable grudge! We are getting
+too big for it. _We_ are parents!”
+
+Paul made the proposition to his mother and she agreed to it in every
+particular save the one. She would remain at Stone Ridge. It was
+impossible to move her. Moya was in despair. She had cultivated an
+overweening conscience in her relations with Mrs. Bogardus. It turned
+upon her now and showed her the true state of her own mind at the
+thought of being Two once more and alone with the child God had given
+them. Mrs. Bogardus appeared to see nothing but her own interests in
+the matter. She had made up her mind. And in spite of the conscientious
+scruples on all sides, the hedging and pleading and explaining, all were
+happier in the end for her decision. She herself was softened by it, and
+she yielded one point in return. Paul had steadily opposed his mother's
+plan of housekeeping, alone with one maid and a man who slept at the
+stables. The Dunlops, as it happened, were childless for the winter,
+young Chauncey attending a “commercial college” in a neighboring town.
+After many interviews and a good deal of self-importance on Cerissa's
+part, the pair were persuaded to close the old house and occupy the
+servants' wing on the Hill, as a distinct family, yet at hand in case
+of need. It was late autumn before all these arrangements could be made.
+Paul and Moya, leaving the young scion aged nineteen months in the care
+of his nurse and his grandmother, went down the river to open the New
+York house.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+INDIAN SUMMER
+
+The upper fields of Stone Ridge, so the farmers said, were infested that
+autumn by a shy and solitary vagrant, who never could be met with face
+to face, but numbers of times had been seen across the width of a lot,
+climbing the bars, or closing a gate, or vanishing up some crooked lane
+that quickly shut him from view.
+
+“I would look after that old chap if I was you, Chauncey. He'll be
+smoking in your hay barns, and burn you out some o' these cold nights.”
+
+Chauncey took these neighborly warnings with good-humored indifference.
+“I haven't seen no signs of his doin' any harm,” he said. “Anybody's at
+liberty to walk in the fields if there ain't a 'No Trespass' posted.
+I rather guess he makes his bed among the corn stouks. I see prints of
+someone's feet, goin' and comin'.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus was more herself in those days than she had been at
+any time since the great North-western wilderness sent her its second
+message of fear. Old memories were losing their sting. She could bear to
+review her decision with a certain shrinking hardihood. Had the choice
+been given her to repeat, her action had been the same. In so far as she
+had perjured herself for the sake of peace in the family, she owned the
+sacrifice was vain; but her own personality was the true reason for what
+she had done. She was free in her unimpeachable widowhood--a mother who
+had never been at heart a wife. She feared no ghosts this keen autumn
+weather, at the summit of her conscious powers. Her dark eye unsheathed
+its glance of authority. It was an eye that went everywhere, and
+everywhere was met with signs that praised its oversight. Here was
+an out-worn inheritance which one woman, in less than a third of her
+lifetime, had developed into a competence for her son. He could afford
+to dream dreams of beneficence with his mother to make them good. Yes,
+he needed her still. His child was in her keeping; and, though brief the
+lease, that trust was no accident. It was the surest proof he could have
+given her of his vital allegiance. In the step which Paul and Moya were
+taking, she saw the first promise of that wisdom she had despaired of in
+her son. In the course of years he would understand her. And Christine?
+She rested bitterly secure in her daughter's inevitable physical need
+of her. Christine was a born parasite. She had no true pride; she was
+capable merely of pique which would wear itself out and pass into other
+forms of selfishness.
+
+This woman had been governed all her life by a habit of decision, and
+a strong personality rooted in the powers of nature. Therefore she
+was seldom mistaken in her conclusions when they dealt with material
+results. Occasionally she left out the spirit; but the spirit leaves out
+no one.
+
+Her long dark skirts were sweeping the autumn grass at sunset as she
+paced back and forth under the red-gold tents of the maples. It was a
+row of young trees she had planted to grace a certain turf walk at the
+top of the low wall that divided, by a drop of a few feet, the west
+lawn at Stone Ridge from the meadow where the beautiful Alderneys were
+pastured. The maples turned purple as the light faded out of their tops
+and struck flat across the meadow, making the grass vivid as in spring.
+Two spots of color moved across it slowly--a young woman capped and
+aproned, urging along a little trotting child. Down the path of their
+united shadows they came, and the shadows had reached already the
+dividing wall. The waiting smile was sweet upon the grandmother's
+features; her face was transformed like the meadow into a memory of
+spring. The child saw her, and waved to her with something scarlet which
+he held in his free hand. She admired the stride of his brown legs above
+their crumpled socks, the imperishable look of health on his broad,
+sweet glowing face. She lifted him high in her embrace and bore him up
+the hill, his dusty shoes dangling against her silk front breadths,
+his knees pressed tight against her waist, and over her shoulder he
+flourished the scarlet cardinal flower.
+
+“Where have you been with him so long?” she asked the nursemaid.
+
+“Only up in the lane, as far as the three gates, ma'am.”
+
+“Then where did he get this flower?”
+
+“Oh,” said the pretty Irish girl, half scared by her tone, and tempted
+to prevaricate. “Why--he must have picked it, I guess.”
+
+“Not in the lane. It's a swamp-flower. It doesn't grow anywhere within
+four miles of the lane!”
+
+“It must have been the old man gev it him then,” said the maid. “Is it
+unhealthy, ma'am? I tried to get it from him, but he screamed and fussed
+so.”
+
+“What old man do you mean?”
+
+“Why, him that was passin' up the lane. I didn't see him till he was
+clean by--and Middy had the flower. I don't know where in the world he
+could have got it, else, for we wasn't one step out of the lane, was we,
+Middy! That's the very truth.”
+
+“But where were you when strangers were giving him flowers?”
+
+“Why, sure, ma'am, I was only just a step away be the fence, having a
+word with one o' the boys. I was lookin' in the field, speakin' to him
+and he was lookin' at me with me back to the lane. 'There's the old man
+again,' he says, shiftin' his eye. I turned me round and there, so he
+was, but he was by and walkin' on up the lane. And Middy had the flower.
+He wouldn't be parted from it and squeezed it so tight I thought the
+juice might be bad on his hands, and he promised he'd not put it to his
+mouth. I kep' my eye on him. Ah, the nasty, na-asty flower! Give it here
+to Katy till I throw it!”
+
+“There's no harm in the flower. But there is harm in strangers making up
+to him when your back is turned. Don't you know the dreadful things we
+read in the papers?”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus said no more. It was Middy's supper-time. But later she
+questioned Katy particularly concerning this old man who was spoken of
+quite as if his appearance were taken for granted in the heart of the
+farm. Katy recalled one other day when she had seen him asleep as she
+thought in a corner of the fence by the big chestnut tree when she and
+the boy were nutting. They had moved away to the other side of the tree,
+but while she was busy hunting for nuts Middy had strayed off a bit and
+foregathered with the old man, who was not asleep at all, but stood with
+his back to her pouring a handful of big fat chestnuts into the child's
+little skirt, which he held up. She called to him and the old man had
+stepped back, and the nuts were spilled. Middy had cried and made her
+pick them up, and when that was done the stranger was gone quite out of
+sight.
+
+Chauncey, too, was questioned, and testified that the old man of the
+fields was no myth. But he deprecated all this exaggerated alarm. The
+stranger was some simple-minded old work-house candidate putting off the
+evil day. In a few weeks he would have to make for shelter in one of the
+neighboring towns. Chauncey could not see what legal hold they had upon
+him even if they could catch him. He hardly came under the vagrancy law,
+since he had neither begged, nor helped himself appreciably to the means
+of subsistence.
+
+“That is just the point,” Mrs. Bogardus insisted. “He has the
+means--from somewhere--to lurk around here and make friends with that
+child. There may be a gang of kidnappers behind him. He is the harmless
+looking decoy. I insist that you keep a sharp lookout, Chauncey. There
+shall be a hold upon him, law or no law, if we catch him on our ground.”
+
+A cold rain set in. Paul and Moya wrote of delays in the house
+preparations, and hoped the grandmother was not growing tired of her
+charge. On the last of the rainy days, in a burst of dubious sunshine,
+came a young girl on horseback to have tea with Mrs. Bogardus. She was
+one of that lady's discoverers, so she claimed, Miss Sallie Remsen, very
+pretty and full of fantastic little affectations founded on her intense
+appreciation of the picturesque. She called Mrs. Bogardus “Madam,” and
+likened her to various female personages in history more celebrated for
+strength of purpose than for the Christian virtues. Mrs. Bogardus, in
+her restful ignorance of such futilities, went no deeper into these
+allusions than their intention, which she took to be complimentary. Miss
+Sallie hugged herself with joy when the rain came down in torrents for
+a clear-up shower. Her groom was sent home with a note to inform her
+mother that Mrs. Bogardus wished to keep her overnight. All the mothers
+were flattered when Mrs. Bogardus took notice of their daughters,--even
+much grander dames than she herself could pretend to be.
+
+They had a charming little dinner by themselves to the tune of the rain
+outside, and were having their coffee by the drawing-room fire; and Miss
+Sallie was thinking by what phrase one could do justice to the massive,
+crass ugliness of that self-satisfied apartment, furnished in the
+hideous sixties, when the word was sent in that Mrs. Dunlop wished to
+speak with Mrs. Bogardus. Something of Cerissa's injured importance
+survived the transmission of the message, causing Mrs. Bogardus to smile
+to herself as she rose. Cerissa was waiting in the dining-room. She kept
+her seat as Mrs. Bogardus entered. Her eyes did not rise higher than the
+lady's dress, which she examined with a fierce intentness of comparison
+while she opened her errand.
+
+“I thought you'd like to know you've got a strange lodger down to the
+old house. I don't seem to ever get moved!” she enlarged. “I'm always
+runnin' down there after first one thing 'n' another we've forgot. This
+morning 't was my stone batter-pot. Chauncey said he thought it was
+getting cold enough for buckwheat cakes. I don't suppose you want to
+have stray tramps in there in the old house, building fires in the
+loom-room, where, if a spark got loose, it would blaze up them draughty
+stairs, and the whole house would go in a minute.” Cerissa stopped to
+gain breath.
+
+“Making fires? Are you sure of that? Has any smoke been seen coming out
+of that chimney?”
+
+“Why, it's been raining so! And the trees have got so tall! But I could
+show you the shucks an' shells he's left there. I know how we left it!”
+
+“You had better speak--No; I will see Chauncey in the morning.” Mrs.
+Bogardus never, if she could avoid it, gave an order through a third
+person.
+
+“Well, I thought I'd just step in. Chauncey said 't was no use
+disturbing you to-night, but he's just that way--so easy about
+everything! I thought you wouldn't want to be harboring tramps this wet
+weather when most anybody would be tempted to build a fire. I'm more
+concerned about what goes on down there now we're _out_ of the house! I
+seem to have it on my mind the whole time. A house is just like a child:
+the more you don't see it the more you worry about it.”
+
+“I'm glad you have such a home feeling about the place,” said Mrs.
+Bogardus, avoiding the onset of words. “Well, good-evening, Cerissa.
+Thank you for your trouble. I will see about it in the morning.”
+
+Mrs. Bogardus mentioned what she had just heard to Miss Sallie, who
+remarked, with her keen sense of antithesis, what a contrast _that_
+fireside must be to _this_.
+
+“Which fireside?”
+
+“Oh, your lodger upon the cold ground,--making his little bit of a
+stolen blaze in that cavern of a chimney in the midst of the wet trees!
+What a nice thing to have an unwatched place like that where a poor
+bird of passage can creep in and make his nest, and not trouble any one.
+Think what Jean Valjeans one might shelter”--
+
+“Who?”
+
+“What 'angels unawares.'”
+
+“It will be unawares, my dear,--very much unawares,--when I shelter any
+angels of that sort.”
+
+“Oh, you wouldn't turn him out, such weather as this?”
+
+“The house is not mine, in the first place,” Mrs. Bogardus explained
+as to a child. “I can't entertain tramps or even angels on my son's
+premises, when he's away.”
+
+“Oh, he! He would build the fires himself, and make up their beds,”
+ laughed Miss Sallie. “If he were here, I believe he would start down
+there now, and stock the place with everything you've got in the house
+to eat.”
+
+“I hope he'd leave us a little something for breakfast,” said Mrs.
+Bogardus a trifle coldly. But she did not mention the cause of her
+uneasiness about this particular visitor. She never defended herself.
+
+Miss Sallie was delighted with her callousness to the sentimental rebuke
+which had been rather rubbed in. It was so unmodern; one got so weary
+of fashionable philanthropy, women who talked of their social sympathies
+and their principles in life. She almost hoped that Mrs. Bogardus had
+neither. Certainly she never mentioned them.
+
+“What did she say? Did she tell you what I said to her last night?”
+ Cerissa questioned her husband feverishly after his interview with Mrs.
+Bogardus.
+
+“She didn't mention your name,” Chauncey took some pleasure in stating.
+“If you hadn't told me yourself, I shouldn't have known you'd meddled in
+it at all.”
+
+“What's she going to do about it?”
+
+“How crazy you women are! 'Cause some poor old Sooner-die-than-work
+warms his bones by a bit of fire that wouldn't scare a chimbly swaller
+out of its nest! Don't you s'pose if there'd been any fire there to
+speak of, I'd 'a' seen it? What am I here for? Now I've got to drop
+everything, and git a padlock on that door, and lock it up every night,
+and search the whole place from top to bottom for fear there's some one
+in there hidin' in a rathole!”
+
+“Chauncey! If you've got to do that I don't want you to go in there
+alone. You take one of the men with you; and you better have a pistol or
+one of the dogs anyhow. Suppose you was to ketch some one in there, and
+corner him! He might turn on you, and shoot you!”
+
+“I wish you wouldn't work yourself up so about nothin' at all! Want
+me to make a blame jackass of myself raisin' the whole place about a
+potato-peel or a bacon-rind!”
+
+“I think you might have some little regard for my feelings,” Cerissa
+whimpered. “If you ain't afraid, I'm afraid for you; and I don't see
+anything to be ashamed of either. I wish you _wouldn't_ go _alone_
+searching through that spooky old place. It just puts me beside myself
+to think of it!”
+
+“Well, well! That's enough about it anyhow. I ain't going to do anything
+foolish, and you needn't think no more about it.”
+
+Whether it was the effect of his wife's fears, or his promise to her,
+or the inhospitable nature of his errand founded on suspicion, certainly
+Chauncey showed no spirit of rashness in conducting his search. He
+knocked the mud off his boots loudly on the doorsill before proceeding
+to attach the padlock to the outer door. He searched the loom-room,
+lighting a candle and peering into all its cobwebbed corners. He
+examined the rooms lately inhabited, unlocking and locking doors
+behind him noisily with increasing confidence in the good old house's
+emptiness. Still, in the fireplace in the loom-room there were signs of
+furtive cooking which a housekeeper's eye would infallibly detect.
+He saw that the search must proceed. It was not all a question of his
+wife's fears, as he opened the stair-door cautiously and tramped slowly
+up towards the tower bedroom. He could not remember who had gone out
+last, on the day the old secretary was moved down. There had been
+four men up there, and--yes, the key was still in the lock outside. He
+clutched it and it fell rattling on the steps. He swung the door open
+and stared into the further darkness beyond his range of vision. He
+waved his candle as far as his arm would reach. “Anybody _in_ here?” he
+shouted. The silence made his flesh prick. “I'm goin' to lock up now.
+Better show up. It's the last chance.” He waited while one could count
+ten. “Anybody in here that wants to be let free? Nobody's goin' to hurt
+ye.”
+
+To his anxious relief there was no reply. But as he listened, he heard
+the loud, measured tick, tick, of the old clock, appalling in the
+darkness, on the silence of that empty room. Chauncey could not have
+told just how he got the door to, nor where he found strength to lock it
+and drag his feet downstairs, but the hand that held the key was moist
+with cold perspiration as he reached the open air.
+
+“Well, if that's rain I'd like to know where it comes from!” He looked
+up at the moon breaking through drifting clouds. The night was keen and
+clear.
+
+“If I was to tell that to Cerissa she'd never go within a mile o' that
+house again! Maybe I was mistaken--but I ain't goin' back to see!”
+
+Next morning on calmer reflection he changed his mind about removing the
+lawn-mower and other hand-tools from the loom-room as he had determined
+overnight should be done. The place continued to be used as a storeroom,
+open by day.
+
+At night it was Chauncey's business to lock it up, and he was careful to
+repeat his search--as far as the stair-door. Never did the silent room
+above give forth a protest, a sound of human restraint or occupation. He
+reported to the mistress that all was snug at the old house, and nobody
+anywhere about the place.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+THE FELL FROST
+
+After the rain came milder days. The still white mornings slowly
+brightened into hazy afternoons. The old moon like a sleep walker stood
+exposed in the morning sky. The roads to Stone Ridge were deep in fallen
+leaves. Soft-tired wheels rustled up the avenue and horses' feet fell
+light, as the last of the summer neighbors came to say good-by.
+
+It was a party of four--Miss Sallie and a good-looking youth of the
+football cult on horseback, her mother and an elder sister, the delicate
+Miss Remsen, in a hired carriage. Their own traps had been sent to town.
+
+Tea was served promptly, as the visitors had a long road home before
+their dinner-hour. In the reduced state of the establishment it was
+Katy who brought the tea while Cerissa looked after her little charge.
+Cerissa sat on the kitchen porch sewing and expanding under the deep
+attention of the cook; they could see Middy a little way off on the
+tennis-court wiping the mud gravely from a truant ball he had found
+among the nasturtiums. All was as peaceful as the time of day and the
+season of the year.
+
+“Yes,” said Cerissa solemnly. “Old Abraham Van Elten was too much
+cumbered up with this world to get quit of it as easy as some. If his
+spirit is burdened with a message to anybody it's to _her_. He died
+unreconciled to her, and she inherited all this place in spite of him,
+as you may say. I've come as near believin' in such things since the
+goings on up there in that room”--
+
+“She wants Middy fetched in to see the comp'ny,” cried Katy, bursting
+into the sentence. “Where is he, till I clean him? And she wants some
+more bread and butter as quick as ye can spread it.”
+
+“Well, Katy!” said Cerissa slowly, with severe emphasis. “When I was a
+girl, my mother used to tell me it wasn't manners to”--
+
+“I haven't got time to hear about yer mother,” said Katy rudely. “What
+have ye done with me boy?” The tennis-court lay vacant on the terrace in
+the sun; the steep lawn sloped away and dipped into the trees.
+
+“Don't call,” said the cook warily. “It'll only scare her. He was there
+only a minute ago. Run, Katy, and see if he's at the stables.”
+
+It was not noticed, except by Mrs. Bogardus, that no Katy, and no boy,
+and no bread and butter, had appeared. Possibly the last deficiency had
+attracted a little playful attention from the young horseback riders,
+who were accusing each other of eating more than their respective
+shares.
+
+At length Miss Sallie perceived there was something on her hostess's
+mind. “Where is John Middleton?” she whispered. “Katy is dressing him
+all over, from head to foot, isn't she? I hope she isn't curling his
+hair. John Middleton has such wonderful hair! I refuse to go back to
+New York till I have introduced you to John Middleton Bogardus,” she
+announced to the young man, who laughed at everything she said. Mrs.
+Bogardus smiled vacantly and glanced at the door.
+
+“Let me go find Katy,” cried Miss Sally. Katy entered as she spoke,
+and said a few words to the mistress. “Excuse me.” Mrs. Bogardus rose
+hastily. She asked Miss Sallie to take her place at the tea-tray.
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“The boy--they cannot find him. Don't say anything.” She had turned ashy
+white, and Katy's pretty flushed face had a wild expression.
+
+In five minutes the search had begun. Mrs. Bogardus was at the
+telephone, calling up the quarry, for she was short of men. One order
+followed another quickly. Her voice was harsh and deep. She had frankly
+forgotten her guests. Embarrassed by their own uselessness, yet unable
+to take leave, they lingered and discussed the mystery of this sudden,
+acute alarm.
+
+“It is the sore spot,” said Miss Sally sentimentally. “You know her
+husband was missing for years before she gave him up; and then that
+dreadful time, three years ago, when they were so frightened about
+Paul.”
+
+Having spread the alarm, Mrs. Bogardus took the field in person. Her
+head was bare in the keen, sunset light. She moved with strong, fleet
+steps, but a look of sudden age stamped her face.
+
+“Go back, all of you!” she said to the women, who crowded on her heels.
+“There are plenty of places to look.” Her stern eyes resisted their
+frightened sympathy. She was not ready to yield to the consciousness of
+her own fears.
+
+To the old house she went, by some sure instinct that told her the road
+to trouble. But her trouble stood off from her, and spared her for one
+moment of exquisite relief; as if the child of Paul and Moya had no part
+in what was waiting for her. The door at the foot of the stairs stood
+open. She heard a soft, repeated thud. Panting, she climbed the stairs;
+and as she rounded the shoulder of the chimney, there, on the top step
+above her, stood the fair-haired child, making the only light in the
+place. He was knocking, with his foolish ball, on the door of the
+chamber of fear. Three generations of the living and the dead were
+brought together in this coil of fate, and the child, in his happy
+innocence, had joined the knot.
+
+The woman crouching on the stairs could barely whisper, “Middy!” lest
+if she startled him he might turn and fall. He looked down at her,
+unsurprised, and paused in his knocking. “Man--in there--won't 'peak to
+Middy!” he said.
+
+She crept towards him and sat below him, coaxing him into her lap. The
+strange motions of her breast, as she pressed his head against her, kept
+the boy quiet, and in that silence she heard an inner sound--the awful
+pulse of the old clock beating steadily, calling her, demanding the
+evidence of her senses,--she who feared no ghosts,--beating out the
+hours of an agony she was there to witness. And she was yet in time. The
+hapless creature entrapped within that room dragged its weight
+slowly across the floor. The clock, sole witness and companion of its
+sufferings, ticked on impartially. Neither is this any new thing, it
+seemed to say. A life was starved in here before--not for lack of food,
+but love,--love,--love!
+
+She carried the child out into the air, and he ran before her like a
+breeze. The women who met them stared at her sick and desperate face.
+She made herself quickly understood, and as each listener drained her
+meaning the horror spread. There was but one man left on the place,
+within call, he with the boyish face and clean brown hands, who had
+ridden across the fields for an afternoon's idle pleasure. He stepped to
+her side and took the key out of her hand. “You ought not to do this,”
+ he said gently, as their eyes met.
+
+“Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,” she counted mechanically. “He has been
+in there six days and seven nights by my orders.” She looked straight
+before her, seeing no one, as she gave her commands to the women: fire
+and hot water and stimulants, in the kitchen of the old house at once,
+and another man, if one could be found to follow her.
+
+The two figures moving across the grass might have stepped out of an
+illustration in the pages of some current magazine. In their thoughts
+they had already unlocked the door of that living death and were face to
+face with the insupportable facts of nature.
+
+The morbid, sickening, prison odor met them at the door--humanity's
+helpless protest against bolts and bars. Again the young man begged his
+companion not to enter. She took one deep breath of the pure outside
+air and stepped before him. They searched the emptiness of the barely
+furnished room. The clock ticked on to itself. Mrs. Bogardus's companion
+stood irresolute, not knowing the place. The fetid air confused
+his senses. But she went past him through the inner door, guided by
+remembrance of the sounds she had heard.
+
+She had seen it. She approached it cautiously, stooping for a better
+view, and closing in upon it warily, as one cuts off the retreat of a
+creature in the last agonies of flight. Her companion heard her say:
+“Show me your face!--Uncover his face,” she repeated, not moving her
+eyes as he stepped behind her. “He will not let me near him. Uncover
+it.”
+
+The thing in the corner had some time been a man. There was still enough
+manhood left to feel her eyes and to shrink as an earthworm from the
+spade. He had crawled close to the baseboard of the room. An old man's
+ashen beard straggled through the brown claws wrapped about the face. As
+the dust of the threshing floor to the summer grain, so was his likeness
+to one she remembered.
+
+“I must see that man's face!” she panted. “He will die if I touch him.
+Take away his hands.” It was done, with set teeth, and the face of the
+football hero was bathed in sweat. He breathed through tense nostrils,
+and a sickly whiteness spread backward from his lips. Suddenly he loosed
+his burden. It fell, doubling in a ghastly heap, and he rushed for the
+open air.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus groaned. She raised herself up slowly, stretching back her
+head. Her face was like the terrible tortured mask of the Medusa. She
+had but a moment in which to recover herself. Deliberately she spoke
+when her companion returned and stood beside her.
+
+“That was my husband. If he lives I am still his wife. You are not to
+forget this. It is no secret. Are you able to help me now? Get a blanket
+from the women. I hear some one coming.”
+
+She waited, with head erect and eyes closed and rigid tortured lips
+apart, till the feet were heard at the door.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+
+Mrs. Remsen and her delicate daughter had driven away to avoid
+excitement and the night air.
+
+Chauncey hovered round the piazza steps, talking, with but little
+encouragement, to Miss Sallie and the young man who had become the
+centre of all eyes.
+
+“I don't see how anybody on the face of the earth could blame her, nor
+me either!” Chauncey protested. “If the critter wanted to git out, why
+couldn't he say so? I stood there holdin' the door open much as five
+minutes. 'Who's in there?' I says. I called it loud enough to wake the
+dead. 'Nobody wants to hurt ye,' says I. There want nothing to be afraid
+of. He hadn't done nothing anyway. It's the strangest case ever I heard
+tell of. And the doctor don't think he was much crazy either.”
+
+“Can he live?” asked Miss Sallie.
+
+“He's alive now, but doctor don't know how long he'll last. There he
+comes now. I must go and git his horse.”
+
+The doctor, who seemed nervous,--he was a young local
+practitioner,--asked to speak with Miss Sallie's hero apart.
+
+“Did Mrs. Bogardus say anything when she first saw that man? Did you
+notice what she said?--how she took it?”
+
+The hero, who was also a gentleman, looked at the doctor coolly.
+
+“It was not a nice thing,” he said. “I saw just as little as I could.”
+
+“You don't understand me,” said the doctor. “I want to know if Mrs.
+Bogardus appeared to you to have made any discovery--received any shock
+not to be accounted for by--by what you both saw?”
+
+“I shouldn't attempt to answer such a question,” said the youngster
+bluntly. “I never saw Mrs. Bogardus in my life before to-day.”
+
+The doctor colored. “Mrs. Bogardus has given me a telegram to send, and
+I don't know whether to send it or not. It's going to make a whole lot
+of talk. I am not much acquainted with Mrs. Bogardus myself, except by
+hearsay. That's partly what surprises me. It looks a little reckless
+to send out such a message as that, by the first hand that comes along.
+Hadn't we better give her time to think it over?” He opened the telegram
+for the other to read. “The man himself can't speak. But he just pants
+for breath every time she comes near him: he tries to hide his face. He
+acts like a criminal afraid of being caught.”
+
+“He didn't look that way to me--what was left of him. Not in the least
+like a criminal.”
+
+“Well, no; that's a fact, too. Now they've got him laid out clean and
+neat, he looks as if he might have been a very decent sort of man. But
+_that_, you know--that's incredible. If she knows him, why doesn't he
+know her? Why won't he own her? He's afraid of her. His eyes are ready
+to burst out of his head whenever she comes near him.”
+
+“Did Mrs. Bogardus write that telegram herself?”
+
+“She did.”
+
+“And what did she tell you to do with it?”
+
+“Send it to her son.”
+
+“Then why don't you send it?”
+
+This was the disputed message: “Come. Your father has been found. Bring
+Doctor Gainsworth.”
+
+In the local man's opinion, the writer of that dispatch was Doctor
+Gainsworth's true patient. What could induce a woman in Mrs. Bogardus's
+position to give such hasty publicity to this shocking disclosure,
+allowing it were true? The more he dwelt on it the less he liked the
+responsibility he was taking. He discussed it openly; and, with the
+best intentions, this much-impressed young man gave out his own
+counter-theory of the case, hoping to forestall whatever mischief might
+have been done. He put himself in the place of Mr. Paul Bogardus, whom
+he liked extremely, and tried to imagine that young gentleman's state
+of mind when he should look upon this new-found parent, and learn the
+manner of his resurrection.
+
+This was the explanation he boldly set forth in behalf of those most
+nearly concerned. [He was getting up his diagnosis for an interesting
+half hour with the great doctor who had been called in consultation.]
+The shock of that awful discovery in the locked chamber, he attested,
+had put Mrs. Bogardus temporarily beside herself. Outwardly composed,
+her nerves were ripped and torn by the terrible sight that met her
+eyes. She was the prey of an hallucination founded on memories of former
+suffering, which had worn a channel for every fresh fear to seek. There
+was something truly noble and loyal and pathetic in the nature of her
+possession. It threw a softened light upon her past. How must she have
+brooded, all these years, for that one thought to have ploughed so deep!
+It was quite commonly known in the neighborhood that she had come back
+from the West years ago without her husband, yet with no proof of his
+death. But who could have believed she would cling for half a lifetime
+to this forlorn expectancy, depicting her own loss in every sad hulk of
+humanity cast upon her prosperous shores!
+
+Every one believed she was deceiving herself, but great honor was hers
+among the neighbors for the plain truth and courage of her astonishing
+avowal. They had thought her proud, exclusive, hard in the security
+of wealth. Here she stood by a pauper's bed in the name of simple
+constancy, stripping herself of all earthly surplusage, exposing her
+deepest wound, proclaiming the bond--herself its only witness--between
+her and this speechless wreck, drifting out on the tide of death. She
+had but to let him go. It was the wild word she had spoken in the name
+of truth and deathless love that fired the imagination of that slow
+countryside. It was the touch beyond nature that appeals to the higher
+sense of a community, and there is no community without a soul.
+
+The straight demands of justice are frequently hard to meet, but its
+ironies are crushing. Mrs. Bogardus had fallen back on the line of a
+mother's duty since that moment of personal accountability. She read
+the unspoken reverence in the eyes of all around her, but she put in
+no disclaimer. Her past was not her own. She could not sin alone. Only
+those who have been honest are privileged under all conditions to remain
+so.
+
+On his arrival with the doctor, Paul endeavored first to see his
+mother alone. For some reason she would not have it so. She took the
+unspeakable situation as it came. He was shown into the room where she
+sat, and by her orders Doctor Gainsworth was with him.
+
+She rose quietly and came to meet them. Placing her hand in her son's
+arm, and looking towards the bed, she said:--
+
+“Doctor--my husband.”
+
+“Madam!” said Doctor Gainsworth. He had been Mrs. Bogardus's family
+physician for many years.
+
+“My husband,” she repeated.
+
+The doctor appeared to accept the statement. As the three approached the
+bed Mrs. Bogardus leaned heavily upon her son. Paul released his arm and
+placed it firmly around her. He felt her shudder. “Mother,” he said to
+her with an indescribable accent that tore her heart.
+
+The doctor began his examination. He addressed his patient as “Mr.
+Bogardus.”
+
+“Mistake,” said a low, husky voice from the bed. “This ain't the man.”
+
+Doctor Gainsworth pursued his investigations. “What is your name?” he
+asked the patient suddenly.
+
+The hunted eyes turned with ghastly appeal upon the faces around him.
+
+“Paul, speak to him! Own your father,” Mrs. Bogardus whispered
+passionately.
+
+“It is for him to speak now,” said Paul. “When he is well, Doctor,” he
+added aloud, “he will know his own name.”
+
+“This man will never be well,” the doctor answered. “If there is
+anything to prove, for or against the identity you claim for him, it
+will have to be done within a very few days.”
+
+Doctor Gainsworth rose and held out his hand. He was a man of delicate
+perceptions. His respect at that moment for Mrs. Bogardus, though
+founded on blindest conjecture, was an emotion which the mask of his
+professional manner could barely conceal. “As a friend, Mrs. Bogardus, I
+hope you will command me--but you need no doctor here.”
+
+“As a friend I ask you to believe me,” she said. “This man _is_ my
+husband. He came back here because this was his home. I cannot tell you
+any more, but this we expect you and every one who knows”--
+
+The dissenting voice from the bed closed her assertion with a hoarse
+“No! Not the man.”
+
+“Good-by, Mrs. Bogardus,” said the doctor. “Don't trouble to explain.
+You and I have lived too long and seen too much of life not to recognize
+its fatalities: the mysterious trend in the actions of men and women
+that cannot be comprised in--in the locking of a door.”
+
+“It is of little consequence--what was done, compared to what was not
+done.” This was all the room for truth she could give herself to turn
+in. The doctor did not try to understand her: yet she had snatched a
+little comfort from merely uttering the words.
+
+Paul and the doctor dined together, Mrs. Bogardus excusing herself.
+
+“There seems to be an impression here,” said the doctor, examining
+the initials on his fish-fork, “that your mother is indulging an
+overstrained fancy in this melancholy resemblance she has traced.
+It does not appear to have made much headway as a fact, which rather
+surprises me in a country neighborhood. Possibly your doctor here, who
+seems a very good fellow, has wished to spare the family any unnecessary
+explanations. If you'll let me advise you, Paul, I would leave it as
+it is,--open to conjecture. But, in whatever shape this impression
+may reach you from outside, I hope you won't let it disturb you in the
+least, so far as it describes your mother's condition. She is one of the
+few well-balanced women I have had the honor to know.”
+
+Paul did not take advantage of the doctor's period. He went on.
+
+“Not that I do know her. Possibly you may not yourself feel that you
+altogether understand your mother? She has had many demands upon her
+powers of adaptation. I should imagine her not one who would adapt
+herself easily, yet, once she had recognized a necessity of that sort,
+I believe she would fit herself to its conditions with an exacting
+thoroughness which in time would become almost, one might say, a second,
+an external self. The 'lendings' we must all of us wear.”
+
+“There will be no explanations,” said Paul, not coldly, but helplessly.
+
+“Much the best way,” said the doctor relieved, and glad to be done with
+a difficult undertaking. “If we are ever understood in this world, it
+is not through our own explanations, but in spite of them. My daughters
+hope to see a good deal of your charming wife this winter. I hear great
+pleasure expressed at your coming back to town.”
+
+“Thank you, Doctor. She will be up this evening. We shall stay here
+with my mother for a time. It will be her desire to carry out
+this--recognition--to the end. We must honor her wishes in the matter.”
+
+The talk then fell upon the patient's condition. The doctor left certain
+directions and took shelter in professional platitudes, but his eyes
+rested with candid kindness upon the young man, and his farewell
+hand-clasp was a second prolonged.
+
+He went away in a state of simple wonderment, deeply marveling at Paul's
+serenity.
+
+“Extraordinary poise! Where does it come from? No: the boy is happy! He
+hides it; but it is the one change in him. He has experienced a great
+relief. Is it possible”--
+
+On his way down the river the doctor continued to muse upon the dignity,
+the amazingly beautiful behavior of this rising family in whose somewhat
+commonplace city fortunes he had taken a friendly interest for years. He
+owned that he had sounded them with too short a line.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Watching with the dying man hours when she was with him alone, Emily
+Bogardus continued to test his resolution. He never retracted by a
+look--faithful to the word she had spoken which made them strangers.
+
+It was the slightest shell of mortality that ever detained a soul on
+earth. The face, small like the face of an old, old child, waxed finer
+and more spiritual, yet ever more startlingly did it bear the stamp of
+that individuality which the spirit had held so cheap--the earthly
+so impenetrated with the spiritual part that the face had become a
+sublimation. As one sees a sheet of paper covered with writing wither
+in flame and become a quivering ash, yet to the last attenuation of
+its fibre the human characters will stand forth, till all is blown up
+chimney to the stars.
+
+Still, peaceful, implacable in its peace, settling down for the silence
+of eternity. Still no sign.
+
+The younger ones came and went. The little boy stole in alone and pushed
+against his grandmother's knee,--she seated always by the bed,--gazed,
+puzzled, at the strange, still face, and whispered obediently,
+“Gran'faver.” There was no response. Once she took the boy and drew him
+close and placed his little tender hand within the dry, crumpled husk
+extended on the bedclothes. The eyes unclosed and rested long and
+earnestly on the face of the child, who yawned as if hypnotized and
+flung his head back on the grandmother's breast. She bent suddenly and
+laid her own hand where the child's had been. The eyes turned inward
+and shut again, but a sigh, so deep it seemed that another breath might
+never come, was all her answer.
+
+Past midnight of the fourth night's watch Paul was awakened by a light
+in his room. His mother stood beside him, white and worn. “He is
+going,” she said. It was the final rally of the body's resistance. A
+few moments' expenditure, and that stubborn vitality would loose its
+hold.--The strength of the soil!
+
+The wife stood aside and gave up her place to the children. Her
+expression was noble, like a queen rebuked before her people. There was
+comfort in that, too. A great, solemn, mutual understanding drew this
+death-bed group together. Within the sickle's compass so they stood:
+the woman God gave this man to found a home; the son who inherited
+his father's gentleness and purity of purpose; the fair flower of the
+generations that father's sacrifice had helped him win; the bud of
+promise on the topmost bough. Those astonished eyes shed their last
+earthly light on this human group, turned and rested in the eyes of
+the woman, faded, and the light went out. He died, blessing her in one
+whispered word. Her name.
+
+Before daybreak on the morning of the funeral, Paul awoke under pressure
+of disturbing dreams. There were sounds of hushed movements in the
+house. He traced them to the door of the room below stairs where his
+father lay. Some one had softly unlocked that door, and entered. He knew
+who that one must be. His place was there alone with his mother, before
+they were called together as a family, and the mask of decency resumed
+for those ironic rites in the presence of the unaccusing dead.
+
+The windows had been lowered behind closed curtains, and the air of the
+death chamber, as he entered, was like the touch of chilled iron to the
+warm pulse of sleep. Without, a still dark night of November had frosted
+the dead grass.
+
+The unappeasable curiosity of the living concerning the Great
+Transition, for the moment appeared to have swept all that was personal
+out of the watcher's gaze, as she bent above the straightened body.
+And something of the peace there dawning on the cold, still face was
+reflected in her own.
+
+“You have never seen your father before. There he is.” She drew a
+deep sigh, as if she had been too intent to breathe naturally. All her
+self-consciousness suddenly was gone. And Paul remembered his dream,
+that had goaded him out of sleep, and vanished with the shock of waking.
+It gave him the key to this long-expected moment of confidence.
+
+“The old likeness has come back,” his mother repeated, with that new
+quietness which restored her to herself.
+
+“I dreamed of that likeness,” said Paul, “only it was much
+stronger--startling--so that the room was full of whispers and
+exclamations as the neighbors--there were hundreds of them--filed past.
+And you stood there, mother, flushed, and talking to each person who
+passed and looked at him and then at you; you said--you”--
+
+Mrs. Bogardus raised her head. “I know! I have been thinking all night.
+Am I to do that? Is that what you wish me to do? Don't hesitate--to
+spare me.”
+
+“Mother! I could not imagine you doing such a thing. It was like
+insanity. I wanted to tell you how horrible, how unseemly it was,
+because I was sure you had been dwelling on some form--some outward”--
+
+“No,” she said. “I know how I should face this if it were left to me.
+But you are my only earthly judge, my son. Judge now between us two. Ask
+of me anything you think is due to him. As to outsiders, what do they
+matter! I will do anything you say.”
+
+“_I_ say! Oh, mother! Every hand he loved was against him--bruising his
+gentle will. Each one of us has cast a stone upon his grave. But you
+took the brunt of it. You spoke out plain the denial that was in my
+coward's heart from the first. And I judged you! I--who uncovered
+my father's soul to ease my own conscience, and put him to shame and
+torture, and you to a trial worse than death. Now let us think of the
+whole of his life. I have much to tell you. You could not listen before;
+but now he is listening. I speak for him. This is how he loved us!”
+
+In hard, brief words Paul told the story of his father's sin and
+self-judgment; his abdication in the flesh; what he esteemed the rights
+to be of a woman placed as he had placed his wife; how carefully he had
+guarded her in those rights, and perjured himself at the last to
+leave her free in peace and honor with her children. She listened, not
+weeping, but with her great eyes shining in her pallid face.
+
+“All that came after,” said Paul, taking her cold hands in his--“after
+his last solemn recantation does not touch the true spirit of his
+sacrifice. It was finished. My father died to us then as he meant to
+die. The body remained--to serve out its time, as he said. But his brain
+was tired. I do not think he connected the past very clearly with the
+present. I think you should forget what has happened here. It was a
+hideous net of circumstance that did it.”
+
+“There is no such thing as circumstance,” said Mrs. Bogardus with
+loftiness. Her face was calm and sweet in its exaltation. “I cannot
+say things as you can, but this is what I mean. I was the wife of his
+body--sworn flesh of his flesh. In the flesh that made us one I denied
+him, and caused his death. And if I could believe as I used to about
+punishment, I would lock myself in that room, and for every hour he
+suffered there, I would suffer two. And no one should prevent me,
+or hasten the end. And the feet of the young men that carried out my
+husband who lied to save me, should wait there for me who lied to save
+myself. All lies are death. But what is a made-up punishment to me! I
+shall take it as it comes--drop by drop--slowly.”
+
+“Mother--my mother! The fashion of this world does not last; but one
+thing does. Is it nothing to you, mother?”
+
+“Have I my son--after all?” she said as one dreaming.
+
+The night lamp expired in smoke that tainted the cold air. Paul drew
+back the curtains one by one, and let in the new-born day.
+
+“'Peace to this house,'” he said; “'not as the world giveth,'” his
+thought concluded.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Desert and The Sown
+
+Author: Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8219]
+This file was first posted on July 3, 2003
+Last Updated: May 19, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DESERT AND THE SOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Eldred, Clay Massei and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DESERT AND THE SOWN
+
+
+By Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+I. A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+
+II. INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+
+III. THE INITIAL LOVE
+
+IV. "A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT"
+
+V. DISINHERITED
+
+VI. AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+
+VII. MARKING TIME
+
+VIII. A HUNTER'S DIARY
+
+IX. THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+
+X. THE WHITE PERIL
+
+XI. A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+
+XII. THE BLOOD-WITE
+
+XIII. CURTAIN
+
+XIV. KIND INQUIRIES
+
+XV. A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+
+XVI. THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+
+XVII. THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+
+XVIII.THE STAR IN THE EAST
+
+XIX. PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+
+XX. A STATION IN THE DESERT
+
+XXI. INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+
+XXII. THE CASE STRIKES IN
+
+XXIII.RESTIVENESS
+
+XXIV. INDIAN SUMMER
+
+XXV. THE FELL FROST
+
+XXVI. PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+
+It was an evening of sudden mildness following a dry October gale.
+The colonel had miscalculated the temperature by one log--only one, he
+declared, but that had proved a pitchy one, and the chimney bellowed
+with flame. From end to end the room was alight with it, as if the
+stored-up energies of a whole pine-tree had been sacrificed in the
+consumption of that four-foot stick.
+
+The young persons of the house had escaped, laughing, into the fresh
+night air, but the colonel was hemmed in on every side; deserted by
+his daughter, mocked by the work of his own hands, and torn between the
+duties of a host and the host's helpless craving for his after-dinner
+cigar.
+
+Across the hearth, filling with her silks all the visible room in his
+own favorite settle corner, sat the one woman on earth it most behooved
+him to be civil to,--the future mother-in-law of his only child. That
+Moya was a willing, nay, a reckless hostage, did not lessen her father's
+awe of the situation.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus, according to her wont at this hour, was composedly doing
+nothing. The colonel could not make his retreat under cover of her real
+or feigned absorption in any of the small scattering pursuits which
+distract the female mind. When she read she read--she never "looked at
+books." When she sewed she sewed--presumably, but no one ever saw her
+do it. Her mind was economic and practical, and she saved it whole, like
+many men of force, for whatever she deemed her best paying sphere of
+action.
+
+It was a silence that crackled with heat! The colonel, wrathfully
+perspiring in the glow of that impenitent stick, frowned at it like
+an inquisitor. Presently Mrs. Bogardus looked up, and her expression
+softened as she saw the energetic despair upon his face.
+
+"Colonel, don't you always smoke after dinner?"
+
+"That is my bad habit, madam. I belong to the generation that
+smokes--after dinner and most other times--more than is good for us."
+Colonel Middleton belonged also to the generation that can carry a
+sentence through to the finish in handsome style, and he did it with a
+suave Virginian accent as easy as his seat in the saddle. Mrs. Bogardus
+always gave him her respectful attention during his best performances,
+though she was a woman of short sentences herself.
+
+"Don't you smoke in this room sometimes?" she asked, with a barely
+perceptible sniff the merest contraction of her housewifely nostrils.
+
+"Ah--h! Those rascally curtains and cushions! You ladies--women,
+I should say--Moya won't let me say ladies--you bolster us up with
+comforts on purpose to betray us!"
+
+"You can say 'ladies' to me," smiled the very handsome one before him.
+"That's the generation _I_ belong to."
+
+The colonel bowed playfully. "Well, you know, I don't detect myself, but
+there's no doubt I have infected the premises."
+
+"Open fires are good ventilators. I wish you would smoke now. If you
+don't, I shall have to go away, and I'm exceedingly comfortable."
+
+"You are exceedingly charming to say so--on top of that last stick,
+too!" The colonel had Irish as well as Virginian progenitors. "Well," he
+sighed, proceeding to make himself conditionally happy, "Moya will never
+forgive me! We spoil each other shamefully when we're alone, but of
+course we try to jack each other up when company comes. It's a great
+comfort to have some one to spoil, isn't it, now? I needn't ask which it
+is in your family!"
+
+"The spoiled one?" Mrs. Bogardus smiled rather coldly. "A woman we had
+for governess, when Christine was a little thing, used to say: 'That
+child is the stuff that tyrants are made of!' Tyrants are made by the
+will of their subjects, don't you think, generally speaking?"
+
+"Well, you couldn't have made a tyrant of your son, Mrs. Bogardus. He's
+the Universal Spoiler! He'll ruin my striker, Jephson. I shall have to
+send the fellow back to the ranks. I don't know how you keep a servant
+good for anything with Paul around."
+
+"Paul thinks he doesn't like to be waited on," Paul's mother observed
+shrewdly. "He says that only invalids, old people, and children have any
+claim on the personal service of others."
+
+"By George! I found him blacking his own boots!"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus laughed.
+
+"But I'm paying a man to do it for him. It upsets my contract with that
+other fellow for Paul to do his work. We have a claim on what we pay for
+in this world."
+
+"I suppose we have. But Paul thinks that nothing can pay the price of
+those artificial relations between man and man. I think that's the way
+he puts it."
+
+"Good Heavens! Has the boy read history? It's a relation that began when
+the world was made, and will last while men are in it."
+
+"I am not defending Paul's ideas, Colonel. I have a great sympathy with
+tyrants myself. You must talk to him. He will amuse you."
+
+"My word! It's a ticklish kind of amusement when _we_ get talking. Why,
+the boy wants to turn the poor old world upside down--make us all stand
+on our heads to give our feet a rest. Now, I respect my feet,"--the
+colonel drew them in a little as the lady's eyes involuntarily took the
+direction of his allusion,--"I take the best care I can of them; but
+I propose to keep my head, such as it is, on top, till I go under
+altogether. These young philanthropists! They assume that the Hands and
+the Feet of the world, the class that serves in that capacity, have got
+the same nerves as the Brain."
+
+"There's a sort of connection," said Mrs. Bogardus carelessly. "Some
+of our Heads have come from the class that you call the Hands and Feet,
+haven't they?"
+
+The colonel admitted the fact, but the fact was the exception. "Why,
+that's just the matter with us now! We've got no class of legislators.
+I don't wish to plume myself, but, upon my word, the two services are
+about all we have left to show what selection and training can do. And
+we're only just getting the army into shape, after the raw material that
+was dumped into it by the civil war."
+
+"Weren't you in the civil war yourself?"
+
+"I was--a West Pointer, madam; and I was true to my salt and false to my
+blood. But, the flag over all!--at the cost of everything I held dear
+on earth." After this speech the colonel looked hotter than ever and a
+trifle ashamed of himself.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus's face wore its most unobservant expression. "I don't
+agree with Paul," she said. "I wish in some ways he were more like other
+young men--exercise, for instance. It's a pity for young men not to love
+activity and leadership. Besides, it's the fashion. A young man might
+as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Blood is a strange
+thing," she mused.
+
+The colonel looked at her curiously. In a woman so unfrank, her
+occasional bursts of frankness were surprising and, as he thought, not
+altogether complimentary. It was as if she felt herself so far removed
+from his conception of her that she might say anything she pleased, sure
+of his miscomprehension.
+
+"He is not lazy intellectually," said the colonel, aiming to comfort
+her.
+
+"I did not say he was lazy--only he won't do things except to what he
+calls some 'purpose.' At his age amusement ought to be purpose enough.
+He ought to take his pleasures seriously--this hunting-trip, for
+instance. I believe, on the very least encouragement, he would give it
+all up!"
+
+"You mustn't let him do that," said the colonel, warming. "All that
+country above Yankee Fork, for a hundred miles, after you've gone fifty
+north from Bonanza, is practically virgin forest. Wonderful flora
+and fauna! It's late for the weeds and things, but if Paul wants game
+trophies for your country-house, he can load a pack-train."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus continued to be amused, in a quiet way. "He calls them
+relics of barbarism! He would as soon festoon his walls with scalps, as
+decorate them with the heads of beautiful animals,--nearer the Creator's
+design than most men, he would say."
+
+"He's right there! But that doesn't change the distinction between men
+and animals. He is your son, madam--and he's going to be mine. But, fine
+boy as he is, I call him a crank of the first water."
+
+"You'll find him quite good to Moya," Mrs. Bogardus remarked
+dispassionately. "And he's not quite twenty-four."
+
+"Very true. Well, _I_ should send him into the woods for the sake of
+getting a little sense into him, of an every-day sort. He 'll take in
+sanity with every breath."
+
+"And you don't think it's too late in the season for them to go out?"
+
+There was no change in Mrs. Bogardus's voice, unconcerned as it was; yet
+the colonel felt at once that this simple question lay at the root of
+all her previous skirmishing.
+
+"The guide will decide as to that," he said definitely. "If it is, he
+won't go out with them. They have got a good man, you say?"
+
+"They are waiting for a good man; they have waited too long, I think.
+He is expected in with another party on Monday, perhaps, Paul is to meet
+the Bowens at Challis, where they buy their outfit. I do believe"--she
+laughed constrainedly--"that he is going up there more to head them off
+than for any other reason."
+
+"How do you mean?"
+
+"Oh, it's very stupid of them! They seem to think an army post is part
+of the public domain. They have been threatening, if Paul gives up the
+trip, to come down here on a gratuitous visit."
+
+"Why, let them come by all means! The more the merrier! We will quarter
+them on the garrison at large."
+
+"Wherever they were quartered, they would be here all the time. They are
+not intimate friends of Paul's. _Mrs._ Bowen is--a very great friend.
+He is her right-hand in all that Hartley House work. The boys are just
+fashionable young men."
+
+"Can't they go hunting without Paul?"
+
+"Wheels within wheels!" Mrs. Bogardus sighed impatiently. "Hunting trips
+are expensive, and--when young men are living on their fathers, it
+is convenient sometimes to have a third. However, Paul goes, I half
+believe, to prevent their making a descent upon us here."
+
+"Well; I should ask them to come, or make it plain they were not
+expected."
+
+"Oh, would you?--if their mother was one of the nicest women, and your
+friend? Besides, the reservation does not cover the whole valley. Banks
+Bowen talks of a mine he wants to look at--I don't think it will make
+much difference to the mine! This is simply to say that I wish Paul
+cared more about the trip for its own sake."
+
+"Well, frankly, I think he's better out of the way for the next
+fortnight. The girls ought to go to bed early, and keep the roses in
+their cheeks for the wedding. Moya's head is full of her frocks and
+fripperies. She is trying to run a brace of sewing women; and all those
+boxes are coming from the East to be 'inspected, and condemned' mostly.
+The child seems to make a great many mistakes, doesn't she? About every
+other day I see a box as big as a coffin in the hall, addressed to some
+dry-goods house, 'returned by ----'"
+
+"Moya should have sent to me for her things," said Mrs. Bogardus. "I am
+the one who makes her return them. She can do much better when she is
+in town herself. It doesn't matter, for the few weeks they will be
+away, what she wears. I shall take her measures home with me and set the
+people to work. She has never been _fitted_ in her life."
+
+The colonel looked rather aghast. He had seldom heard Mrs. Bogardus
+speak with so much animation. He wondered if really his household was so
+very far behind the times.
+
+"It's very kind of you, I'm sure, if Moya will let you. Most girls think
+they can manage these matters for themselves."
+
+"It's impossible to shop by mail," Mrs. Bogardus said decidedly. "They
+always keep a certain style of things for the Western and Southern
+trade."
+
+The colonel was crushed. Mrs. Bogardus rose, and he picked up her
+handkerchief, breathing a little hard after the exertion. She passed
+out, thanking him with a smile as he opened the door. In the hall she
+stopped to choose a wrap from a collection of unconventional garments
+hanging on a rack of moose horns.
+
+"I think I shall go out," she said. "The air is quite soft to-night. Do
+you know which way the children went?" By the "children," as the colonel
+had noted, Mrs. Bogardus usually meant her daughter, the budding tyrant,
+Christine.
+
+"Fine woman!" he mused, alone with himself in his study. "Splendid
+character head. Regular Dutch beauty. But hard--eh?--a trifle hard in
+the grain. Eyes that tell you nothing. Mouth set like a stone. Never
+rambles in her talk. Never speculates or exaggerates for fun. Never runs
+into hyperbole--the more fool some other folks! Speaks to the point or
+keeps still."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+
+The colonel's papers failed to hold him somehow. He rose and paced the
+room with his short, stiff-kneed tread. He stopped and stared into the
+fire; his face began to get red.
+
+"So! Moya's clothes are not good enough. Going to set the people to
+work, is she? Wants an outfit worthy of her son. And who's to pay for
+it, by gad? Post-nuptial bills for wedding finery are going to hurt poor
+little Moya like the deuce. Confound the woman! Dressing my daughter
+for me, right in my own house. Takes it in her hands as if it were
+her right, by----!" The colonel let slip another expletive. "Well,"
+he sighed, half amused at his own violence, "I'll write to Annie. I
+promised Moya, and it's high time I did."
+
+Annie was the colonel's sister, the wife of an infantry captain,
+stationed at Fort Sherman. She was a very understanding woman; at least
+she understood her brother. But she was not solely dependent upon his
+laggard letters for information concerning his private affairs. The
+approaching wedding at Bisuka Barracks was the topic of most of the
+military families in the Department of the Columbia. Moya herself had
+written some time before, in the self-conscious manner of the newly
+engaged. Her aunt knew of course that Moya and Christine Bogardus had
+been room-mates at Miss Howard's, that the girls had fallen in love with
+each other first, and with visits at holidays and vacations, when the
+army girl could not go to her father, it was easily seen how the
+rest had followed. And well for Moya that it had, was Mrs. Creve's
+indorsement. As a family they were quite sufficiently represented in
+the army; and if one should ever get an Eastern detail it would be very
+pleasant to have a young niece charmingly settled in New York.
+
+The colonel drew a match across the top bar of the grate and set it
+to his pipe. His big nostrils whitened as he took a deep in-breath. He
+reseated himself and began his duty letter in the tone of a judicious
+parent; but, warming as he wrote, under the influence of Annie's
+imagined sympathy, he presently broke forth with his usual arrogant
+colloquialism.
+
+"She might have had her pick of the junior officers in both branches.
+And there was a captain of engineers at the Presidio, a widower, but an
+awfully good fellow. And she has chosen a boy, full of transcendental
+moonshine, who climbs upon a horse as if it were a stone fence, and has
+mixed ideas which side of himself to hang a pistol on.
+
+"I have no particular quarrel with the lad, barring his great burly
+mouthful of a name, Bo--gardus! To call a child Moya and have her fetch
+up with her soft, Irish vowels against such a name as that! She had a
+fond idea that it was from Beauregard. But she has had to give that up.
+It's Dutch--Hudson River Dutch--for something horticultural--a tree,
+or an orchard, or a brush-pile; and she says it's a good name where it
+belongs. Pity it couldn't have stayed where it belongs.
+
+"However, you won't find him quite so scrubby as he sounds. He's very
+proper and clean-shaven, with a good pair of dark, Dutch eyes, which he
+gets from his mother; and I wish he had got her business ability with
+them, and her horse sense, if the lady will excuse me. She runs the
+property and he spends it, as far as she'll let him, on the newest
+reforms. And there's another hitch!--To belong to the Truly Good
+at twenty-four! But beggars can't be choosers. He's going to settle
+something handsome on Moya out of the portion Madame gives him on his
+marriage. My poor little girl, as you know, will get nothing from me but
+a few old bits and trinkets and a father's blessing,--the same
+doesn't go for much in these days. I have been a better dispenser than
+accumulator, like others of our name.
+
+"I do assure you, Annie, it bores me down to the ground, this
+humanitarian racket from children with ugly names who have just chipped
+the shell. This one owns his surprise that we _work_ in the army! That
+our junior officers teach, and study a bit perforce themselves. His own
+idea is that every West Pointer, before he gets his commission, should
+serve a year or two in the ranks, to raise the type of the enlisted man,
+and chiefly, mark you, to get his point of view, the which he is to
+bear in mind when he comes to his command. Oh, we've had some pretty
+arguments! But I suspect the rascal of drawing it mild, at this stage,
+for the old dragon who guards his Golden Apple. He doesn't want to poke
+me up. How far he'd go if he were not hampered in his principles by the
+fact that he is in love, I cannot say. And I'd rather not imagine."
+
+The commandant's house at Bisuka Barracks is the nearest one to the
+flag-pole as you go up a flight of wooden steps from the parade ground.
+These steps, and their landings, flanked by the dry grass terrace of the
+line, are a favorite gathering place for young persons of leisure at
+the Post. They face the valley and the mountains; they lead past the
+adjutant's office to the main road to town; they command the daily
+pageant of garrison duty as performed at such distant, unvisited posts,
+with only the ladies and the mountains looking on.
+
+Retreat had sounded at half after five, for the autumn days grew short.
+The colonel's orderly had been dismissed to his quarters. There was no
+excuse, at this hour, for two young persons lingering in sentimental
+corners of the steps, beyond a flagrant satisfaction in the shadow
+thereof which covered them since the lighting of lamps on Officers' Row.
+
+The colonel stood at his study window keeping his pipe alive with slow
+and dreamy puffs. The moon was just clearing the roof of the men's
+quarters. His eye caught a shape, or a commingling of shapes, ensconced
+in an angle of the steps; the which he made out to be his daughter,
+in her light evening frock with one of his own old army capes over her
+shoulders, seated in close formation beside the only man at the Post who
+wore civilian black.
+
+The colonel had the feelings of a man as well as a father. He went back
+to his letter with a softened look in his face. He had said too much; he
+always did--to Annie; and now he must hedge a little or she would think
+there was trouble brewing, and that he was going to be nasty about
+Moya's choice.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+THE INITIAL LOVE
+
+"Let us be simple! Not every one can be, but we can. We can afford to
+be, and we know how!"
+
+Moya was speaking rapidly, in her singularly articulate tones. A reader
+of voices would have pronounced hers the physical record of unbroken
+health and constant, joyous poise.
+
+"Hear the word of your prophet Emerson!" she brought a little fist down
+upon her knee for emphasis, a hand several sizes larger closed upon it
+and held it fast. "Hear the word--are you listening? 'Only _two_ in the
+Garden walked and with Snake and Seraph talked.'"
+
+The young man's answer was an instant's impassioned silence. Too close
+it touched him, that vital image of the Garden. Then, with an effect of
+sternness, he said,--
+
+"Have we the right to do as we please? Have we the courage that comes of
+right to cut ourselves off from all those calls and cries for help?"
+
+"_I_ have," said the girl; "I have just that right--of one who knows
+exactly what she wants, and is going to get it if she can!"
+
+He laughed at her happy insolence, with which all the youth and nature
+in him made common cause.
+
+"I shouldn't mind thinking about your Poor Man," she tripped along, "if
+he liked being poor, or if it seemed to improve him any; or if it were
+only now and then. But there is so dreadfully much of him! Once we
+begin, how should we ever think about anything else? He'd rise up and
+sit down with us, and eat and drink with us, and tell us what to wear.
+Every pleasure of our lives would be spoiled with his eternal 'Where do
+_I_ come in?' It was simple enough in _that_ garden, with only those
+two and nobody outside to feel injured. But we are those two, aren't
+we? Isn't everybody--once in a life, and once only?" She turned her face
+aside, slighting by her manner the excessive meaning of her words. "I
+ask for myself only what I think I have a right to give you--my absolute
+undivided attention for those first few years. They say it never lasts!"
+she hastened to add with playful cynicism.
+
+Young Bogardus seemed incapable under the circumstances of any adequate
+reply. Free as they were in words, there was an extreme personal shyness
+between these proud young persons, undeveloped on the side of passion
+and better versed in theories of life than in life itself. They had
+separated the day after their sudden engagement, and their nearest
+approaches to intimacy had been through letters. Naturally the girl was
+the bolder, having less in herself to fear.
+
+"That is what _I_ call being simple," she went on briskly. "If you
+think we can be that in New York, let us live there. _I_ could be simple
+there, but not with you, sir! That terrible East Side would be shaking
+its gory locks at us. We should feel that we did it--or you would! Then
+good-by to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"
+
+"You are my life, liberty, and happiness, and I will be your almoner,"
+said Paul, "and dispense you"--
+
+"Dispense _with_ me!" laughed the girl. "And what shall I be doing while
+you are dispensing me on the East Side? New York has other sides. While
+you go slumming with the Seraph, I shall be talking to the Snake! Now,
+_do_ laugh!" she entreated childishly, turning her sparkling face to
+his.
+
+"Am I expected to laugh at that?"
+
+"Well, what shall we do? Don't make me harden my heart before it has had
+time to soften naturally. Give my poor pagan sympathies a little time to
+ripen."
+
+"But you have lived in New York. Did you find it such a strain on your
+sympathies?"
+
+"I was a visitor; and a girl is not expected to have sympathies. But to
+begin our home there: we should have to strike a note of some sort.
+How if my note should jar with yours? Paul, dear, it isn't nice to
+have convictions when one is young and going to be married. You know it
+isn't. It's not poetic, and it's not polite, and it's a dreadful bore!"
+
+The altruist and lover winced at this. Allowing for exaggeration, which
+was the life of speech with her, he knew that Moya was giving him a bit
+of her true self, that changeful, changeless self which goes behind all
+law and "follows joy and only joy." Her voice dropped into its sweetest
+tones of intimacy.
+
+"Why need we live in a crowd? Why must we be pressed upon with all this
+fuss and doing? Doing, doing! We are not ready to do anything yet. Every
+day must have its dawn;--and I don't see my way yet; I'm hardly awake!"
+
+"Darling, hush! You must not say such things to me. For you only to look
+at me like that is the most terrible temptation of my life. You make
+me forget everything a man is bound--that I of all men am bound to
+remember."
+
+"Then I will keep on looking! Behold, I am Happiness, Selfishness, if
+you like! I have come to stay. No, really, it's not nice of you to act
+as if you were under higher orders. You are under my orders. What right
+have we to choose each other if we are not to be better to each other
+than to any one else?--if our lives belong to any one who needs us, or
+our time and money, more than we need it ourselves? Why did you choose
+me? Why not somebody pathetic--one of your Poor Things; or else save
+yourself whole for all the Poor Things?"
+
+"Now you are 'talking for victory,'" he smiled. "You don't believe we
+must be as consistent as all that. Hearts don't have to be coddled
+like pears picked for market. But I'm not preaching to you. The heavens
+forbid! I'm trying to explain. You don't think this whole thing with me
+is a pose? I know I'm a bore with my convictions; but how do we come by
+such things?"
+
+"Ah! How do I come not to have any, or to want any?" she rejoined.
+
+"Once for all, let me tell you how I came by mine. Then you will know
+just where and how those cries for help take hold on me."
+
+"I don't wish to know. Preserve me from knowing! Why didn't you choose
+somebody different?"
+
+He looked at her with all his passion in his eyes. "I did not choose.
+Did you?"
+
+"It isn't too late," she whispered. Her face grew hot in the darkness.
+
+"Yes; it is too late--for anything but the truth. Will you listen,
+sweet? Will you let the nonsense wait?"
+
+"Deeper and deeper! Haven't we reached the bottom yet?"
+
+"Go on! It's the dearest nonsense," she heard him say; but she detected
+pain in his voice and a new constraint.
+
+"What is it? What is the 'truth'?"
+
+"Oh, it's not so dreadful. Only, you always put me in quite a different
+class from where I belong, and I haven't had the courage to set you
+right."
+
+"Children, children!" a young voice called, from the lighted walk above.
+Two figures were going down the line, one in uniform keeping step beside
+a girl in white who reefed back her skirts with one hand, the other was
+raised to her hair which was blowing across her forehead in bewitching
+disorder. Every gesture and turn of her shape announced that she was
+pretty and gay in the knowledge of her power. It was Chrissy, walking
+with Lieutenant Lane.
+
+"Where are you--ridiculous ones? Don't you want to come with us?"
+
+"'Now who were they?'" Paul quoted derisively out of the dark.
+
+"We are going to Captain Dawson's to play Hearts. Come! Don't be
+stupid!"
+
+"We are not stupid, we are busy!" Moya called back.
+
+"Busy! Doing what?"
+
+"Oh, deciding things. We are talking about the Poor Man."
+
+"The poor men, she means." Christine's high laugh followed the
+lieutenant's speech, as the pair went on.
+
+"He _is_ a bore!" Moya declared. "We can't even use him for a joke."
+
+"Speaking of Lane, dear?"
+
+"The Poor Man. Are you sure that you've got a sense of humor, Paul?
+Can't we have charity for jokes among the other poor things?"
+
+Paul had raised himself to the step beside her. "You are shivering," he
+said, "I must let you go in."
+
+"I'm not shivering--I'm chattering," she mocked. "Why should I go in
+when we are going to be really serious?"
+
+Paul waited a moment; his breath came short, as if he were facing a
+postponed dread. "Moya, dear," he began in a forced tone, "I can't help
+my constraints and convictions that bore you so, any more than you can
+help your light heart--God bless it--and your theory of class which to
+me seems mediaeval. I have cringed to it, like the coward a man is when
+he is in love. But now I want you to know me."
+
+He took her hand and kissed it repeatedly, as if impressing upon her
+the one important fact back of all hypothesis and perilous efforts at
+statement.
+
+"Well, are you bidding me good-by?"
+
+"You must give me time," he said. "It takes courage in these days for
+a good American to tell the girl he loves that his father was a hired
+man."
+
+He smiled, but there was little mirth and less color in his face.
+
+"What absurdity!" cried Moya. Then glancing at him she added quickly,
+"_My_ father is a hired man. Most fathers who are worth anything are!"
+
+"My father was because he came of that class. His father was one before
+him. His mother took in tailoring in the village where he was born. He
+had only the commonest common-school education and not much of that.
+At eleven he worked for his board and clothes at my Grandfather Van
+Elten's, and from that time he earned his bread with his hands. Don't
+imagine that I'm apologizing," Paul went on rapidly. "The apology
+belongs on the other side. In New York, for instance, the Bogardus blood
+is quite as good as the Bevier or the Broderick or the Van Elten; but
+up the Hudson, owing to those chances or mischances that selected our
+farming aristocracy for us, my father's people had slipped out of
+their holdings and sunk to the poor artisan class which the old Dutch
+landowners held in contempt."
+
+"We are not landowners," said Moya. "What does it matter? What does any
+of it matter?"
+
+"It matters to be honest and not sail under false colors. I thought
+you would not speak of the Poor Man as you do if you knew that I am his
+son."
+
+"Money has nothing to do with position in the army. I am a poor man's
+daughter."
+
+"Ah, child! Your father gives orders--mine took them, all his life."
+
+"My father has to take what he gives. There is no escaping 'orders.'
+Even I know that!" said Moya. A slight shiver passed over her as she
+spoke, laughing off as usual the touch of seriousness in her words.
+
+"Why did you do that?" Paul touched her shoulder. "Is it the wind? There
+is a wind creeping down these steps." He improved the formation slightly
+in respect to the wind.
+
+"Listen!" said Moya. "Isn't that your mother walking on the porch?
+Father, I know, is writing. She will be lonely."
+
+"She is never lonely, more or less. It is always the same loneliness--of
+a woman widowed for years."
+
+"How very much she must have cared for him!" Moya sighed incredulously.
+What a pity, she thought, that among the humbler vocations Paul's father
+should have been just a plain "hired man." Cowboy, miner, man-o'-war's
+man, even enlisted man, though that were bad enough--any of these he
+might have been in an accidental way, that at least would have been
+picturesque; but it is only the possession of land, by whatsoever means
+or title, that can dignify an habitual personal contact with it in the
+form of soil. That is one of the accepted prejudices which one does not
+meddle with at nineteen. "Youth is conservative because it is afraid."
+Moya, for all her fighting blood, was traditionally and in social ways
+much more in bonds than Paul, who had inherited his father's dreamy
+speculative habit of thought, with something of the farm-hand's distrust
+of society and its forms and shibboleth.
+
+Paul's voice took a narrative tone, and Moya gave herself up to
+listening--to him rather more, perhaps, than to his story.
+
+Few young men of twenty-four can go very deeply into questions of
+heredity. Of what follows here much was not known to Paul. Much that he
+did know he would have interpreted differently. The old well at Stone
+Ridge, for instance, had no place in his recital; and yet out of it
+sprang the history of his shorn generation. Had Paul's mother grown up
+in a houseful of brothers and sisters, governed by her mother instead
+of an old ignorant servant, in all likelihood she would have married
+differently--more wisely but not perhaps so well, her son would loyally
+have maintained. The sons of the rich farmers who would have been her
+suitors were men inferior to their fathers. They inherited the vigor and
+coarseness of constitution, the unabashed materialism of that earlier
+generation that spent its energies coping with Nature on its stony
+farms, but the sons were spared the need of that hard labor which their
+blood required. They supplied an element of force, but one of great
+corruption later, in the state politics of their time.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT
+
+In the kitchen court called the "Airy" at Abraham Van Elten's, there
+was one of those old family wells which our ancestors used to locate so
+artlessly. And when it tapped the kitchen drain, and typhoid took the
+elder children, and the mother followed the children, it was called the
+will of God. A gloomy distinction rested on the house. Abraham felt the
+importance attaching to any supreme experience in a community where life
+runs on in the middle key.
+
+A young doctor who had been called in at the close of the last case
+went prying about the premises, asking foolish questions that angered
+Abraham. It is easier for some natures to suffer than to change. If the
+farmer had ever drunk water himself, except as tea or coffee, or mixed
+with something stronger, he must have been an early victim, to his own
+crass ignorance. He was a vigorous, heavy-set man, a grand field for
+typhoid. But he prospered, and the young doctor was turned down with
+the full weight and breadth of the Van Elten thumb, or the Broderick;
+Abraham's build was that of his maternal grandmother, Hillotje
+Broderick.
+
+On the Ridge, which later developed into a valuable slate quarry,
+there was a spring of water, cold and perpetual, flowing out of the
+trap-formation. Abraham had piped this water down to his barns and
+cattle-sheds; it furnished power for the farm-work. But to bring it to
+the house, in obedience to the doctor's meddlesome advice, would be an
+acknowledgment of fatal mistakes in the past; would raise talk and blame
+among the neighbors, and do away with the honor of a special visitation;
+would cost no trifle of money; would justify the doctor's interference,
+and insult the old well of his father and his father's father, the
+fountain of generations. To seal its mouth and bid its usefulness cease
+in the house where it had ministered for upwards of a hundred years was
+an act of desecration impossible to the man who in his stolid way loved
+the very stones that lined its slimy sides. The few sentiments that had
+taken hold on Abraham's arid nature went as deep as his obstinacy and
+clung as fast as his distrust of new opinions and new men. The question
+of water supply was closed in his house; but the well remained open and
+kept up its illicit connection with the drain.
+
+Old Becky, keeper of the widower's keys, had followed closely the
+history of those unhappy "cases;" she had listened to discussions,
+violent or suppressed, she had heard much talk that went on behind her
+master's back.
+
+Employers of that day and generation were masters; and masters are meant
+to be outwitted. Emily, the youngest and last of the flock, was now a
+child of four, dark like her mother, sturdy and strong like her father.
+On an August day soon after the mother's funeral, Becky took her little
+charge to the well and showed her a tumbler filled, with water not
+freshly drawn.
+
+"See them little specks and squirmy things?" Emmy saw them. She followed
+their wavering motion in the glass as the stern forefinger pointed.
+"Those are little baby snakes," said Becky mysteriously. "The well is
+full of 'em. Sometimes you can see 'em, sometimes you can't, but they're
+always there. They never grow big down the well; it's too dark 'n' cold.
+But you drink that water and the snakes will grow and wriggle and
+work all through ye, and eat your insides out, and you'll die. Your
+mother"--in a whisper--"she drunk that water, and she died. Your sister
+Ruth, and Dirck, and Jimmy, they drunk it, and they died. Now if Emmy
+wants to die"--Large eyes of horror fastened on the speaker's face.
+"No--o, she don't want to die, the Loveums! She don't want Becky to have
+no little girl left at all! No; we mustn't ever drink any of that bad
+water--all full of snakes, ugh! But if Emmy's thirsty, see here! Here's
+good nice water. It's going to be always here in this pail--same water
+the little lambs drink up in the fields. Becky 'll take Emmy up on the
+hill sometime and show where the little lambs drink."
+
+Grief had not clouded the farmer's oversight in petty things. He noticed
+the innocent pail on the area bench, never empty, always specklessly
+clean.
+
+"What is this water?" he asked.
+
+Becky was surly. "Drinking water. Want some?"
+
+"What's it doing here all the time?"
+
+"I set it there for Emmy. She can't reach up to the bucket."
+
+Abraham tasted the water suspiciously. The well-water was hard, with
+a tang of iron. The spring soft, and less cold for its journey to the
+barn.
+
+"Where did you get this water?"
+
+"Help yourself. There's plenty more."
+
+"Becky, where did this water come from? Out o' the well?"
+
+Becky gave a snort of exasperation. "Sam Lewis brought it from the barn!
+I'm too lame to be histin' buckets. I've got the rheumatiz' awful in my
+back and shoulders, if ye want to know!"
+
+"Becky, you're lying to me. You've been listening to what don't concern
+you. Now, see here. You are not going to ask the men to carry water for
+you. They've got something else to do. _There's_ your water, as handy as
+ever a woman had it; use that or go without."
+
+Abraham caught up the pail and flung its contents out upon the grass,
+scattering the hens that came sidling back with squawks of inquiring
+temerity.
+
+When next Emmy came for water, the old woman took her by the hand in
+silence and led her into the dim meat-cellar, a half-basement with one
+low window level with the grass. There was the pail, safe hidden behind
+the soft-soap barrel.
+
+"I had to hide it from your pa," Becky whispered. "Don't you never let
+him know you're afraid o' the well-water. He drunk it when he was a
+little boy. He don't believe in the snakes. But _there wa'n't none
+then_. It's when water gets old and rotten. You can believe what Becky
+says. _She_ knows! But you mustn't ever tell. Your father 'd be as mad
+as fire if he knowed I said anything about snakes. He'd send me right
+away, and some strange woman would come, and maybe she'd whip Emmy.
+Emmy want Becky to go?" Sobs, and little arms clinging wildly to Becky's
+aproned skirts. "No, no! Well, she ain't goin'. But Emmy mustn't tell
+tales or she might have to. Tattlers are wicked anyway. 'Telltale tit!
+Your tongue shall be slit, and all the little dogs'--There! run now!
+There's your poppy. Don't you never,--never!"
+
+Emmy let her eyes be wiped, and with one long, solemn, secret look of
+awed intelligence she ran out to meet her father. She did not love him,
+and the smile with which she met him was no new lesson in diplomacy. But
+her first secret from him lay deep in the beautiful eyes, her mother's
+eyes, as she raised them to his.
+
+"Ain't that wonderful!" said Becky, with a satisfied sigh, watching her.
+"Safe as a jug! An' she not five years old!" For vital reasons she had
+taught the child an ugly lesson. Such lessons were common enough in her
+experience of family discipline. She never thought of it again.
+
+That year which took Emmy's mother from her brought to the child her
+first young companion and friend. Adam Bogardus came as chore-boy to
+the farm,--an only child himself, and sensitive through the clashing
+of gentle instincts with rough and inferior surroundings; brought up
+in that depressed God-fearing attitude in which a widow not strong,
+and earning her bread, would do her duty by an only son. Not a natural
+fighter, she took what little combativeness he had out of him, and made
+his school-days miserable--a record of humiliations that sunk deep and
+drove him from his kind. He was a big, clumsy, sagacious boy, grave
+as an old man, always snubbed and condescended to, yet always trusted.
+Little Emmy made him her bondslave at sight. His whole soul blossomed in
+adoration of the beautiful, masterful child who ordered him about as her
+vassal, while slipping a soft little trustful hand in his. She trotted
+at his heels like one of the lambs or chickens that he fed. She brought
+him into perpetual disgrace with Becky, for wasting his time through her
+imperious demands. She was the burden, the delight, the handicap, the
+incentive, and the reward of his humble apprenticeship. And when he was
+promoted to be one of the regular hands she followed him still, and got
+her pleasure out of his day's work. No one had such patience to tell
+her things, to wait for her and help her over places where her tagging
+powers fell short. But though she bullied him, she looked up to him
+as well. His occupations commanded her respect. He was the god of the
+orchards and of the cider-making; he presided at all the functions of
+the farm year. He was a perfect calendar besides of country sports in
+their season. He swept the ice pools in the meadow for winter sliding,
+after his day's work was done. He saved up paper and string for
+kite-making in March. He knew when willow bark would slip for April's
+whistles. In the first heats of June he climbed the tall locust-trees
+to put up a swing in which she could dream away the perfumed hours.
+At harvest she waited in the meadow for him to toss her up on the
+hay-loads, and his great arms received her when she slid off in the
+barn. She knelt at his feet on the bumping boards of the farm-wagon
+while he braced himself like a charioteer, holding the reins above
+her head. He threshed the nut-trees and routed marauding boys from her
+preserves, and carved pumpkin lanterns to light her to her attic chamber
+on cold November nights, where she would lie awake watching strange
+shadows on the sloping roof, half worshiping, half afraid of her idol's
+ugliness in the dark.
+
+These were some of Paul's illustrations of that pastoral beginning, and
+no doubt they were sympathetically close to the truth. He lingered
+over them, dressing up his mother's choice instinctively to the little
+aristocrat beside him.
+
+When Emmy grew big enough to go to the Academy, three miles from the
+farm, it was all in the day's work that Adam should take her and fetch
+her home. He combined her with the mail, the blacksmith, and other
+village errands. Whoever met her father's team on those long stony hills
+of Saugerties would see his little daughter seated beside his hired man,
+her face turned up to his in endless confiding talk. It was a face, as
+we say, to dream of. But there were few dreamers in that little world.
+The farmers would nod gravely to Adam. "Abraham's girl takes after her
+mother; heartier lookin', though. Guess he'll need a set o' new tires
+before spring." The comments went no deeper.
+
+Abraham was now well on in years; he made no visits, and he never drove
+his own team at night. When his daughter began to let down her frocks
+and be asked to evening parties, it was still Adam who escorted her.
+He sat in the kitchen while she was amusing herself in the parlor. She
+discussed her young acquaintances with him on their way home. The
+time for distinctions had come, but she was too innocent to feel
+them herself, and too proud to accept the standards of others. He was
+absolutely honest and unworldly. He thought it no treachery to love her
+for herself, and he believed, as most of us do, that his family was as
+good as hers or any other.
+
+It would be hard to explain the old man's obliviousness. Perhaps he had
+forgotten his own youth; or class prejudice had gone so deep with him as
+to preclude the bare thought of a child of his falling in love with one
+of his "men." His imagination could not so insult his own blood. But
+when the awakening came, his passion of anger and resentment knew no
+bounds. To discharge his faithless employee out of hand would be the
+cripple throwing away his crutch. Though he called Adam _one_ of his
+men, and though his pay was that of a common laborer, his duties had
+long been of a much higher order. Abraham had made a very good bargain
+out of the widow's son. Adam knew well that he could not be spared, and
+pitied the old man's helpless rage. He took his frantic insults as part
+of his senility, and felt it no unmanliness to appease it by giving his
+promise that he would speak no more of love to Emmy while he was taking
+her father's wages. But Emmy did not indorse this promise fully. To her
+it looked like weakness, and implied a sort of patience which did
+not become a lover such as she wished hers to be. The winter wore on
+uncomfortably for all. Towards spring, Becky's last illness and passing
+away brought the younger ones together again, and closer than before.
+Adam kept his promise through days and nights of sickroom intimacy; but
+though no word of love was spoken, each bore silent witness to what was
+loveliest in the other, and the bond between them deepened.
+
+Then spring came, and its restlessness was strong upon them both. But it
+was Emmy to whom it meant action and rebellion.
+
+They stood on the orchard hill one Sunday afternoon at the pause of the
+year. Buds were swelling and the edges of the woods wore a soft blush
+against the vaporous sky. The bare brown slopes were streaked with snow.
+A floe of winter ice, grinding upon itself with the tide, glared yellow
+as an old man's teeth in the setting sun. From across the river came
+the thunder of a train, bound north, two engines dragging forty cars of
+freight piled up by some recent traffic-jam; it plunged into a tunnel,
+and they waited, listening to the monster's smothered roar. Out it
+burst, its breath packed into clouds, the engines whooped, and round
+the curve where a point of cedars cut the sky the huge creature unwound
+itself, the hills echoing to its tread.
+
+Emmy watched it out of sight, and breathed again. "Hundreds, hundreds
+going every day! It seems easy enough for everybody else. Oh, if I were
+a man!"
+
+"What do you want I should do, Emmy?" Adam knew well what man she was
+thinking of.
+
+"_I_ want? Don't you ever want things yourself?"
+
+"When I want a thing bad, I gen'ly think it's worth waiting for."
+
+"People don't get things by waiting. I don't know how you can stand
+it,--to stay here year after year. And now you've tied yourself up with
+a promise, and you know you cannot keep it!"
+
+"I'm trying to keep it."
+
+"You couldn't keep it if you cared--really and truly--as some do!" She
+dropped her voice hurriedly. "To live here and eat your meals day after
+day and pass me like a stick or a stone!"
+
+The slow blood burned in Adam's face and hammered in his pulses. His
+blue eyes were bashful through its heat. "I don't feel like a stick nor
+a stone. You know it, Emmy. You want to be careful," he added gently.
+"Would going away look as if I cared?"
+
+"Why--why don't you ask me to go with you?" The girl tried to meet his
+eyes. She turned off her question with a proud laugh.
+
+"Be--careful, child! You know why I can't take you up on that. Would
+you want we should leave him here alone--without even Becky? You're only
+trying me for fun."
+
+"No; I am not!" Emmy was pale now. Her breast was rising in strong
+excitement. "If we were gone, he would know then what you are worth to
+him. Now, you're only Adam! He thinks he can put you down like a boy. He
+won't believe I care for you. There's only one way to show him--that
+is, if we do care. In one month he would be sending for us back. Then we
+could come, and you would take your right place here, and be somebody.
+You would not eat in the kitchen, then. Haven't you been like a son to
+him? And why shouldn't he own it?"
+
+"But if he won't? Suppose he don't send for us to come back?"
+
+"Then you could strike out for yourself. What was Tom Madden, before
+he went away to Colorado, or somewhere--where was it? And now everybody
+stops to shake hands with him;--he's as much of a man as anybody. If you
+could make a little money. That's the proof he wants. If you were rich,
+you'd be all right with him. You know that!"
+
+"I'd hate to think it. But I'll never be rich. Put that out of your
+mind, Emmy. It don't run in the blood. I don't come of a money-making
+breed."
+
+"What a silly thing to say! Of course, if you don't believe you can, you
+can't. Who has made the money here for the last ten years?"
+
+"It was his capital done it. It ain't hard to make money after you've
+scraped the first few thousands together. But it's the first thousand
+that costs."
+
+"How much have you got ahead?"
+
+Adam answered awkwardly, "Eleven hundred and sixty odd." He did not like
+to talk of money to the girl who was the prayer, the inspiration, of his
+life. It hurt him to be questioned by her in this sordid way.
+
+"You earned it all, didn't you?"
+
+"I've took no risks. Here was my home. He give me the chance and he
+showed me how. And--he's your father. I don't like to talk about his
+money, nor about my own, to you."
+
+"Oh, you are good, good! Nobody knows! But it's all wasted if you
+haven't got any push--anything inside of yourself that makes people know
+what you are. I wish I could put into you some of my _fury_ that I
+feel when things get in my way! You have held yourself in too long. You
+can't--_can't_ love a girl, and be so careful--like a mother. Don't you
+understand?"
+
+"Stop right there, Emmy! You needn't push no harder. I can let go
+whenever you say so. But--do _you_ understand, little girl? Man and wife
+it will have to be."
+
+Emmy did not shrink at the words. Her face grew set, her dark eyes full
+of mystery fixed themselves on the slow-moving ice-floe grinding along
+the shore.
+
+"I know," she assented slowly.
+
+"I can't give you no farm, nor horses and carriages, nor help in the
+kitchen. It's bucklin' right down with our bare hands--me outside and
+you in? And you only eighteen. See what little hands--If I could do it
+all!"
+
+"Your promise is broken," she whispered. "I made you break it. You will
+have to tell him now, or--we must go."
+
+"So be!" said Adam solemnly. "And God do so to me and more also, if I
+have to hurt my little girl,--Emmy--wife!"
+
+He folded her in his great arms clumsily--the man she had said was like
+a mother. He was almost as ignorant as she, and more hopeful than he had
+dared to seem, as to their worldly chances. But the love he had for her
+told him it was not love that made her so bold. The first touch of
+such love as his would have made her fear him as he feared her. And the
+subtle pain of this instinctive knowledge, together with that broken
+promise, shackled the wings of his great joy. It was not as he had hoped
+to win the crown of life.
+
+Paul, it may be supposed, had never liked to think of his mother's
+elopement. It had been the one hard point to get over in his conception
+of his father, but he could never have explained it by such a scene as
+this. It would have hampered him terribly in his tale had he dreamed of
+it. He passed over the unfortunate incident with a romancer's touch, and
+dwelt upon his grandfather's bitter resentment which he resented as
+the son of his mother's choice. The Van Eltens and Brodericks all fared
+hardly at the hands of their legatee.
+
+It was not only in the person of a hireling who had abused his trust
+that Abraham had felt himself outraged. There were old neighborhood
+spites and feuds going back, dividing blood from blood--even brothers of
+the same blood. There was trouble between him and his brother Jacob, of
+New York, dating from the settlement of their father's, Broderick Van
+Elten's, estate; and no one knows what besides that was private and
+personal may have entered into it. It was years since they had met,
+but Jacob kept well abreast of his brother's misfortunes. A bachelor
+himself, with no children to lose or to quarrel with, it was not
+displeasing to him to hear of the breaks in his brother's household.
+
+"What, what, what! The last one left him,--run off with one of his men!
+What a fool the man must be. Can't he look after his women folks better
+than that? Better have lost her with the others. Two boys, and Chrissy,
+and the girl--and now the last girl gone off with his hired man. Poor
+Chrissy! Guess she had about enough of it. Things have come out pretty
+much even, after all! There was more love and lickin's wasted on Abe.
+Father was proudest of him, but he couldn't break him. Hi! but I've
+crawled under the woodshed to hear him yell, and father would tan him
+with a raw-hide, but he couldn't break him; couldn't get a sound out
+of him. Big, and hard, and tough--Chrissy thought she knew a man; she
+thought she took the best one."
+
+With slow, cold spite Jacob had tracked his brother's path in life
+through its failures. Jacob had no failures, and no life.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+DISINHERITED
+
+Proud little Emmy, heiress no longer, had put her spirit into her
+farm-hand and incited him to the first rebellion of his life. They
+crossed the river at night, poling through floating ice, and climbed
+aboard one of those great through trains whose rushing thunder had made
+the girlish heart so often beat. This was long before the West Shore
+Line was built. Neither of them had ever seen the inside of a Pullman
+sleeper. Emmy could count the purchased meals she had eaten in her life;
+she had never slept in a hotel or hired lodging till after her marriage.
+Hardly any one could be so provincial in these days.
+
+Adam Bogardus was a plodder in the West as he had been in the East. He
+was an honest man, and he was wise enough not to try to be a shrewd one.
+He tried none of the short-cuts to a fortune. Hard work suited him best,
+and no work was too hard for his iron strength and patient resolution.
+But it broke the spirit of a man in him to see his young wife's despair.
+Poverty frightened and quelled her. The deep-rooted security of her old
+home was something she missed every day of her makeshift existence. It
+was degradation to live in "rooms," or a room; to move for want of means
+to pay the rent. She pined for the good food she had been used to. Her
+health suffered through anxiety and hard work. She was too proud to
+complain, but the sight of her dumb unacceptance of what had come to
+her through him undoubtedly added the last straw to her husband's mental
+strain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It is hard for me to realize it as I once did," said Paul, as the story
+paused. "You make tragedy a dream. But there is a deep vein of tragedy
+in our blood. And my theory is that it always crops out in families
+where it's the keynote, as it were."
+
+"Never mind, you old care-taker! We Middletons carry sail enough to need
+a ton or two of lead in our keel."
+
+"But, you understand?"--
+
+"I understand the distinction between what I call your good blood, and
+the sort of blood I thought you had. It explains a certain funny way you
+have with arms--weapons. Do you mind?"
+
+"Not at all," said Paul coldly. "I hate a weapon. I am always ashamed of
+myself when I get one in my hand."
+
+"You act that way, dear!"
+
+"God made tools and the Devil made weapons."
+
+"You are civil to my father's profession."
+
+"Your father is what he is aside from his profession."
+
+"You are quite mistaken, Paul. My father and his profession are one.
+His sword is a symbol of healing. The army is the great surgeon of the
+nation when the time comes for a capital operation."
+
+"It grows harder to tell my story," said Paul gloomily;--"the short and
+simple annals of the poor."
+
+"Now come! Have I been a snob about my father's profession?"
+
+"No; but you love it, naturally. You have grown up with its pomp and
+circumstance around you. You are the history makers when history is most
+exciting."
+
+"Go on with your story, you proud little Dutchman! When I despise you
+for your farming relatives, you can taunt me with my history making."
+
+Paul was about two years old when his parents broke up in the Wood
+River country and came south by wagon on the old stage-road to Felton.
+Whenever he saw a "string-bean freighter's" outfit moving into Bisuka,
+if there was a woman on the driver's seat, he wanted to take off his hat
+to her. For so his mother sat beside his father and held him in her arms
+two hundred miles across the Snake River desert. The stages have been
+laid off since the Oregon Short Line went through, but there were
+stations then all along the road.
+
+One night they made camp at a lonely place between Soul's Rest and
+Mountain Home. Oneman Station it was called; afterwards Deadman Station,
+when the keeper's body was found one morning stiff and cold in his bunk.
+He died in the night alone. Emily Bogardus had cause to hate the man
+when he was living, and his dreary end was long a shuddering remembrance
+to her, like the answer to an unforgiving prayer.
+
+The station was in a hollow with bare hills around, rising to the
+highest point of that rolling plain country. The mountains sink below
+the plain, only their white tops showing. It was October. All the wild
+grass had been eaten close for miles on both sides of the road, but over
+a gap in the Western divide was the Bruneau Valley, where the bell-mare
+of the team had been raised. In the night she broke her hopples and
+struck out across the summit with the four mules at her heels. Towards
+morning a light snow fell and covered their tracks. Adam was compelled
+to hunt his stock on foot; the keeper refusing him a horse, saying he
+had got himself into trouble before through being friendly with the
+company's horses. He started out across the hills, expecting that the
+same night would see him back, and his wife was left in the wagon camp
+alone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I know this story very well," said Paul, "and yet I never heard it but
+once, when mother decided I was old enough to know all. But every word
+was bitten into me--especially this ugly part I am coming to. I wish
+it need not be told, yet all the rest depends on it; and that such an
+experience could come to a woman like my mother shows what exposure and
+humiliation lie in the straightest path if there is no money to smooth
+the way. You hear it said that in the West the toughest men will be
+chivalrous to a woman if she is the right sort of a woman. I'm afraid
+that is a romantic theory of the Western man.
+
+"That night, before his team stampeded, as he sat by the keeper's fire,
+father had made up his mind that the less they had to do with that man
+the better. He may have warned mother; and she, left alone with the
+brute, did not know the wisdom of hiding her fear and loathing of him.
+He may have meant no more than a low kind of teasing, but her suffering
+was the same.
+
+"Father did not come. She dared not leave the camp. She knew no place to
+go to, and in his haste, believing he would soon be with her again, he
+had taken all their little stock of funds. But he had left her his gun,
+and with this within reach of her hand in the shelter of the wagon hood,
+without fire and without cooked food, she kept a sleepless watch.
+
+"The stages came and went; help was within sound of her voice, but she
+dared make no sign. The passengers were few at that season, always
+men, on the best of terms with the keeper. He had threatened--well, no
+matter--such a threat as a more sophisticated woman would have smiled
+at. She was simple, but she was not weak. It was a moral battle between
+them. There were hours when she held him by the power of her eye alone;
+she conquered, but it nearly killed her.
+
+"One morning a man jumped down from the stage whose face she knew. He
+had recognized my father's outfit and he came to speak to her, amazed
+to find her in that place alone. There was no need to put her worst fear
+into words; he knew the keeper. He made the best he could of father's
+detention, but he assured her, as she knew too well, that she could not
+wait for him there. He was on his way East, and he took us with him as
+far as Mountain Home. To this day she believes that if Bud Granger had
+led the search, my father would have been found; but he went East to
+sell his cattle, the snows set in, and the search party came straggling
+home. The man, Granger, had left a letter of explanation, inclosing one
+from mother to father, with the keeper. He bribed and frightened him,
+but for years she used to agonize over a fear that father had come back
+and the keeper had withheld the letter and belied her to him with some
+devilish story that maddened him and drove him from her. Such a fancy
+might have come out of her mental state at that time. I believe that
+Granger left the letter simply to satisfy her. He must have believed my
+father was dead. He could not have conceived of a man's being lost in
+that broad country at that season; but my father was a man of hills and
+farms, all small, compact. The plains were another planet to him.
+
+"The letter was found in the keeper's clothing after his death; no
+one ever came to claim it of his successor. Somewhere in this great
+wilderness a tired man found rest. What would we not give if we knew
+where!
+
+"And she worked in a hotel in Mountain Home. Can you imagine it! Then
+Christine was born and the multiplied strain overcame her. Strangers
+took care of her children while she lay between life and death. She had
+been silent about herself and her past, but they found a letter from one
+of her old schoolmates asking about teachers' salaries in the West, and
+they wrote to her begging her to make known my mother's condition to
+her relatives if any were living. At length came a letter from
+grandfather--characteristic to the last. The old home was there, for her
+and for her children, but no home for the traitor, as he called father.
+She must give him up even to his name. No Bogardus could inherit of a
+Van Elten.
+
+"She had not then lost all hope of father's return, and she never
+forgave her father for trying to buy her back for the price of what she
+considered her birthright. She settled down miserably to earn bread for
+her children. Then, when hope and pride were crushed in her, and faith
+had nothing left to cling to, there came a letter from Uncle Jacob, the
+bachelor, who had bided his time. Out of the division in his brother's
+house he proposed to build up his own; just as he would step in and buy
+depreciated bonds to hold them for a rise. He offered her a home and
+maintenance during his lifetime, and his estate for herself and her
+children when he was through. There were no conditions referring to our
+father, but it was understood that she should give up her own. This,
+mainly, to spite his brother, yet under all there was an old man's plea.
+She felt she could make the obligation good, though there might not be
+much love on either side. Perhaps it came later; but I remember enough
+of that time to believe that her children's future was dearly paid for.
+Grandfather died alone, in the old rat-ridden house up the Hudson. He
+left no will, to every one's surprise. It might have been his negative
+way of owning his debt to nature at the last.
+
+"That is how we came to be rich; and no one detects in us now the crime
+of those early struggles. But my father was a hired man; and my mother
+has done every menial thing with those soft hands of hers." A softer one
+was folded in his own. Its answering clasp was loyal and strong.
+
+"Is _this_ the story you had not the courage to tell me?"
+
+"This is the story I had the courage to tell you--not any too soon,
+perhaps you think?"
+
+"And do you think it needed courage?"
+
+"The question is what you think. What are we to do with Uncle Jacob's
+money? Go off by ourselves and have a good time with it?"
+
+"We will not decide to-night," said Moya, tenderly subdued. But, though
+the story had interested and touched her, as accounting for her lover's
+saddened, conscience-ridden youth, it was no argument against teaching
+him what youth meant in her philosophy. The differences were explained,
+but not abolished.
+
+"It was spite money, remember, not love money," he continued, reverting
+to his story. "It purchased my mother's compliance to one who hated her
+father, who forced her to listen, year after year, to bitter, unnatural
+words against him. I am not sure but it kept her from him at the last;
+for if Uncle Jacob had not stepped in and made her his, I can't help
+thinking she would have found somehow a way to the soft place in his
+heart. Something good ought to be done with that money to redeem its
+history."
+
+"You must not be morbid, Paul."
+
+"That sounds like mother," said Paul, smiling. "She is always jealous
+for our happiness; because she lost her own, I think, and paid so
+heavily for ours. She prizes pleasure and success, even worldly success,
+for us."
+
+"I don't blame her!" cried Moya.
+
+"No; of course not. But you mustn't both be against me, and Chrissy,
+too. She is so, unconsciously; she does not know the pull there is on
+me, through knowing things she doesn't dream of, and that I can never
+forget."
+
+"No," said Moya. "I am sure she is perfectly unconscious. We exchanged
+biographies at school, and there was nothing at all like this in hers.
+Why was she never told?"
+
+"She has always been too strained, too excitable. Every least incident
+is an emotion with her. When she laughs, her laugh is like a cry.
+Haven't you noticed that? Startle her, and her eyes are the very eyes of
+fear. Mother was wise, I think, not to pour those old sorrows into her
+little fragile cup."
+
+"So she emptied them all into yours!"
+
+"That was my right, of the elder and stronger. I wouldn't have missed
+the knowledge of our beginnings for the world. What a prosperous fool
+and ass I might have made of myself!"
+
+"Morbid again," said Moya. "You belong to your own day and generation.
+You might as well wear country shoes and clothes because your father
+wore them."
+
+"Still, if we have such a thing in this country as class, then you and I
+do not belong to the same class except by virtue of Uncle Jacob's money.
+Confess you are glad I am a Bevier and a Broderick and a Van Elten, as
+well as a Bogardus."
+
+"I shall confess nothing of the kind. Now you do talk like a _nouveau_
+Paul, dear," said Moya, with her caressing eyes on his--they had paused
+under the lamp at the top of the steps--"I think your father must have
+been a very good man."
+
+"All our fathers were," Paul averred, smiling at her earnestness.
+
+"Yes, but yours in particular; because _you_ are an angel; and your
+mother is quite human, is she not?--almost as human as I am? That
+carriage of the head,--if that does not mean the world!"--
+
+"She has needed all her pride."
+
+"I don't object to pride, myself," said the girl, "but you dwell so upon
+her humiliations. I see no such record in her face."
+
+"She has had much to hide, you must remember."
+
+"Well, she can hide things; but one's self must escape sometimes. What
+has become of little Emily Van Elten who ran away with her father's
+hired man? What has become of the freighter's wife?"
+
+"She is all mother now. She brought us back to the world, and for our
+sakes she has learned to take her place in it. Herself she has buried."
+
+"Yes; but which is--was herself?"
+
+"And you cannot see her story in her face?"
+
+"Not that story."
+
+"Not the crushing reserve, the long suspense, the silence of a sorrow
+that even her children could not share?"
+
+"I know her silence. Your mother is a most reticent woman. But is she
+now the woman of that story?"
+
+"I don't understand you quite," said Paul. "How much are we ourselves
+after we have passed through fires of grief, and been recast under the
+pressure of circumstances! She was that woman once."
+
+"The saddest part of the story to me is, that your father, who loved her
+so, and worked so hard for his family, should have served you all the
+better by his death."
+
+"Oh, don't say that, dear! Who knows what is best? But one thing we do
+know. The sorrow that cut my mother's life in two brought you and me
+together. It rent the stratum on which I was born and raised it to the
+level of yours, my lady!"
+
+"I shall not forget," whispered Moya with blissful irony, "that you are
+the Poor Man's son!"
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+
+The autumn days were shortening imperceptibly and the sunsets had
+gained an almost articulate splendor: cloud calling unto cloud, the west
+horizon signaling to the east, and answering again, while the mute dark
+circle of hills sat like a council of chiefs with their blankets drawn
+over their heads. Soon those blankets would be white with snow.
+
+Behind the Post where the hills climb toward the Cottonwood Creek
+divide, there is a little canon which at sunset is especially inviting.
+It hastens twilight by at least an hour during midsummer, and in autumn
+it leads up a stairway of shadow to the great spectacle of the day--the
+day's departure from the hills.
+
+The canon has its companion rivulet always coming down to meet the
+stage-road going up. As this road is the only outlet hillward for all
+the life of the plain, and as the tendency of every valley population is
+to climb, one thinks of it as a way out rather than a way in. Higher up,
+the stage-road becomes a pass cut through a wall of splintered cliffs;
+and here it leads its companion, the brook, a wild dance over boulders,
+and under culverts of fallen rock. At last it emerges on what is
+called The Summit; and between are green, deep valleys where the little
+ranches, fields and fences and houses, seem to have slid down to the
+bottom and lie there at rest.
+
+A party of young riders from the post had gone up this road one evening,
+and two had come down, laughing and talking; but the other two remained
+in the circle of light that rested on the summit. Prom where they sat
+in the dry grass they could hear a hollow sound of moving feet as the
+cattle wandered down through folds of the hills, seeking the willow
+copses by the water. On the breast of her habit Moya wore the blossoms
+of the wild evening primrose, which in this region flowers till the
+coming of frost. They had been gathered for her on the way up, and as
+she had waited for them, sitting her horse in silence, the brown owls
+gurgled and hooted overhead from nest to nest in the crannies of the
+rocks.
+
+"You need not hold the horses," she commanded, in her fresh voice.
+"Throw my bridle over your saddle pommel and yours over mine.--There!"
+she said, watching the horses as they shuffled about interlinked. "That
+is like half the marriages in this world. They don't separate and they
+don't go astray, but they don't _get_ anywhere!"
+
+"I have been thinking of those 'two in the Garden,'" mused Paul, resting
+his dark, abstracted eyes on her. "Whether or no your humble servant has
+a claim to unchallenged bliss in this world, there's no doubt about your
+claim. If my plans interfere, I must take myself out of the way."
+
+"Oh, you funny old croaker!" laughed the girl. "Take yourself out of the
+way, indeed! Haven't you chosen me to show you the way?"
+
+"Moya, Moya!" said Paul in a smothered voice.
+
+"I know what you are thinking. But stop it!" she held one of her crushed
+blossoms to his lips. "What was this made for? Why hasn't it some work
+to do? Isn't it a skulker--blooming here for only a night?"
+
+"'Ripen, fall, and cease!'" Paul murmured.
+
+"How much more am I--are you, then? The sum of us may amount to
+something, if we mind our own business and keep step with each other,
+and finish one thing before we begin the next. I will not be in a hurry
+about being good. Goodness can take care of itself. What you need is to
+be happy! And it's my first duty to make you so."
+
+"God knows what bliss it would be."
+
+"Don't say 'would be.'"
+
+"God knows it is!"
+
+"Then hush and be thankful!" There was a long hush. They heard the far,
+faint notes of a bugle sounding from the Post.
+
+"Lights out," said Moya. "We must go."
+
+"You haven't told me yet where our Garden is to be," he said.
+
+"I will tell you on the way home."
+
+When they had come down into the neighborhood of ranches, and Bisuka's
+lights were twinkling below them, she asked: "Who lives now in the
+grandfather's house on the Hudson?"
+
+"The farmer, Chauncey Dunlop."
+
+"Is there any other house on the place?"
+
+"Yes. Mother built a new one on the Ridge some years ago."
+
+"What sort of a house is it?"
+
+"It was called a good house once; but now it's rather everything it
+shouldn't be. It was one of the few rash things mother ever did; build a
+house for her children while they were children. Now she will not change
+it. She says we shall build for ourselves, how and where we please.
+Stone Ridge is her shop. Of course, if Chrissy liked it--But Chrissy
+considers it a 'hole.' Mother goes up there and indulges in secret
+orgies of economy; one man in the stable, one in the garden--'Economy
+has its pleasures for all healthy minds.'"
+
+"Economy is as delicious as bread and butter after too much candy. I
+should love to go up to Stone Ridge and wear out my old clothes. Did any
+one tell me that place would some day be yours?"
+
+"It will be my wife's on the day we are married."
+
+"That is where your wife, sir, would like to live."
+
+"It is a stony Garden, dear! The summer people have their places nearer
+the river. Our land lies back, with no view but hills. For one who has
+the world before her where to choose, it strikes me she has picked out a
+very humble Paradise."
+
+"Did you think my idea was to travel--a poor army girl who spends
+her life in trunks? Do we ever buy a book or frame a picture without
+thinking of our next move? As for houses, who am I that I should be
+particular? In the Army's House are many mansions, but none that we
+can call our own. Oh, I'm very primitive; I have the savage instinct to
+gather sticks and stones, and get a roof over my head before winter sets
+in."
+
+To such a speech as this there was but one obvious answer, as she rode
+at his side, her appealing slenderness within reach of his arm. It did
+not matter what thousands he proposed to spend upon the roof that should
+cover her; it was the same as if they were planning a hut of tules or a
+burrow in the snow.
+
+"It is a poor man's country," he said; "stony hillsides, stony roads
+lined with stone fences. The chief crop of the country is ice and stone.
+In one of my grandfather's fields there is a great cairn which Adam
+Bogardus, they say, picked up, stone by stone, with his bare hands, and
+carted there when he was fourteen years old. We will build them into the
+walls of our new house for a blessing."
+
+"No," said Moya. "We will let sleeping stones lie!"
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+MARKING TIME
+
+There was impatience at the garrison for news that the hunters had
+started. Every day's delay at Challis meant an abridgment of the
+bridegroom's leave, and the wedding was now but a fortnight away. It
+began to seem preposterous that he should go at all, and the colonel
+was annoyed with himself for his enthusiasm over the plan in the first
+place. Mrs. Bogardus's watchfulness of dates told the story of her
+thoughts, but she said nothing.
+
+"Mamsie is restless," said Christine, putting an arm around her mother's
+solid waist and giving her a tight little hug apropos of nothing. "I
+believe it's another case of 'mail-time fever.' The colonel says it
+comes on with Moya every afternoon about First Sergeant's call. But
+Moya is cunning. She goes off and pretends she isn't listening for the
+bugle."
+
+"'First Sergeant or Second,' it's all one to me," said Mrs. Bogardus. "I
+never know one call from another, except when the gun goes off."
+
+"Mamsie! 'When the gun goes off!' What a civilian way of talking. You
+are not getting on at all with your military training. Now let me give
+you some useful information. In two seconds the bugle will call the
+first sergeant--of each company--to the adjutant's office, and there
+he'll get the mail for his men. The orderly trumpeter will bring it to
+the houses on the line, and the colonel's orderly--beautiful creature!
+There he goes! How I wish we could take him home with us and have him
+in our front hall. Fancy the feelings of the maids! And the rage on the
+noble brow of Parkins--awful Parkins. I should like to give his pride a
+bump."
+
+Mother and daughter were pacing the colonel's veranda, behind a partial
+screen of rose vines--October vines fast shedding their leaves. Every
+breeze shook a handful down, which the women's skirts swept with them as
+they walked. Mrs. Bogardus turned and clasped Christine's arm above the
+elbow; through the thin sleeve she could feel its cool roundness. It was
+a soft, small, unmuscular arm, that had never borne its own burdens, to
+say nothing of a share in the burdens of others.
+
+"Get your jacket," said the mother. "There is a chill in the air."
+
+"There is no chill in me," laughed Christine. "You know, mamsie, you
+aren't a girl. I should simply die in those awful things that you wear.
+Did you ever know such a hot house as the colonel keeps!"
+
+"The rooms are small, and the colonel is--impulsive," Mrs. Bogardus
+added with a smile.
+
+"There is something very like him about his fire-making. I should know
+by the way he puts on wood that he never would have "--Mrs. Bogardus
+checked herself.
+
+"A large bank account?" Christine supplied, with her quick wit, which
+was not of a highly sensitive order.
+
+"He has a large heart," said her mother.
+
+"And plenty of room for it, bless him! The slope of his chest is like
+the roof of a house. The only time I envy Moya is when she lays her head
+down on it and tries to meet her arms around him as if he were a tree,
+and he strokes her hair as if his hand was a bough! If ever I marry a
+soldier he shall be a colonel with a white mustache and a burnt-sienna
+complexion, and a sword-belt that measures--what is the colonel's
+waist-measure, do you suppose?"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus listened to this nonsense with the smile of a silent
+woman who has borne a child that can talk. Moya had often noticed how
+uncritical she was of Christine's "unruly member."
+
+"It isn't polite to speak of waist-measures to middle-aged persons like
+your mother and the colonel," she said placidly. "You like it very much
+out here?"
+
+"Fascinating! Never had such a good time in my whole life."
+
+"And you like the West altogether? Would you like to live here?"
+
+"Oh, if it came to living, I should want to be sure there was a way
+out."
+
+"There generally is a way out of most things. But it costs something."
+Mrs. Bogardus was so concise in her speech as at times to be almost
+oracular.
+
+"Army people are sure of their way out," said Christine, "and I guess
+they find it costs something."
+
+"Why do they buy so many books, I wonder? If I moved as often as they
+do, I'd have only paper covers and leave them behind."
+
+"You are not a reader, mummy. You're a business woman. You look at
+everything from the practical side."
+
+"And if I didn't, who would?" Mrs. Bogardus spoke with earnestness. "We
+can't all be dreamers like Paul or privileged persons like you. There
+has to be one in every family to say the things no one likes to hear and
+do the things nobody likes to do."
+
+"We are the rich repiners and you are the household drudge!" Christine
+shouted, laughing at her own wit.
+
+"Hush, hush!" her mother smiled. "Don't make so much noise."
+
+"I should like to know who's to be the drudge in Paul's privileged
+family. It doesn't strike me it's going to be Moya. And Paul only
+drudges for people he doesn't know."
+
+"Moya is a girl you can expect anything of. She is a wonderful mixture
+of opposites. She has the Irish quickness, and yet she has learned to
+obey. She has had the freedom and the discipline of these little lordly
+army posts. She is one of the few girls of her age who does not measure
+everything from her own point of view."
+
+"Is that a dig at me, ma'am?"
+
+At that moment Moya came out upon the porch.
+
+She was very striking with the high color and brilliant eyes that
+mail-time fever breeds. Christine looked at her with freshly aroused
+curiosity, moved by her mother's unwonted burst of praise. The faintest
+tinge of jealousy made her feel naughty. As Moya went down the board
+walk, the colonel's orderly came springing up the steps to meet her with
+the mail-bag. He saluted and turned off at an angle down the embankment
+not to present his back to the ladies.
+
+"Did you see that! He never raised his eyes. They are like priests. You
+can't make them look at you." Moya looked at Christine in amazement.
+The man himself might have heard her. It was not the first time
+this privileged guest had rubbed against garrison customs in certain
+directions hardly worth mentioning. Moya hesitated. Then she laughed
+a little, and said: "Only a raw recruity would look at an officer's
+daughter, or any lady of the line."
+
+"Oh, you horrid little aristocrat! Well, I look at them, when they are
+as pretty as that one, and I forgive them if they look at me."
+
+Moya turned and hovered over the contents of the mail-bag. In the
+exercise of one of her prerogatives, it was her habit to sort its
+contents before delivering it at the official door.
+
+"All, all for you!" she offered a huge packet of letters, smiling, to
+Mrs. Bogardus. It was faced with one on top in Paul's handwriting. "All
+but one," she added, and proceeded to open her own much fatter one in
+the same hand. She stood reading it in the hall.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus presently followed and remained beside her. "Could I speak
+to your father a moment?" she asked.
+
+"Certainly, I will call him," said Moya.
+
+"Wait: I hear him now." The study door opened and Colonel Middleton
+joined them. Mrs. Bogardus leading the way into the sitting-room, the
+colonel followed her, and Moya, not having been invited, lingered in the
+hall.
+
+"Well, have the hunters started yet?" the colonel inquired in his breezy
+voice, which made you want to open the doors and windows to give it
+room. "Be seated! Be seated! I hope you have got a long letter to read
+me."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stood reflecting. "The day this letter was mailed they got
+off--only two days ago," she said. "Could I reach them, Colonel, with a
+telegram?"
+
+"Two days ago," the colonel considered. "They must have made Yankee Fork
+by yesterday. Today they are deep in the woods. No; I should say a man
+on horseback would be your surest telegram. Is it anything important?"
+
+"Colonel, I wish we could call them back! They have gone off, it seems
+to me, in a most crazy way--against the judgment of every one who knows.
+The guide, this man whom they waited for, refused, it appears, to go
+out again with another party so late in the fall. But the Bowens were
+determined. They insisted on making arrangements with another man. Then,
+when 'Packer John,' they call him, heard of this, he went to Paul and
+urged him, if he could not prevent the others from going, to give up the
+trip himself. The Bowens were very much annoyed at his interference,
+and with Paul for listening to him. And Paul, rather than make things
+unpleasant, gave in. You know how young men are! What silly grounds are
+enough for the most serious decisions when it is a question of pride or
+good faith. The Bowens had bought their outfit on Paul's assurance that
+he would go. He felt he could not leave them in the lurch. On that, the
+guide suddenly changed his mind and said he would go with them sooner
+than see them fall into worse hands. They were, in a way, committed to
+the other man, so they took _him_ along as cook--the whole thing done in
+haste, you see, and unpleasant feelings all around. Do you call that a
+good start for a pleasure trip?"
+
+"It's very much the way with young troops when they start
+out--everything wrong end foremost, everybody mad with everybody else. A
+day in the saddle will set their little tempers all right."
+
+"That isn't the point," Mrs. Bogardus persisted gloomily. As she spoke,
+the two girls came into the room and stood listening.
+
+"What is the point, then?" Christine demanded. "Moya has no news; all
+those pages and pages, and nothing for anybody or about anybody!"
+
+"'Such an intolerable deal of sack to such a poor pennyworth of bread,'"
+the colonel quoted, smiling at Moya's bloated envelope.
+
+"But what do you think?" Mrs. Bogardus recalled him. "Don't you think
+it's a mistake all around?"
+
+"Not at all, if they have a good man. This flat-footed fellow, John,
+will take command, as he should. There is no danger in the woods at any
+season unless the party gets rattled and goes to pieces for want of a
+head."
+
+"Father!" exclaimed Moya. "You know there is danger. Often, things have
+happened!"
+
+"Why, what could happen?" asked Christine, with wide eyes.
+
+"Many things very interesting could happen," the colonel boasted
+cheerfully. "That is the object of the trip. You want things to happen.
+It is the emergency that makes the man--sifts him, and takes the chaff
+out of him."
+
+"Take the chaff out of Banks Bowen," Moya imprudently struck in, "and
+what would you have left?" She had met Banks Bowen in New York.
+
+"Tut, tut!" said the colonel. "Silence, or a good word for the
+absent--same as the"--The colonel stopped short.
+
+"You are so scornful about the other men, now you have chosen one!"
+Christine's face turned red.
+
+"Why, Chrissy! You would not compare your brother to those men! Papa, I
+beg your pardon; this is only for argument."
+
+"I don't compare him; but that's not to say all the other men are
+chaff!" Christine joined constrainedly in the laugh that followed her
+speech.
+
+"You need not go fancying things, Moya," she cried, in answer to a
+quizzical look. "As if I hadn't known the Bowen boys since I was so
+high!"
+
+"You might know them from the cradle to the grave, my dear young lady,
+and not know them as Paul will, after a week in the woods with them."
+
+The colonel had missed the drift of the girls' discussion. He was
+considering, privately, whether he had not better send a special
+messenger on the young men's trail. His assurances to the women left
+a wide margin for personal doubt as to the prudence of the trip. Aside
+from the lateness of the start, it was, undoubtedly, an ill-assorted
+company for the woods. There was a wide margin also for suspense, as all
+mail facilities ceased at Challis.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+A HUNTER'S DIARY
+
+Early in November, about a week before the hunters were expected home, a
+packet came addressed to Moya. It was a journal letter from Paul, mailed
+by some returning prospector chance encountered in the forest as the
+party were going in. Moya read it aloud, with asterisks, to a family
+audience which did not include her father.
+
+"To-day," one of the first entries read, "we halt at Twelve-Mile Cabin,
+the last roof we shall sleep under. There are pine-trees near the cabin
+cut off fifteen feet above the ground, felled in winter, John tells us,
+_at the level of the snow!_
+
+"These cabins are all deserted now; the tide of prospecting has turned
+another way. The great hills that crowd one another up against the sky
+are so infested and overridden by this enormous forest-growth, and the
+underbrush is so dense, it would be impossible for a 'tenderfoot' to
+gain any clear idea of his direction. I should be a lost man the moment
+I ventured out of call. Woodcraft must be a sixth sense which we lost
+with the rest of our Eden birthright when we strayed from innocence,
+when we ceased to sleep with one ear on the ground, and to spell our way
+by the moss on tree-trunks. In these solitudes, as we call them,
+ranks and clouds of witnesses rise up to prove us deaf and blind. Busy
+couriers are passing every moment of the day; and we do not see, nor
+hear, nor understand. We are the stocks and stones. Packer John is our
+only wood-sharp;--yet the last half of the name doesn't altogether fit
+him. He is a one-sided character, handicapped, I should say, by some
+experience that has humbled and perplexed him. Two and two perhaps
+refused to make four in his account with men, and he gave up the
+proposition. And now he consorts with trees, and hunts to live, not
+to kill. He has an impersonal, out-door odor about him, such as the
+cleanest animals have. I would as soon eat out of his dry, hard, cool
+hand, as from a chunk of pine-bark.
+
+"It is amusing to see him with a certain member of the party who tries
+to be fresh with him. He has a disconcerting eye when he fixes it on a
+man, or turns it away from one who has said a coarse or a foolish thing.
+
+"'The jungle is large,' he seems to say, 'and the cub he is small. Let
+him think and be still!'"
+
+"Who is this 'certain member' who tries to be 'fresh'?" Christine
+inquired with perceptible warmth.
+
+"The cook, perhaps," said Moya prudently.
+
+"The cook isn't a 'member'!--Well, can't you go on, Moya? Paul seems to
+need a lot of editing." Moya had paused and was glancing ahead, smiling
+to herself constrainedly.
+
+"Is there more disparagement of his comrades?" Christine persisted.
+
+"Christine, be still!" Mrs. Bogardus interfered. "Moya ought to have the
+first reading of her own letter. It's very good of her to let us hear it
+at all."
+
+"Oh dear, there's no disparagement. Quite the contrary! I'll go on with
+pleasure if you don't mind." Moya read hurriedly, laughing through her
+words:--
+
+"'If you were here, (Ah, _if_ you were here!) You should lend me an
+ear--One at the least Of a pair the prettiest'--which is, within a foot
+or two, the rhythm of 'Wood Notes.' Of course you don't know it!"
+
+"This is a gibe at me," Moya explained, "because I don't read Emerson.
+'It is the very measure of a marching chorus,' he goes on to say, 'where
+the step is broken by rocks and tree-roots;'--and he is chanting it
+to himself (to her it was in the original) as they go in single file
+through these 'haughty solitudes, the twilight of the gods!'"
+
+"'Haughty solitudes'!" Christine derided.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus sighed with impatience, and Moya's face became set. "Well,
+here he quotes again," she haughtily resumed. "Anybody who is tired of
+this can be excused. Emerson won't mind, and I'm sure Paul won't!" She
+looked a mute apology to Paul's mother, who smiled and said, "Go on,
+dear. I don't read Emerson either, but I like him when Paul reads him
+for me."
+
+"Well, I warn you there is an awful lot of him here!" Moya's voice was a
+trifle husky as she read on.
+
+"Old as Jove, Old as Love'"
+
+"I thought Love was young!"--Christine in a whisper aside.
+
+"'Who of me Tells the pedigree? Only the mountains old, Only the waters
+cold, Only the moon and stars, My coevals are.'"
+
+Moya sighed, and sank into prose again. "There is a gaudy yellow moss
+in these woods that flecks the straight and mournful tree-trunks like a
+wandering glint of sunlight; and there is a crpe-like black moss that
+hangs funeral scarfs upon the boughs, as if there had been a death in
+the forest, and the trees were in line for the burial procession. The
+grating of our voices on this supreme silence reminds one of 'Why will
+you still be talking, Monsieur Benedick?--nobody marks you.'
+
+"There are silences, and again there are whole symphonies of sound. The
+winds smites the tree-tops over our heads, a surf-like roar comes up
+the slope, and the yellow pine-needles fall across the deepest darks as
+motes sail down a sunbeam. One wearies of the constant perpendicular,
+always these stiff, columnar lines, varied only by the melancholy
+incline where some great pine-chieftain is leaning to his fall supported
+in the arms of his comrades, or by the tragic prostration of the 'down
+timber'--beautiful straight-cut English these woodsmen talk.
+
+"Last evening John and I sat by the stove in the men's tent, while the
+others were in the cabin playing penny-ante with the cook (a sodden
+brute who toadies to the Bowens, and sulks with John because he objected
+to our hiring the fellow--an objection which I sustained, hence his
+logical spite includes me). John was melting pine gum and elk tallow
+into a dressing for our boots. I took a mean advantage of him, his hands
+being in the tallow and the tent-flap down, and tried on him a little
+of--now, don't deride me!--'Wood Notes.' It is seldom one can get the
+comment of a genuine woodsman on Nature according to the poets.'"
+
+Moya read on perfunctorily, feeling that she was not carrying her
+audience with her, and longing for the time when she could take her
+letter away and have it all to herself. If she stopped now, Christine,
+in this sudden new freak of distrustfulness, would be sure to
+misunderstand.
+
+ "'For Nature ever faithful is
+ To such as trust her faithfulness.
+ When the forest shall mislead me,
+ When the night and morning lie,
+ When sea and land refuse to feed me,
+ Will be time enough to die.
+
+ Then will yet my Mother yield
+ A pillow in her greenest field;
+ Nor the June flowers scorn to cover
+ The clay of their departed lover.'"
+
+"That is beautiful," Mrs. Bogardus murmured hastily. "Even I can
+understand that." Moya thanked her with a glance.
+
+"And what did the infallible John say?" Christine inquired.
+
+"John looked at me and smiled, as at a babbling infant"--
+
+"Good for John!"
+
+"Christine, be still!"
+
+"John looked at me and smiled," Moya repeated steadily. Nothing could
+have stopped her now. She only hoped for some further scattering mention
+of that "certain member" who had set them all at odds and spoiled what
+should have been an hour's pure happiness. "'You'll get the pillow all
+right,' he said. 'It might not be a green one, nor I wouldn't bank much
+on the flowers; but you'll be tired enough to sleep without rocking
+about the time you trust to Nature's tuckin' you in and puttin' victuals
+in your mouth. I never _see_ nature till I came out here. I'd seen
+pretty woods and views, that a young lady could take down with her
+paints; but how are you going to paint that?'--he waved his tallow-stick
+towards the night outside. 'Ears can't reach the bottom of that
+stillness. That's creation before God ever thought of man. Long as I've
+been in the woods, I never get over the feeling that there's _something
+behind me_. If you go towards the trees, they come to meet you; if you
+go backwards, they go back; but you can't sit down and sit still without
+they'll come a-creeping up and creeping up, and crowding in'--
+
+"He stirred his 'dope' awhile, and then he struck another note. 'I've
+wintered alone in these mountains,' he said, 'and I've seen snowslides
+pounce out of a clear sky--a puff and a flash and a roar; an' trees four
+foot across snappin' like kindlin' wood--not because it hit 'em; only
+the breath of it struck them; and maybe a man lying dead somewheres
+under his cabin timbers. That's no mother's love-tap. Pillows and
+flowers ain't in it. But it's good poetry,' he added condescendingly.
+
+"I have not quoted him right, not being much of a snap-shot at dialect;
+and his is an undefined, unclassifiable mixture. Eastern farm-hand and
+Western ranchman, prospector, who knows what? His real language is in
+his eye and his rare, pure smile. And just as his countenance expresses
+his thoughts without circumlocution or attempt at effect, so his body
+informs his clothing. Wind and rain have moulded his hat to his head,
+his shoes grip the ground like paws; his buckskins have a surface like
+a cast after Rodin. They are repoussed by the hard bones and sinews
+underneath. I can think of nothing but the clothing of Millet's peasants
+to compare with this exterior of John's. He is himself a peasant of the
+woods. He has not the predatory instincts. If he could have his way, not
+a shot would be fired by any of us for the mere idle sport of killing.
+Shooting these innocent, fearless creatures, who have not learned that
+we are here for their destruction, is too like murder and treachery
+combined. Hunger should be our only excuse. My forbearance, or weakness,
+is a sort of unspoken bond between us. But I am a peasant, too, you
+know. I do not come of the lordly, arms-bearing blood. I shoot at a live
+mark always under protest; and when I fairly catch the look in the great
+eye of a dying elk or black-tail, it knocks me out for that day's hunt."
+
+"Paul is perfectly happy!" Christine broke in. "He has got one of his
+beloved People to grovel to. They can sleep in the same tent and eat
+from the same plate, if you like. Why, it's better than the East Side!
+He'll be blood brother to Packer John before they leave the woods."
+
+Moya blushed with anger.
+
+"You have said enough on that subject, Christine." Mrs. Bogardus bent
+her dark, keen gaze upon her daughter's face. "Come"--she rose. "Come
+with me!"
+
+Christine sat still. "Come!" her mother repeated sternly. "Moya,"--in
+a different voice,--"your letter was lovely. Shall you read it to your
+father?"
+
+"Hardly," said Moya, flushing. "Father does not care for descriptions,
+and the woods are an old story to him."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus placed her hands on the girl's shoulders and gave her one
+of her infrequent, ceremonious kisses, which, like her finest smile, she
+kept for occasions too nice for words.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+
+Christine followed her mother to their room, and the two faced each
+other a moment in pale silence.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus spoke first. "What does this mean?"--her breath came
+short, perhaps from climbing the stairs. She was a large woman.
+
+"What does what mean? I don't understand you, mother."
+
+"Ah, child, don't repulse me! Twice you and Moya have nearly quarreled
+about those men. Why were you so rude to her? Why did you behave so
+about her letter?"
+
+"Paul is so intolerant! And the airs he puts on! If he is my own brother
+I must say he's an awful prig about other men."
+
+"We are not discussing Paul. That is not the question now. Have you
+anything to tell me, Christine?"
+
+"To tell you?--about what, mother?" Christine spoke lower.
+
+"You know what I mean. Which of them is it? Is it Banks?--don't say it
+is Banks!"
+
+"Mother, how can I say anything when you begin like that?"
+
+"Have you any idea what sort of a man Banks Bowen really is? His father
+supports him entirely--six years now, ever since he left the law school.
+He does nothing, never will do anything. He has no will or purpose in
+life, except about trifles like this hunting-trip. As far as I can see
+he is without common sense."
+
+Christine stood by the dressing-table pleating the cover-frilling with
+her small fingers that were loaded with rings. She pinched the folds
+hard and let them go. "Why did no one ever say these things before?"
+
+"We don't say things about the sons of our friends, unless we are
+compelled to. They were implied in every way possible. When have I asked
+Banks Bowen to the house except when everybody was asked! I would never
+in the world have come out in Mr. Borland's car if I had known the
+Bowens were to be of the party."
+
+"That made no difference," said Christine loftily.
+
+"It was all settled before then, was it?"
+
+"Have I said it was settled, mother? He asked me if I could ever care
+for him; and I said that I did--a little. Why shouldn't I? He does what
+I like a man to do. I don't enjoy people who have wills and purposes. It
+may be very horrid of me, but I wouldn't be in Moya's place for worlds."
+
+"You poor child! You poor, unhappy child!"
+
+"Why am I unhappy? Has Paul added so much to our income since he left
+college?"
+
+"Paul does not make money; neither does he selfishly waste it. He has a
+conscience in his use of what he has."
+
+"I don't see what conscience has to do with it. When it is gone it's
+gone."
+
+"You will learn what conscience has to do with a man's spending if ever
+you try to make both ends meet with Banks Bowen. I suppose he will go
+through the form of speaking to me?"
+
+"Mother dear! He has only just spoken to me. How fast you go!"
+
+"Not fast enough to keep up with my children, it seems. Was it you,
+Christine, who asked them to come here?"
+
+Christine was silent.
+
+"Where did you learn such ways?--such want of frankness, of delicacy, of
+the commonest consideration for others? To be looking out for your own
+little schemes at a time like this!" Mrs. Bogardus saw now what must
+have been Paul's reason for doing what, with all her forced explanations
+of the hunting-trip, she had never until now understood. He had taken
+the alarm before she had, and done what he could to postpone this family
+catastrophe.
+
+Christine retreated to a deep-cushioned chair, and threw herself into
+it, her slender hands, palm upwards, extended upon its arms. Total
+surrender under pressure of cruel odds was the expression of her pointed
+eyebrows and drooping mouth. She looked exasperatingly pretty and
+irresponsibly fragile. Her blue-veined eyelids quivered, her breath came
+in distinct pants.
+
+"Perhaps you will not be troubled with my 'ways' for very many years,
+mother. If you could feel my heart now! It jumps like something trying
+to get out. It will get out some day. Have patience!"
+
+"That is a poor way to retaliate upon your mother, Christine. Your
+health is too serious a matter to trifle with. If you choose to make it
+a shield against everything I say that doesn't please you, you can cut
+yourself off from me entirely. I cannot beat down such a defense as
+that. Anger me you never can, but you can make me helpless to help you."
+
+"I dare say it's better that I should never marry at all," said
+Christine, her eyes closed in resignation. "You never would like anybody
+I like."
+
+"I shall say no more. You are a woman. I have protected you as far as
+I was able on account of your weakness. I cannot protect you from the
+weakness itself."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose. She did not offer to comfort her child with
+caresses, but in her eyes as she looked at her there was a profound,
+inalienable, sorrowing tenderness, a depth of understanding beyond
+words.
+
+"I know so well," the dark eyes seemed to say, "how you came to be the
+poor thing that you are!"
+
+The constraint which she felt towards her mother threw Chrissy back upon
+Moya. Being a lesser power, she was always seeking alliances. Moya had
+put aside their foolish tiff as unworthy of another thought; she was
+embarrassed when at bedtime Christine came humbly to her door, and
+putting her arms around her neck implored her not to be cross with
+her "poor pussy." It was always the other person who was "cross" with
+Christine.
+
+"Nobody is cross with anybody, so far as I know," said Moya briskly. A
+certain sort of sentimentality always made her feel like whistling or
+singing or asserting the commonplace side of life in some way.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+THE WHITE PERIL
+
+Mrs. Bogardus received many letters, chiefly on business, and these she
+answered with manlike brevity, in a strong, provincial hand. They took
+up much of her time, and mercifully, for it was now the last week in
+November and the young men did not return.
+
+The range cattle had been driven down into the valleys, deer-tracks
+multiplied by lonely mountain fords; War Eagle and his brethren of the
+Owyhees were taking council under their winter blankets. The nights were
+still, the mornings rimy with hoarfrost. Fogs arose from the river and
+cut off the bases of the mountains, converting the valley before sunrise
+into the likeness of a polar sea.
+
+"You have let your fire go out," said the colonel briskly. He had
+invaded the sitting-room at an unaccustomed hour, finding the lady at
+her letters as usual. She turned and held her pen poised above her paper
+as she looked at him.
+
+"You did not come to see about the fire?" she said.
+
+"No; I have had letters from the north. Would you step into my study a
+moment?"
+
+Moya was in her father's room when they entered. She had been weeping,
+but at sight of Paul's mother she rose and stood picking at the
+handkerchief she held, without raising her eyes.
+
+"Don't be alarmed at Moya's face," said the colonel stoutly. "Paul was
+all right at last accounts. We will have a merry Christmas yet."
+
+"This is not from Paul!" Mrs. Bogardus fixed her eyes upon a letter
+which she held at arm's length, feeling for her glasses. "It's not for
+me--'_Miss_ Bogardus.'"
+
+"Ah, well. I saw it was postmarked Lemhi--Fort Lemhi, you know. Sit
+down, madam. Suppose I give you Mr. Winslow's report first--Lieutenant
+Winslow. You heard of his going to Lemhi?"
+
+"She doesn't know," whispered Moya.
+
+"True. Well, two weeks ago I gave Mr. Winslow a hunter's leave, as we
+call it in the army, to beat up the trail of those boys. I thought it
+was time we heard from them, but it wasn't worth while to raise a hue
+and cry. He started out with a few picked men from Lemhi, the Indian
+Reservation, you know. I couldn't have sent a better man; the thing
+hasn't got into the local papers even. My object, of course, has been
+to save unnecessary alarm. Mr. Winslow has just got back to Challis. He
+rounded up the Bowen youths and the cook and the helper, in bad shape,
+all of them, but able to tell a story. The details we shall get
+later, but I have Mr. Winslow's report to me. It is short and probably
+correct."
+
+"Was Paul not with them?" his mother questioned in a hard, dry voice.
+"Where is he then?"
+
+"He is in camp, madam, in charge of the wounded."
+
+"Dear father! if you would speak plain!" Moya whispered nervously.
+
+"Certainly. There is nothing whatever to hide. We know now that on their
+last day's hunt they met with an accident which resulted in a division
+of the party. A fall of snow had covered the ice on the trails, and
+the guide's horse fell and rolled on him--nature of his injuries not
+described. This happened a day's journey from their camp at Ten-Mile
+cabin, and the retreat with the wounded man was slow and of course
+difficult over such a trail. They put together a sort of horse-litter
+made of pine poles and carried him on that, slung between two mules
+tandem. A beastly business, winding and twisting over fallen timber,
+hugging the caon wall, near a thousand feet down--'Impassable' the
+trail is marked, on the government military maps. This first day's march
+was so discouraging that at Ten Mile they called a council, and the
+packer spoke up like a man. He disposed of his own case in this way. If
+he were to live, they could send back help to fetch him out. If not,
+no help would be needed. The snows were upon them; there was danger in
+every hour's delay. It was insane to sacrifice four sound men for one,
+badly hurt, with not many hours perhaps to suffer."
+
+A murmur from the mother announced her appreciation of the packer's
+argument.
+
+"It was no more than a man should do; but as to taking him at his word,
+why, that's another question." The colonel paused and gustily cleared
+his throat. "They were up against it right then and there, and the party
+split upon it. Three of them went on,--for help, as they put it,--and
+Paul stayed behind with the wounded man."
+
+"Paul stayed--alone?" Mrs. Bogardus uttered with hoarse emphasis. "Was
+not that a very strange way to divide? Among them all, I should think
+they might have brought the man out with them."
+
+"Their story is that his injuries were such that he could not have borne
+the pain of the journey. Rather an unusual case," the colonel added
+dryly. "In my experience, a wounded man will stand anything sooner than
+be left on the field."
+
+"I cannot understand it," Mrs. Bogardus repeated, in a voice of
+indignant pain. "Such a strange division! One man left alone--to nurse,
+and hunt, and cook, and keep up fires! Suppose the guide should die!"
+
+"Paul was not _left_, you know," the colonel said emphatically. "He
+_stayed_. And I should be thankful in your place, madam, that my son was
+the man who made that choice. But setting conduct aside, for we are not
+prepared to judge, it is merely a matter of time our getting in there,
+now that we know where he is."
+
+"How much time?" Mrs. Bogardus opened her ashen lips to say.
+
+The colonel's face fell. "Mr. Winslow reports heavy snows for the past
+week,--soft, clogging snow,--too deep to wade through and too soft to
+bear. A little later, when the cold has formed a crust, our men can get
+in on snowshoes. There is nothing for it but patience, Mrs. Bogardus,
+and faith in the boy's endurance. The pluck that made him stay behind
+will help him to hold out."
+
+Moya gave a hurt sob; the colonel stepped to the desk and stood there a
+moment turning over his papers. Behind his back the mother sent a glance
+to Moya expressive of despair.
+
+"Do you know what happened to his father? Did he ever tell you?" she
+whispered.
+
+Moya assented; she could not speak.
+
+"Twice, twice in a lifetime!" said the older woman.
+
+With a gesture, Moya protested against this wild prophecy; but as Paul's
+mother left the room she rushed upon her father, crying: "Tell _me_ the
+truth! What do you think of it? Did you ever hear of such a dastardly
+thing?"
+
+"It was a rout," said the colonel coolly. "They were in full flight
+before the enemy."
+
+"What enemy? They deserted a wounded comrade, and a servant at that!"
+
+"The enemy was panic,--panic, my dear. In these woods I've seen strong
+men go half beside themselves with fear of something--the Lord knows
+what! Then, add the winter and what they had seen and heard of that.
+Anyway, you can afford to be easy on the other boys. The honors of the
+day are with Paul--and the old packer, though it's all in the day's work
+to him."
+
+"And you are satisfied with Paul, father?"
+
+"He didn't desert his command to save his own skin." The colonel smiled
+grimly.
+
+"When the men of the Fourth discovered those other fellows they had
+literally sat down in the snow to die. Not a man of them knew how to
+pack a mule. Their meat pack slipped, going along one of those high
+trails, and scared the mule, and in trying to kick himself free the
+beast fell off the trail--mule and meat both gone. They got tired of
+carrying their stuff and made a raft to float it down the river, and
+lost that! Paul has been much better off in camp than he would have been
+with them. So cheer up, my girl, and think how you'd like to have your
+bridegroom out on an Indian campaign!"
+
+"Ah, but that would be orders! It's the uselessness that hurts. There
+was nothing to do or to gain. He didn't want to go. Oh, daddy dear, I
+made fun of his shooting,--I did! I laughed at his way with firearms.
+Wretched fool and snob that I was! As if I cared! I thought of what
+other people would say. You remember,--he went shooting up the gulch
+with Mr. Lane, and when he hit but didn't kill he wouldn't--couldn't put
+the birds out of pain. Jephson had to do it for him, and he told it in
+barracks and the men laughed."
+
+"How did you know that! And what does it all amount to! Blame yourself
+all you like, dear, if it does you any good, but don't make him out a
+fool! There's not much that comes to us straight in this world--not
+even orders, you'll find. But we have to take it straight and leave the
+muddles and the blunders as they are. That's the brave man's courage and
+the brave woman's. Orders are mixed, but duty is clear. And the boy
+out there in the woods has found his duty and done it like a man. That
+should be enough for any soldier's daughter."
+
+An hour passed in suspense. Moya was disappointed in her expectation of
+sharing in whatever the letter from Fort Lemhi might contain. Christine
+was in bed with a headache, her mother dully gave out, with no apparent
+expectation that any one would accept this excuse for the girl's
+complete withdrawal. The letter, she told Moya, was from Banks Bowen.
+"There was nothing in it of consequence--to us," she added, and
+Moya took the words to mean "you and me" to the unhappy exclusion of
+Christine.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus's face had settled into lines of anxiety printed years
+before, as the creases in an old garment, smoothed and laid away, will
+reappear with fresh wear. Her plan was to go back to New York with
+Christine, who was plainly unfit to bear a long siege of suspense. There
+she could leave the girl with friends and learn what particulars could
+be gathered from the Bowens, who would have arrived. She would then
+return alone and wait for news at the garrison. That night, with Moya's
+help, she completed her packing, and on the following day the wedding
+party broke up.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+
+Fine, dry snowflakes were drifting past the upper square of a window
+set in a wall of logs. The lower half was obscured by a white bulk
+that shouldered up against the sash in the likeness of a muffled figure
+stooping to peer in.
+
+Lying in his bunk against the wall, the packer watched this sentinel
+snowdrift grow and become human and bold and familiar. His deep-lined
+visage was reduced to its bony structure. The hand was a claw with
+which he plucked at the ancient fever-crust shredding from his lips: an
+occupation at once so absorbing and so exhausting that often the hand
+would drop and the blankets rise upon the arch of the chest in a sigh of
+retarded respiration. The sigh would be followed by a cough, controlled,
+as in dread of the shock to a sore and shattered frame. The snow came
+faster and faster until the dim, wintry pane was a blur. Millions of
+atoms crossed the watcher's weary vision, whirling, wavering, driven
+with an aimless persistence, unable to pause or to stop. And the blind
+white snowdrift climbed, fed, like human circumstance, from disconnected
+atoms impelled by a common law.
+
+There were sounds in the cabin: wet wood sweating on hot coals; a step
+that went to and fro. Outside, a snow-weighted bough let go its load and
+sprang up, scraping against the logs. Some heavy soft thing slid off
+the roof and dropped with a _chug_. Then the door, that hung awry like a
+drooping eyelid, gave a disreputable wink, and the whole front gable of
+the cabin loomed a giant countenance with a silly forehead and an evil
+leer. Now it seemed that a hand was hurling snow against the door, as
+a sower scatters grain,--snow that lay like beach sand on the floor, or
+melted into a crawling pool--red in the firelight, red as blood!
+
+These and other phantasms had now for an unmeasured time been tenants
+of the packer's brain, sharing and often overpowering the reality of
+the human step that went to and fro. To-day the shapes and relations of
+things were more natural, and the step aroused a querulous curiosity.
+
+"Who's there?" the sick man imagined himself to have said. A croaking
+sound in his throat, which was all he could do by way of speech, brought
+the step to his bedside. A young face, lightly bearded, and gaunt almost
+as his own, bent over him. Large, black eyes rested on his; a hand with
+womanish nails placed its fingers on his wrist.
+
+"You are better to-day. Your pulse is down. I wouldn't try to talk."
+
+"Who's that--outside?"
+
+"There is no one outside," Paul answered, following the direction of his
+patient's eyes. "That? That is only a snowdrift. It grows faster than I
+can shovel it away."
+
+The packer had forgotten his own question. He dozed off, and presently
+roused again as suddenly as he had slept. His utterance was clearer, but
+not his meaning.
+
+"What--you want to fetch me back for?"
+
+"Back?" Paul repeated.
+
+"I was most gone, wa'n't I?"
+
+"Back to life, you mean? You came back of yourself. I hadn't much to do
+with it."
+
+"What's been the matter--gen'ly speaking?"
+
+"You were hurt, don't you remember? Something like wound fever set in.
+The altitude is bad for fevers. You have had a pretty close call."
+
+"Been here all the time?"
+
+"Have I been here?--yes."
+
+"'Lone?"
+
+"With you. How is your chest? Does it hurt you still when you breathe?"
+
+The sick man filled his lungs experimentally. "Something busted inside,
+I guess," he panted. "'Tain't no killing matter, though."
+
+Nourishment, in a tin cup, warm from the fire was offered him, refused
+with a gesture, and firmly urged upon him. This necessitated another
+rest. It was long before he spoke again--out of some remoter train of
+thought apparently.
+
+"Family all in New York?"
+
+"My family? They were at Bisuka when I left them."
+
+"You don't _live_ West!"
+
+"No. I was born in the West, though. Idaho is my native state."
+
+The patient fell to whimpering suddenly like a hurt child. He drew up
+the blanket to cover his face. Paul, interpreting this as a signal for
+more nourishment, brought the sad decoction,--rinds of dried beef cooked
+with rice in snow water.
+
+"Guess that'll do, thank ye. My tongue feels like an old buckskin
+glove."
+
+"When I was a little fellow," said the nurse, beguiling the patient
+while he tucked the spoonfuls down, "I was like you: I wouldn't take
+what the doctor ordered, and they used to pretend I must take it for
+the others of the family,--a kind of vicarious milk diet, or gruel, or
+whatever it was. 'Here's a spoonful for mother, poor mother,' they would
+say; and of course it couldn't be refused when mother needed it so much.
+'And now one for Chrissy'"--
+
+"Who?"
+
+"My sister, Christine. And then I'd take one for 'uncle' and one for
+each of the servants; and the cupful would go down to the health of the
+household, and I the dupe of my sympathies! Now you are taking this for
+me, because it's nicer to be shut up here with a live man than a dead
+one; and we haven't the conveniences for a first-class funeral."
+
+"You never took a spoonful for 'father,'--eh?"
+
+Paul answered the question with gravity. "No. We never used that name in
+common."
+
+"Dead was he?"
+
+"I will tell you some time. Better try to sleep now."
+
+Paul returned the saucepan to the fire, after piecing out its contents
+with water, and retired out of his patient's sight.
+
+Again came a murmur, chiefly unintelligible, from the bunk.
+
+"Did you ask for anything?"
+
+The sick man heaved a worried sigh. "See what a mis'rable presumptuous
+piece of work!" he muttered, addressing the logs overhead. "But that
+Clauson--he wa'n't no more fit to guide ye than to go to heaven!
+Couldn't 'a' done much worse than this, though!"
+
+"He has done worse!" Paul came over to the bunk-side to reason on this
+matter. "They started back from here, four strong men with all the
+animals and all the food they needed for a six weeks' trip. We came in
+in one. If they got through at all, where is the help they were to send
+us?"
+
+"Help!" The packer roused. "They helped themselves, and pretty frequent.
+I said to them more than once--they didn't like it any too well: 'We
+can't drink up here like they do down to the coast. The air is too
+light. What a man would take with his dinner down there would fit him
+out with a first-class jag up here, 'leven thousand above the sea!'"
+
+"It's a waste of breath to talk about them--breath burns up food and we
+haven't much to spare. We rushed into this trouble and we dragged you in
+after us. We have hurt you a good deal more than you have us."
+
+The sick man groaned. He flung one hand back against the logs,
+dislodging ancient dust that fell upon his corpse-like forehead. It was
+carefully wiped away. Helpless tears stole down the rigid face.
+
+"John," said Paul with animation, "your general appearance just now
+reminds me of those worked-out placer claims we passed in Ruby Gulch,
+the first day out. The fever and my cooking have ground-sluiced you to
+the bone."
+
+John smiled faintly. "Don't look very fat yourself. Where'd you git all
+that baird on your face?"
+
+"We have been here some time, you know--or you don't know; you have been
+living in places far away from here. I used to envy you sometimes. And
+other times I didn't."
+
+"You mean I was off my head?"
+
+"At times. But more of the time you were dreaming and talking in your
+dreams; seeing things out loud by the flash-light of fever."
+
+"Talking, was I? Guess there wa'n't much sense in any of it?" The hazard
+was a question.
+
+"A kind of sense,--out of focus, distorted. Some of it was opium. Didn't
+you coax a little of his favorite medicine out of the cook?"
+
+Packer John apologized sheepishly, "I cal'lated I was going to be left.
+You put it up on me--making out you were off with the rest. _That_ was
+all right. But I wa'n't going to suffer it out; why should I? A gunshot
+would have cured me quicker, perhaps. Then some critter might 'a' found
+me and called it murder. A word like that set going can hang a man. No,
+I just took a little to deaden the pain."
+
+"The whole discussion was rather nasty, right before the man we were
+talking about," said Paul. "I wanted to get them off and out of hearing.
+Then we had a few words."
+
+At intervals during that day and the next, Paul's patient expended his
+strength in questions, apparently trivial. His eyes, whenever they were
+open, followed his nurse with a shrinking intelligence. Paul was on his
+guard.
+
+"What day of the month do you make it out to be?"
+
+"The second of December."
+
+"December!" The packer lay still considering. "Game all gone down?"
+
+"I am not much of a pot-hunter," said Paul. "There may be game, but I
+can't seem to get it. The snow is pretty deep."
+
+"Wouldn't bear a man on snowshoes?"
+
+"He would go out of sight."
+
+"Snowing a little every day?"
+
+"Right along, quietly, for I don't know how many days! I think the sky
+is packed with it a mile deep."
+
+"How much grub have we got?"
+
+Paul gave a flattering estimate of their resources. The patient was not
+deceived.
+
+"Where's it all gone to? You ain't eat anything."
+
+"I've eaten a good deal more than you have."
+
+"I was livin' on fever."
+
+"You can't live on fever any longer. The fever has left you, and you'll
+go with it if you don't obey your doctor."
+
+"But where's all the stuff _gone_ to?"
+
+"There were four of them, and they allowed for some delay in getting
+out," Paul explained, with a sickly smile.
+
+"Well, they was hogs! I knew how they'd pan out! That was why"--He
+wearied of speech and left the point unfinished.
+
+On the evening following, when the two could no longer see each other's
+faces in the dusk, Paul spoke, controlling his voice:--
+
+"I need not ask you, John, what you think of our chances?"
+
+"I guess they ain't much worth thinking about." The fire hissed and
+crackled; the soft subsidence of the snow could be heard outside.
+
+"We are 'free among the dead,' how does it go? 'Like unto them that are
+wounded and lie in the grave.' What we say to each other here will stop
+here with our breath. Let us put our memories in order for the last
+reckoning. I think, John, you must, at some time in your life, have
+known my father, Adam Bogardus? He was lost on the Snake River plains,
+twenty-one years ago this autumn."
+
+Receiving no answer, the pale young inquisitor went on, choosing his
+words with intense deliberation as one feeling his way in the dark.
+
+"Most of us believe in some form of communication that we can't explain,
+between those who are separated in body, in this world, but closely
+united in thought. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+There was a sound of deep breathing from the bunk; it produced a similar
+conscious excitement in the speaker. He halted, recovered himself, and
+continued:--
+
+"After my father's disappearance, my mother had a distinct
+presentiment--it haunted her for years--that something had happened to
+him at a place called One Man Station. Did you ever know the place?"
+
+"I might have." The words came huskily.
+
+"Father had left her at this place, and to her knowledge he never came
+back. But she had this intimation--and suffered from it--that he did
+come back and was foully dealt with there--wronged in body or mind. The
+place had most evil associations for her; it was not strange she should
+have connected it with the great disaster of her life. As you lay
+talking to yourself in your fever, you took me back on that lost
+trail that ended, as we thought, in the grave. But we might have been
+mistaken. Is there anything it would not be safe for you and me to speak
+of now? Do you know any tie between men that should be closer than the
+tie between us? Any safer place where a man could lay off the secret
+burdens of his life and be himself for a little while--before the end
+answers all? I know you have a secret. I believe that a share of it
+belongs to me."
+
+"We are better off sometimes if we don't get all that belongs to us,"
+said John gratingly.
+
+"It doesn't seem to be a matter of choice, does it? If you were not
+meant to tell me--what you have partly told me already--where is there
+any meaning in our being here at all? Let us have some excuse for this
+senseless accident. Do you believe much in accidents? How foolish"--Paul
+sighed--"for you and me to be afraid of each other! Two men who have
+parted with everything but the privilege of speaking the truth!"
+
+The packer raised himself in his bunk slowly, like one in pain. He
+looked long at the listless figure crouching by the fire; then he sank
+back again with a low groan. "What was it you heared me say? Come!"
+
+"I can't give you the exact words. The words were nothing. Haven't you
+watched the sparks blow up, at night, when the wind goes searching over
+the ashes of an old camp-fire? It was the fever made you talk, and
+your words were the sparks that showed where there had been fire once.
+Perhaps I had no right to track you by your own words when you lay
+helpless, but I couldn't always leave you. Now I'd like to have my share
+of that--whatever it was--that hurt you so, at One Man Station."
+
+"You ought to been a lawyer," said the packer, releasing his breath.
+There was less strain in his voice. It broke with feeling. "You put up a
+mighty strong case for your way of looking at it. I don't say it's best.
+There, if you will have it! Sonny--my son! It--it's like startin' a
+snow-slide."
+
+The sick man broke down and sobbed childishly.
+
+"Take it quietly! Oh, take it quietly!" Paul shivered. "I have known it
+a long time."
+
+Hours later they were still awake, the packer in his bunk, Paul in his
+blankets by the winking brands. The pines were moving, and in pauses of
+the wind they could hear the incessant soft crowding of the snow.
+
+"When they find us here in the spring," said the packer humbly, "it
+won't matter much which on us was 'Mister' and which was 'John.'"
+
+"Are you thinking of that!" Paul answered with nervous irritation. "I
+thought you had lived in the woods long enough to have got rid of all
+that nonsense!"
+
+"I guess there was some of it where you've been living."
+
+"We are done with all that now. Go to sleep,--Father." He pronounced
+the word conscientiously to punish himself for dreading it. The darkness
+seemed to ring with it and give it back to him ironically. "Father!"
+muttered the pines outside, and the snow, listening, let fall the
+word in elfin whispers. Paul turned over desperately in his blankets.
+"Father!" he repeated out loud. "Do _you_ believe it? Does it do you any
+good?"
+
+"I wouldn't distress myself, one way or t' other, if it don't come
+natural," the packer spoke, out of his corner in the darkness. "Wait
+till you can feel to say it. The word ain't nothing."
+
+"But do you feel it? Is it any comfort to you at all?"
+
+"I ain't in any hurry to feel it. We'll get there. Don't worry. And
+s'pose we don't! We're men. Man to man is good enough for me."
+
+Paul spent some wakeful hours after that, trying not to think of Moya,
+of his mother and Christine. They were of another world,--a world that
+dies hard at twenty-four. Towards morning he slept, but not without
+dreams.
+
+He was in the pent-road at Stone Ridge. It was sunset and long shadows
+striped the lane. A man stood, back towards him, leaning both arms on
+the stone fence that bounds the lane to the eastward,--a plain farmer
+figure, gazing down across the misty fields as he might have stood a
+hundred times in that place at that hour. Paul could not see his face,
+but something told him who it must be. His heart stood still, for he saw
+his mother coming up the lane. She carried something in her hand covered
+with a napkin, and she smiled, walking carefully as if carrying a treat
+to a sick child. She passed the man at the fence, not appearing to have
+seen him.
+
+"Won't you speak to him, mother? Won't you speak to"--He could not utter
+the name. She looked at him bewildered. "Speak? who shall I speak to?"
+The man at the fence had turned and he watched her, or so Paul imagined.
+He felt himself choking, faint, with the effort to speak that one word.
+Too late! The moment passed. The man whom he knew was his father, the
+solemn, quiet figure, moved away up the road unquestioned. He never
+looked back. Paul grew dizzy with the lines of shadow; they stretched on
+and on, they became the ties of a railroad--interminable. He awoke,
+very faint and tired, with a lost feeling and the sense upon him of some
+great catastrophe. The old man was sleeping deeply in his bunk, a ray
+of white sunlight falling on his yellow features. He looked like one who
+would never wake again. But as Paul gazed at him he smiled, and sighed
+heavily. His lips formed a name; and all the blood in Paul's body dyed
+his face crimson. The name was his mother's.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+THE BLOOD-WITE
+
+A few hours seemed days, after the great disclosure. Both men had
+recoiled from it and were feeling the strain of the new relation. Three
+times since their first meeting the elder had adjusted himself quietly
+to a change in the younger's manner to him. First there had been
+respectful curiosity in the presence of a new type, combined with the
+deference due a leader and an expert in strange fields. Then indignant
+partisanship, pity, and the slight condescension of the nurse. This had
+hurt the packer, but he took it as he accepted his physical downfall.
+The last change was hardest to bear; for now the time was short, and, as
+Paul himself had said, they were in the presence of the final unveiling.
+
+So when Paul made artificial remarks to break the pauses, avoiding his
+father's eye and giving him neither name nor title, the latter became
+silent and lay staring at the logs and picking at his hands.
+
+"If I was hunting up a father," he said to himself aloud one day, "I'd
+try to find a better lookin' one. I wouldn't pa'm off on myself no such
+old warped stick as I be." The remark seemed a tentative one.
+
+"I had the choice, to take or leave you," Paul responded. "You were an
+unconscious witness. Why should I have opened the subject at all?"
+
+Both knew that this answer was an evasion. By forcing the tie they had
+merely marked the want of ease and confidence between them. As "Packer
+John" Paul could have enjoyed, nay, loved this man; as his father, the
+sum and finality of his filial dreams, the supplanter of that imaginary
+husband of his mother's youth, the thing was impossible. And the father
+knew it and did not resent it in the least, only pitied the boy for
+his needless struggle. He was curious about him, too. He wanted to
+understand him and the life he had come out of: his roundabout way of
+reaching the simplest conclusions; his courage in argument, and his
+personal shying away from the truth when found. More than all he longed
+for a little plain talk, the exile's hunger for news from home. It
+pleased him when Paul, rousing at this deliberate challenge, spoke up
+with animation, as if he had come to some conclusion in his own mind. It
+could not be expected he would express it simply. The packer had become
+used to his oddly elaborate way of putting things.
+
+"If we had food enough and time, we might afford to waste them
+discussing each other's personal appearance. _I_ propose we talk to some
+purpose."
+
+"Talking sure burns up the food." The packer waited.
+
+"I wish I knew what my father was doing with himself, all those years
+when his family were giving him the honors of the dead."
+
+"I warned ye about this pumping out old shafts. You can't tell what
+you'll find in the bottom. I suppose you know there are things in this
+world, Boy, a good deal worse than death?"
+
+"Desertion is worse. It is not my father's death I want explained, it
+is his life, your life, in secret, these twenty years! Can you explain
+that?"
+
+The packer doubled his bony fist and brought it down on the bunk-side.
+"Now you talk like a man! I been waiting to hear you say that. Yes, I
+can answer that question, if you ain't afeard of the answer!"
+
+"I am keeping alive to hear it!" said Paul in a guarded voice.
+
+"You might say you're keeping me alive to tell it. It's a good thing to
+git off of one's mind; but it's a poor thing to hand over to a son. All
+I've got to leave ye, though: the truth if you can stand it! Where do
+you want I should begin?"
+
+"At the night when you came back to One Man Station."
+
+"How'd you know I come back?"
+
+"You were back there in your fever, living over something that happened
+in that place. There was a wind blowing and the door wouldn't shut. And
+something had to be lifted,"--the old man's eyes, fixed upon his son,
+took a look of awful comprehensions,--"something heavy."
+
+"Yes; great Lord, it was heavy! And I been carrying it ever since!" His
+chest rose as if the weight of that load lay on it still, and his breath
+expired with a hoarse "haugh." "I got out of the way because it was _my_
+load. I didn't want no help from them." He paused and sat picking at his
+hands. "It's a dreadful ugly story. I'd most as soon live it over again
+as have to tell it in cold blood. I feel sometimes it _can't be!_"
+
+"You need not go back beyond that night. I know how my mother was left,
+and what sort of a man you were forced to leave her with. Was it--the
+keeper?"
+
+"That's what it was. That was the hard knot in my thread. Nothing
+wouldn't go past that. Some, when they git things in a tangle, they just
+reach for the shears an' cut the thread. I wa'n't brought up that way.
+I was taught to leave the shears alone. So I went on stringin' one year
+after another. But they wouldn't join on to them that went before. There
+was the knot."
+
+"It was between you and him--and the law?" said Paul.
+
+"You've got it! I was there alone with it,--witness an' judge an' jury;
+I worked up my own case. Manslaughter with extenuatin' circumstances,
+I made it--though he was more beast than man. I give myself the outside
+penalty,--imprisonment for life. And I been working out my sentence
+ever since. The Western country wa'n't home to me then--more like a big
+prison. It's been my prison these twenty-odd years, while your mother
+was enjoying what belonged to her, and making a splendid job of your
+education. If I had let things alone I might have finished my time out:
+but I didn't, and now the rest of it's commuted--for the life of my
+son!"
+
+"Don't put it that way! I am no lamb of sacrifice. Why, how can we let
+things alone in this world! Should I have stood off from this secret and
+never asked my father for his defense?"
+
+"Do you mean to say a boy like you can take hold of this thing and
+understand it?"
+
+"I can," said Paul. "I could almost tell the story myself."
+
+"Put it up then!" said the packer. The fascination of confession was
+strong upon him.
+
+"You had been out in the mountains--how long?"
+
+"Two days and three nights, just as I left camp."
+
+"You were crazed with anxiety for us. You came back to find your camp
+empty, the wife and baby gone. You had reason to distrust the keeper.
+Not for what he did--for what you knew he meant to do."
+
+"For what he meant and tried to do. I seen it in his eye. The devil that
+wanted him incited him to play with me and tell me lies about my wife.
+She scorned the brute and he took his mean revenge. He kep' back her
+letter, and he says to me, leerin' at me out of his wicked eyes, 'Your
+livestock seems to be the strayin' kind. The man she went off with
+give me that,'--he lugged a gold piece out of his clothes and showed
+me,--'give me that,' he says, 'to keep it quiet.' He kep' it quiet! Half
+starved and sick's I was, the strength was in me. But vengeance in the
+hand of a man, it cuts both ways, my son! His bunk had a sharp edge
+to it like this. He fell acrost it with my weight on top of him and he
+never raised up again. There wasn't a mark on him. His back was broke.
+He died slow, his eyes mocking me.
+
+"'You fool,' he says. 'Go look in that coat hangin' on the wall.' I
+found her letter there inside of one from Granger. He watched me read it
+and he laughed. 'Now, go tell her you've killed a man!' He knew I didn't
+come of a killin' breed. There was four hours to think it over. Four
+hours! I thought hard, I tell you! 'T was six of one and half a dozen of
+t' other 'twixt him and me, but I worked it back 'n' forth a good long
+while about her. First, taking her away from her father, an old man
+whose bread I'd eat. She was like a child of my own raising. I always
+had felt mean about that. We'd had bad luck from the start,--my
+luck,--and now disgrace to cap it all. Whether I hid it or told her and
+stood my trial, I'd never be a free man again. There he lay! And a sin
+done in secret, it's like a drop of nitric acid: it's going to eat its
+way out--and in!
+
+"I knew she'd have friends enough, once she was quit of me. That was the
+case between us. The thing that hurt me most was to put her letter
+back where I found it, and leave it, there with him. Her little cry to
+me--and I couldn't come! I read the words over and over, I've said 'em
+to myself ever since. I've lived on them. But I had to leave the letter
+there to show I'd never come back. I put it back after he was dead.
+
+"The sins of the parents shall be visited,--when it's in the blood! But
+I declare to the Almighty, murder wa'n't in my blood! It come on me like
+a stroke of lightning hits a tree, and I had a clear show to fall alone.
+
+"That's the answer. Maybe I didn't see all sides of it, but there never
+was no opening to do different, after that night. Now, you've had an
+education. I should be glad to hear your way of looking at it?"
+
+"I should think you might stand your trial, now, before any judge or
+jury, in this world or the next," Paul answered.
+
+"There is only one Judge." The packer smiled a beautiful quiet smile
+that covered a world of meanings. "What a man re'ly wants, if he'd own
+up it, is a leetle shade of partiality. Maybe that's what we're all
+going to need, before we git through."
+
+Paul was glad to be saved the necessity of speech, and he felt the swift
+discernment with which the packer resumed his usual manner. "Got any
+more of that stuff you call soup? Divide even! I won't be made no baby
+of."
+
+"We might as well finish it up. It's hardly worth making two bites of a
+cherry."
+
+"Call this 'cherry'! It's been a good while on the bough. What's it
+mostly made of?"
+
+"Rind of bacon, snow water,--plenty of water,--and a tablespoonful of
+rice."
+
+"Good work! Hungry folks can live on what the full bellies throw away."
+
+"Oh, I can save. But there comes a time when you can't live by saving
+what you haven't got."
+
+"That's right! Well, let's talk, then, before the bacon-rind fades out
+of us."
+
+The packer's face and voice, his whole manner, showed the joy of a soul
+that has found relief. Paul was not trying now to behave dutifully; they
+were man to man once more. The quaint, subdued humor asserted itself,
+and the narrator's speech flowed on in the homely dialect which
+expressed the man.
+
+"I stayed out all that winter, workin' towards the coast. One day, along
+in March, I fetched a charcoal burner's camp, and the critter took me in
+and nursed my frost-bites and didn't ask no questions, nor I of him. We
+struck up a trade, my drivin' stock, mostly skin and bone, for a show in
+his business. He wa'n't gettin' rich at it, that was as plain as the hip
+bones on my mules. I kep' in the woods, cuttin' timber and tendin' kiln,
+and he hauled and did the sellin'. Next year he went below to Portland
+and brought home smallpox with him. It broke out on him on the road. He
+was a terrible sick man. I buried him, and waited for my turn. It didn't
+come. I seemed kind o' insured. I've been in lots of trouble since then,
+but nothing ever touched me till now. I banked on it too strong, though.
+I sure did! My pardner was just such another lone bird like me. If
+he had any folks of his own he kep' still about them. So I took his
+name--whether it was his name there's no knowing. Guess I've took full
+as good care of it as he would. 'Hagar?' folk would say, sort o' lookin'
+me over. 'You ain't Jim Hagar.' No, but I was John, and they let it go
+at that.
+
+"I heard of your mother that summer, from a prospector who came up past
+my camp. He'd wintered in Mountain Home. He told me my own story, the
+way they had it down there, and what straits your mother was in. I had
+scraped up quite a few dollars by then, and was thinking how I'd shove
+it into a bank like an old debt coming to Adam Bogardus. I was studying
+how I was going to rig it. There wasn't any one who knew me down there,
+so I felt safe to ventur' a few inquiries. What I heard was that she'd
+gone home to her folks and was as well off as anybody need be. That
+broke me all up at first. I must have had a sneakin' notion that maybe
+some day I could see my way to go back to her, but that let me out
+completely. I quit then, and I've stayed quit. The only break I made was
+showin' up here at the 'leventh hour, thinking I could be some use to my
+son!"
+
+"It was to be," said Paul. "For years our lives have been shaping
+towards this meeting. There were a thousand chances against it. Yet here
+we are!"
+
+"Here we are!" the packer repeated soberly. "But don't think that I lay
+any of my foolishness on the Almighty! Maybe it was meant my son should
+close my eyes, but it's too dear at the price. Anybody would say so, I
+don't care who."
+
+"But aside from the 'price,' is it something to you?"
+
+"More--more than I've got words to say. And yet it grinds me, every
+breath I take! Not that I wish you'd done different--you couldn't and be
+a man. I knew it even when I was kickin' against it. Oh, well! It ain't
+no use to kick. I thought I'd learned something, but I ain't--learned--a
+thing!"
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+CURTAIN
+
+A greater freedom followed this confession, as was natural. It became
+the basis for lighter confidences and bits of autobiography that came to
+the surface easily after this tremendous effort at sincerity. Paul found
+that he could speak even of the family past, into which by degrees he
+began to fit the real man in place of that bucolic abstraction which
+had walked the fields of fancy. He had never dared to actuate the "hired
+man," his father, on a basis of fact. He knew the speech and manners of
+the class from which he came,--knew men of that class, and talked with
+them every summer at Stone Ridge; but he had brooded so deeply over the
+tragic and sentimental side of his father's fate as to have lost sight
+of the fact that he was a man.
+
+Reality has its own convincing charm, not inconsistent with plainness or
+even with commonness. To know it is to lose one's taste for toys of
+the imagination. Paul, at last, could look back almost with, a sense of
+humor at the doll-like progenitor he had played with so long. But when
+it came to placing the real man, Adam Bogardus, beside that real woman,
+once his wife, their son could but own with awe that there is mercy in
+extinction, after all; in the chance, however it may come to us, for
+slipping off those cruel disguises that life weaves around us.
+
+In the strange, wakeful nights, full of starvation dreams, he saw his
+mother as she would look on state occasions in the hostess's place at
+her luxurious table; the odor of flowers, the smell of meats and wines,
+tantalized and sickened him. Christine would come in her dancing frocks,
+always laughing, greedy in her mirth; but Moya, face to face, he could
+never see. It was torture to feel her near him, a disembodied embrace.
+Passionate panegyrics and hopeless adjurations he would pour out to
+that hovering loveliness just beyond his reach. The agony of
+frustration would waken him, if indeed it were sleep that dissolved his
+consciousness, and he would be irritable if spoken to.
+
+The packer broke in, one morning, on these unnerving dreams. "You
+wouldn't happen to have a picture of her along with you?"
+
+Paul stared at him.
+
+"No, of course you wouldn't! And I'd be 'most afeard to look at it, if
+you had. She must have changed considerable. Time hasn't stood still
+with her any more than the rest of us."
+
+"I have no picture of my mother," Paul replied.
+
+The packer saw that his question had jarred; he had waited weeks to ask
+it. He passed it off now with one of his homely similes. "If you was to
+break a cup clean in two, and put the halves together again while the
+break was fresh, they'd knit so you wouldn't hardly see a crack. But you
+take one half and set it in the chainy closet and chuck the other half
+out on the ash-heap,--them halves won't look much like pieces of the
+same cup, come a year or two. The edges won't jine no more than the lips
+of an old cut that's healed without stitches. No; married folks they
+grow together or they grow apart, and they're a-doing of the one or the
+other every minute of the time, breaks or no breaks. Does she go up to
+the old place summers?"
+
+"Not lately, except on business," said Paul. "A company was formed to
+open slate quarries on the upper farm, a good many years ago. They are
+worth more than all the land forty times over."
+
+"I always said so; always told the old man he had a gold mine in that
+ridge. Was this before he died?"
+
+"Long after. It was my mother's scheme mainly. She controls it now. She
+is a very strong business woman."
+
+"She got her training, likely, from that uncle in New York. He had the
+business head. The old man had no more contrivance than one of the bulls
+in his pastures. He could lock horns and stay there, but it wa'nt no
+trouble to outflank him. More than once his brother Jacob got to the
+windward of him in a bargain. He was made a good deal like his own land.
+Winters of frost it took to break up that ground, and sun and rain to
+meller it, and then't was a hatful of soil to a cartful of stone. The
+plough would jump the furrows if you drew it deep. My arms used to ache
+as if they'd been pounded, with the jar of them stones. They used to
+tell us children a story how Satan, he flew over the earth a-sowing
+it with rocks and stones, and as he was passing over our county a hole
+bu'st through his leather apron and he lost his whole load right slam
+there. I could 'a' p'inted out the very spot where the heft on it fell.
+Ten Stone meadow, so-called. Ten million stone! I was pickin' stone in
+that field all of one summer when I was fifteen year old. We built a
+mile of fence with it.
+
+"Them quarries must have brought a mint of money into the country.
+Different sort of labor, too. Well, the world grows richer and poorer
+every year. More difference every year between the way rich folks and
+poor folks live. I wouldn't know where I belonged, 't ain't likely, if
+I was to go back there. I'd be way off! One while I used to think a
+good deal about going back, just to take a look around. It comes over
+me lately like hunger and thirst. I think about the most curious things
+when I'm asleep--foolish, like a child! I can smell all the good home
+smells of a frosty morning: apple pomace, steaming in the barnyard;
+sausage frying; Becky scouring the brass furnace-kittle with salt and
+vinegar. Killin' time, you know--makes you think of boiling souse and
+head-cheese. You ever eat souse?" The packer sucked in his breath with a
+lean smile. "It ain't best to dwell on it. But you can't help yourself,
+at night. I can smell Becky's fresh bread, in my dreams, just out of the
+brick oven. Never eat bread cooked in a stove till I came out here. I
+never drunk any water like that spring on the ridge. Last night I was
+back there, and the maples were all yellow like sunshine. Once it
+was spring, and apple-blooms up in the hill orchard. And little Emmy,
+a-setting on the fence, with her bunnit throwed back on her neck.
+'Addy!' she called, way across the lot; 'Addy, come, help me down!' She
+was a master hand for venturin' up on places, but she didn't like the
+gettin' down.
+
+"Well, she 'a learned the ups and downs by this time. She don't need
+Addy to help her. I'd have helped a big sight more if I had kep' my
+distance. It's a thing so con-demned foolish and unnecessary--I can't be
+reconciled to it noway!"
+
+"You see only one side of it," said Paul. Unspeakable thoughts had kept
+pace with his father's words. "Nothing that happens, happens through
+us--or to us--alone. There was a girl I knew, outside. She was as happy,
+when I knew her first, as you say my mother used to be. Then she met
+some one--a man--and the shadow of his life crossed hers. He would have
+wrapped her up in it and put out her sunshine if he had stayed in the
+same world. Now she can be herself again, after a while. It cannot take
+long to forget a person you have known only a little over a year."
+
+The packer rose on one elbow. He reached across and shook his son.
+
+"Where is that girl? Answer me! Take your face out of your hands!"
+
+"At Bisuka Barracks. She is the commandant's daughter. I came out to
+marry her."
+
+"What possessed ye not to tell me?"
+
+"Why should I tell you? We buried the wedding-day months back, in the
+snow."
+
+"Boy, boy!" the packer groaned.
+
+"What difference can it make now?"
+
+"_All_ the difference--all the difference there is! I thought you were
+out here touring it with them fool boys and they were all the chance
+you had for help outside. You suppose her father is going to see her git
+left? _They_'ll get in here, if they have to crawl on their bellies or
+climb through the tree-limbs. They know how! And we've wasted the grub
+and talked like a couple of women!"
+
+"Oh, don't--don't torment me!" Paul groaned. "It was all over. Can't you
+leave the dead in peace!"
+
+"We are not the dead! I 'most wish we were. Boy, I've got a big word to
+say to you about that. Come closer!" The packer's speech hoarsened and
+failed. They could only hear each other breathe. Then it seemed to the
+packer that his was the only breath in the darkness. He listened. A
+faint cheer arose in the forest and a crashing of the dead underlimbs of
+the pines.
+
+He turned frantically upon his son, but no pledge could be extorted now.
+Paul's lips were closed. He had lost consciousness.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+KIND INQUIRIES
+
+The colonel's drawing-room was as hot as usual the first hour after
+dinner, and as usual it was full of kindly participant neighbors who had
+dropped in to repeat their congratulations on the good news, now almost
+a week old. Mrs. Bogardus had not come down, and, though asked after by
+all, the talk was noticeably freer for her absence.
+
+Mrs. Creve, in response to a telegram from her brother, had arrived from
+Fort Sherman on the day before, prepared for anything, from frozen feet
+to a wedding. She had spent the afternoon in town doing errands for
+Moya, and being late for dinner had not changed her dress. There never
+was such a "natural" person as aunt Annie. At present she was addressing
+the company at large, as if they were all her promising children.
+
+"Nobody talks about their star in these days. I used to have a star. I
+forget which it was. I know it was a pretty lucky one. Now I trust in
+Providence and the major and wear thick shoes." She exhibited the shoes,
+a particularly large and sensible kind which she imported from the East.
+Everybody laughed and longed to embrace her. "Has Moya got a star?" she
+asked seriously.
+
+"The whole galaxy!" a male voice replied. "Doesn't the luck prove it?"
+
+"Moya has got a 'temperament,'" said Doctor Fleming, the Post surgeon.
+"That's as good as having a star. You know there are persons who attract
+misfortune just as sickly children catch all the diseases that are
+going. I knew that boy was sure to be found. Anything of Moya's would
+be."
+
+"So you think it was Moya's 'temperament' that pulled him out of the
+snow?" said the colonel, wheeling his chair into the discussion.
+
+"How about Mr. Winslow's temperament? I prefer to leave a little of the
+credit to him," said Moya sweetly.
+
+A young officer, who had been suffering in the corner by the fire,
+jumped to his feet and bowed, then blushed and sat down again,
+regretting his rashness. Moya continued to look at him with steadfast
+friendliness. Winslow had led the rescue that brought her lover home.
+A glow of sympathy united these friends and neighbors; the air was
+electrical and full of emotion.
+
+"I suppose no date has been fixed for the wedding?" Mrs. Dawson, on the
+divan, murmured to Mrs. Creve. The latter smiled a non-committal assent.
+
+"I should think they would just put the doctor aside and be married
+anyhow. My husband says he ought to go to a warmer climate at once."
+
+"My dear, a young man can't be married in his dressing-gown and
+slippers!"
+
+"No! It's not as bad as that?"
+
+"Well, not quite. He's up and dressed and walks about, but he doesn't
+come down to his meals,--he can eat so very little at a time, and
+it tires him to sit through a dinner. It isn't one of those ravenous
+recoveries. It went too far with him for that."
+
+"His mother was perfectly magnificent through it all, they say."
+
+"Have you seen much of Mrs. Bogardus?"
+
+"No; we left them alone, poor things, when the pinch came. But I used to
+see her walking the porch, up and down, up and down. Moya would go off
+on the hills. They couldn't walk together! That was after Miss Chrissy
+went home. Her mother took her back, you know, and then returned alone.
+Perfectly heroic! They say she dressed every evening for dinner as
+carefully as if she were in New York, and led the conversation. She used
+to make Moya read aloud to her--history, novels--anything to pretend
+they were not thinking. The strain must have begun before any of us
+knew. The colonel kept it so quiet. What is the dear man doing with your
+bonnet?"
+
+The colonel had plucked his sister's walking-hat, a pert piece of
+millinery froward in feathers, from the trunk of the headless Victory,
+where she had reposed it in her haste before dinner.
+
+"Mustn't be disrespectful to the household Lar," he kindly reminded her.
+
+"Where am I to put my hats, then? I shall wear them on my head and come
+down to breakfast in them. Moya, dear, will you please rescue my hat?
+Put it anywhere, dear,--under your chair. There is not really a place
+in this house to put a thing. A wedding that goes off on time is bad
+enough, but one that hangs on from month to month--and doesn't even take
+care of its clothes! Forgive me, dear! The clothes are very pretty.
+I open a bureau-drawer to put away my middle-aged bonnet--a puff of
+violets! A pile of something white, and, behold, a wedding veil! There
+isn't a hook in the closet that doesn't say, 'Standing-room only,' and
+the standing-room is all stood on by a regiment of new shoes."
+
+"My dear woman, go light on our sore spots. We are only just out of the
+woods."
+
+"Isn't it bad to coddle your sore spots, Doctor? Like a saddle-gall,
+ride them down!" Mrs. Creve and Dr. Fleming exchanged a friendly smile
+on the strength of this nonsense. On the doctor's side it covered a
+suspicion: "'The lady, methinks, protests too much'!" The colonel, too,
+was restless, and Moya's sweet color came and went. She appeared to be
+listening for steps or sounds from some other part of the house.
+
+The men all rose now as Mrs. Bogardus entered; one or two of the ladies
+rose also, compelled by something in her look certainly not intended.
+She was careful to greet everybody; she even crossed the room and gave
+her hand to Lieutenant Winslow, whom she had not seen since the night of
+his return. The doctor she casually passed over with a bow; they had met
+before that day. It was in the mind of each person present not of the
+family, and excepting the doctor, to ask her: 'How is your son this
+evening?' But for some reason the inquiry did not come off.
+
+The company began suddenly to feel itself _de trop_. Mrs. Dawson, who
+had come under the doctor's escort, glanced at him, awaiting the moment
+when it would do to make the first move.
+
+"I hear you lost a patient from the hospital yesterday?" said Lieutenant
+Winslow, at the doctor's side.
+
+"_From_, did you say? That's right! He was to have been operated on
+to-day." The doctor shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"What!"
+
+"Two broken ribs. One grown fast to the lung."
+
+"Wh-ew!"
+
+"He just walked out. Said I had ordered him to have fresh air. There was
+a new hall-boy, a greenhorn."
+
+"He can't go far in that shape, can he?"
+
+"Oh, there's no telling. The constitution of those men is beyond
+anything. You can't kill him. He'll suffer of course, suffer like an
+animal, and die like one--away from the herd. Maybe not this time,
+though."
+
+"Was he afraid of the operation?"
+
+"I can't say. He did not seem to be either afraid or anxious for help.
+Not used to being helped. He would be taken to the Sisters' Hospital.
+Wouldn't come up here as the guest of the Post, not a bit! I believe
+from the first he meant to give us the slip, and take his chance in his
+own way."
+
+"Did you hear,"--Mrs. Creve spoke up from the opposite side of the room
+under that hypnotic influence by which a dangerous topic spreads,--"did
+you hear about the poor guide who ran away from the hospital to escape
+from our wicked doctor here? What a reputation you must have, Doctor!"
+
+"All talk, my dear; town gossip," said the colonel. "You gave him his
+discharge, didn't you, Doctor?" The colonel looked hard at the medical
+officer; he had prepared the way for a statement suited to a mixed
+company, including ladies. But Doctor Fleming stated things usually to
+suit himself.
+
+"There was a man who left the Sisters' Hospital rather informally
+yesterday. I won't say he is not just as well off to-day as if he had
+stayed."
+
+"Who was it? Was it our man, father?"
+
+"The doctor has more than one patient at the hospital." Colonel
+Middleton looked reproachfully at the doctor, who continued to put aside
+as childish these clumsy subterfuges. "I think you ladies frightened him
+away with your attentions. He knew he was under heavy liabilities for
+all your flowers and fancy cookery."
+
+"Attentions! Are we going to let him die on the road somewhere?" cried
+Moya.
+
+"Miss Moya?" Lieutenant Winslow spoke up with a mixture of embarrassment
+and resolution to be heard, though every voice in the room conspired
+against him. "Those men are a big fraternity. They have their outfitting
+places where they put in for repairs. Packer John had his blankets sent
+to the Green Meadow corral. They know him there. They say he had money
+at one of the stores. They all have a little money cached here and
+there. And they _can't_ get lost, you know!"
+
+Moya's eyes shone with a suspicious brightness.
+
+ "'When the forest shall mislead me;
+ When the night and morning lie.'"
+
+She turned her swimming eyes upon Paul's mother, who would be sure to
+remember the quotation.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus remained perfectly still, her lips slightly parted. She
+grew very pale. Then she rose and walked quickly to the door.
+
+"Just a breath of cold air!" she panted. The doctor, Moya, and Mrs.
+Creve had followed her into the hall. Moya placed herself on the settle
+beside her and leaned to support her, but she sat back rigidly with her
+eyes closed. Mrs. Creve looked on in quiet concern. "Let me take you
+into the study, Mrs. Bogardus!" the doctor commanded. "A glass of water,
+Moya, please."
+
+"How is she? What is it? Can we do anything?" The company crowded
+around Mrs. Creve on her return to the drawing-room. She glanced at
+her brother. There was no clue there. He stood looking embarrassed and
+mystified. "It is only the warm welcome we give our friends," she said
+aloud, smiling calmly. "Mrs. Bogardus found the room too hot. I think I
+should have succumbed myself but for that little recess in the hall."
+
+The colonel attacked his fire. He thought he was being played with.
+Things were not right in the house, and no one, not the doctor, or even
+Annie, was frank with him. His kind face flushed as he straightened up
+to bid his guests good-night.
+
+"Well, if it's not anything serious, you think. But you'll be sure
+to let us know?" said Mrs. Dawson. "Well, good-night, Mrs. Creve.
+_Good_-night, Colonel! You'll say good-night to Moya? Do let us know if
+there is anything we can do."
+
+Dr. Fleming was in the hall looking for his cape. The colonel touched
+him on the shoulder. "Don't be in a hurry, Doctor. Mrs. Dawson will
+excuse you."
+
+"I don't think you need me any more to-night. Moya is with Mrs.
+Bogardus. She is not ill. The room was a little close."
+
+"Never mind the _room_! Come in here. I want a word with you."
+
+The doctor laughed oddly, and obeyed.
+
+"Annie, you needn't leave us."
+
+"Why, thank you, dear boy! It's awfully good of you," Annie mocked him.
+"But I must go and relieve Moya."
+
+"I don't believe you are wanted in there," said Doctor Fleming.
+
+"It's more than obvious that I'm not in here."
+
+"Oh, do sit down," said the teased colonel.
+
+The fire sulked and smoked a trifle with its brands apart. Doctor
+Fleming leaned forward upon his knees and regarded it thoughtfully. The
+colonel sat fondling the tongs. In a deep chair Mrs. Creve lay back and
+shaded her face with the end of her lace scarf. By her manner she might
+have been alone in the room, yet she was keenly observant of the men,
+for she felt that developments were taking place.
+
+"What is the matter with your patient upstairs, Doctor?" the colonel
+began his cross-examination. Doctor Fleming raised his eyebrows.
+
+"He's had nothing to eat to speak of for six weeks, at an altitude"--
+
+"Yes; we know all that. But he's twenty-four years old. They made an
+easy trip back, and he has been here a week, nearly. He's not as strong
+as he was when they brought him in, is he?"
+
+"That was excitement. You have to allow for the reaction. He has had
+a shock to the entire system,--nerves, digestion,--must give him time.
+Very nervous temperament too much controlled."
+
+"Make it as you like. But I'm disappointed in his rallying powers,
+unless you are keeping something back. A boy with the grit to do what he
+did, and stand it as he did--why isn't he standing it better now?"
+
+"We are all suffering from reaction, I think," said Mrs. Creve
+diplomatically; "and we show it by making too much of little things.
+Tom, we oughtn't to keep the doctor up here talking nonsense. He wants
+to go to bed."
+
+"_I_'m not talking nonsense," said the doctor. "I should be if I
+pretended there was anything mysterious about that boy's case upstairs.
+He has had a tremendous experience, say what you will; and it's pulled
+him down nervously, and every other way. He isn't ready or able to
+talk of it yet. And he knows as soon as he comes down there'll be forty
+people waiting to congratulate him and ask him how it was. I don't
+wonder he fights shy. If he could take his bride by the hand and walk
+out of the house with her I believe he could start to-morrow; but if
+there must be a wedding and a lot of fuss"--
+
+Mrs. Creve nodded her head approvingly. The three had risen and stood
+around the hearth, while the colonel put the brands delicately together
+with the skill of an old campaigner. The flames breathed again.
+
+"I don't offer this as a professional opinion," said the doctor. "But a
+case like his is not a disease, it's a condition"--
+
+"Of the mind, perhaps?" the colonel added significantly. He glanced at
+Mrs. Creve. "You've thought about that, Doctor? The letter his mother
+consulted you about?"
+
+"Have you been worrying about that, Colonel? Why didn't you say so?
+There is nothing in it whatever. Why, it's so plain a case the other
+way--any one can see where the animus comes from!"
+
+"Now you _are_ getting mysterious, and I'm going to bed!" said Mrs.
+Creve.
+
+"No; we're coming to the point now," said the colonel.
+
+"What is it you want Bogardus to do?" asked Doctor Fleming. "Want him to
+get up and walk out of the house as my patient did at the hospital? Dare
+say he could do it, but what then? Will you let me speak out, Colonel?
+No regard to anybody's feelings? Now, this may be gossip, but I think
+it has a bearing on the case upstairs. I'm going to have it off my mind
+anyhow! When Mrs. Bogardus came to see the guide,--Packer John,--day
+before yesterday, was it?--he asked to see her alone. Said he had
+something particular to say to her about her son. We thought it a queer
+start, but she was willing to humor him. Well, she wasn't in there above
+ten minutes, but in that time something passed between them that hit
+her very hard, no doubt of that! Now, Bogardus holds his tongue like
+a gentleman as to what happened in the woods. He doesn't mention
+his comrades' names. And the packer has disappeared; so he can't be
+questioned. Seems to me a little bird told me there was an attachment
+between one of those Bowen boys and Miss Christine?
+
+"Now we, who know what brutes brute fear will make of men, are not going
+to deny that those boys behaved badly. There are some things that can't
+be acknowledged among men, you know, if there is a hole to crawl out of.
+Cowardice is one of them. Well then, they lied, that's the whole of
+it. The little boys lied. They wrote Mrs. Bogardus a long letter from
+Lemhi,"--the doctor was reviewing now for Mrs. Creve's benefit,--"when
+they first got out. They probably judged, by the time they had had,
+that Paul and the packer would never tell their own story. Very well: it
+couldn't hurt Paul, it might be the saving of them, if they could show
+that something had queered him in the woods. They asked his mother
+if she had heard of the effects of altitude upon highly sensitive
+organizations. They recounted some instances--I will mention them later.
+One of the boys is a lawyer, isn't he? They are a pair of ingenious
+youths. Bogardus, they claim, avoided them almost from the time they
+entered the woods,--almost lived with the packer, behaved like a crank
+about the shooting. Whereas they had gone there to kill things, he made
+it a personal matter whenever they pursued this intention in a natural
+and undisguised manner. He had pangs, like a girl, when the creatures
+expired. He hated the carcases, the blood--forgive me, Mrs. Creve. In
+short, he called the whole business butchery."
+
+"Do you make _that_ a sign of lunacy?" Mrs. Creve flung in.
+
+"I am quoting, you know." The doctor smiled indulgently. "They declare
+that they offered--even begged--to stay behind with him, one of them, at
+least, but he rejected their company in a manner so unpleasant that they
+saw it would only be courting a quarrel to remain. And so, treating him
+perforce like a child _or_ a lunatic _pro tem._, and having but little
+time to decide in, they cut loose and hurried back for help. This is the
+tale, composed on reflection. They said nothing of this to Winslow--to
+save publicity, of course! Mrs. Bogardus's lips are doubly sealed, for
+her son's sake and for the sake of the young scamp who is to be her
+son, by and by! I saw she winced at my opinion, which I gave her
+plainly--brutally, perhaps. And she asked me particularly to say
+nothing, which I am particularly not doing.
+
+"This, I think, you will find is the bitter drop in the cup of rejoicing
+upstairs. And they are swallowing it in silence, those two, for the sake
+of the little girl and the old friends in New York. Of course she has
+kept from Paul that last shot in the back from those sweet boys! The
+packer had some unruly testimony he was bursting with, which he had
+sense enough to keep for her alone, and she doesn't want the case to
+spread. It is singular how a man in his condition could get out of
+the way as suddenly as he did. You might think he'd been taken up in a
+cloud."
+
+"Doctor, what do you mean by such an insinuation as that?"
+
+"Colonel, have I insinuated anything? Did I say she had oiled the wheels
+of his departure?"
+
+"Come, come! You go too far!"
+
+"Not at all. That's your own construction. I merely say that I am not
+concerned about that man's disappearance. I think he'll be looked after,
+as a valuable witness should be."
+
+"Well," the colonel grumbled uneasily, "I don't like mysteries myself,
+and I don't like family quarrels nor skeletons at the feasts of old
+friends. But I suppose there must be a drop in every cup. What were your
+altitude cases, Doctor?"
+
+"The same old ones; poor Addison, you know. All those stories they tell
+an Easterner. As I pointed out to Mrs. Bogardus, in every case there was
+some predisposing cause. Addison had been too long in the mountains, and
+he was frightfully overworked; short of company officers. He came to me
+about an insect he said had got into his ear; buzzed, and bothered him
+day and night. The story got to the men's quarters. They joked about the
+colonel's 'bug.' I knew it was no joke. I condemned him for duty, but
+the Sioux were out. They thought at Washington no one but Addison could
+handle an Indian campaign. He was on the ground, too. So they sent him
+up higher where it was dry, with a thousand men in his hands. I knew
+he'd be a madman or a dead man in a month! There were a good many of the
+dead! By Jove! The boys who took his orders and loved the old fellow and
+knew he was sending them to their death! Well for him that he'll never
+know."
+
+"The 'altitude of heartbreak,'" sighed Mrs. Creve. The phrase was her
+own, for many a reason deeply known unto herself, but she gave it the
+effect of a quotation before the men.
+
+"Then you think there is no 'altitude' in ours?"
+
+"No; nor 'heartbreak' either," said the doctor, helping himself to one
+of the colonel's cigars. "But I don't say there isn't enough to keep a
+woman awake nights, and to make those young men avoid the sight of each
+other for a time. Thanks, I won't smoke now. I'm going to take a look at
+Mrs. Bogardus as I go out."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+
+The doctor had taken his look, feeling a trifle guilty under his
+patient's counter gaze, yet glad to have relieved the good colonel's
+anxiety. If he loved to gossip, at least he was particular as to whom he
+gossiped with.
+
+Moya closed the door after him and silently resumed her seat. Mrs.
+Bogardus helped herself to a sip of water. She was struggling with a
+dry constriction of the throat, and Moya protested a little, seeing the
+effort that it cost her to speak, even in the hoarse, unnatural tone
+which was all the voice she had left.
+
+"I want to finish now," she said, "and never speak of this again. It was
+I who accused them first--and then I asked him:--if there was anything
+he could say in their defense, to say it, for Chrissy's sake! 'I will
+never break bread with them again,' said he,--'either Banks or Horace.
+I will not eat with them, or drink with them, or speak with them again!'
+Think of it! How are we to live? How are they to inhabit the same
+city? He thinks I have been weak. I am weak! The only power I have is
+through--the property. Banks will never marry a poor girl. But that
+would be a dear-bought victory. Let her keep what faith in him she can.
+No; in families, the ones who can control themselves have to give in--to
+those who can't. If you argue with Christine she simply gives way, and
+then she gets hysterical, and then she is ill. It's a disease. Mothers
+know how their children--Christine was marked--marked with trouble! I
+am thankful she has any mind at all. She needs me more than Paul does. I
+cannot be parted from my power to help her--such as it is."
+
+"When she is Banks Bowen's wife she will need you more than ever!" said
+Moya.
+
+"She will. I could prevent the marriage, but I am afraid to. I am
+afraid! So, as the family is cut in two--in three, for I--" Mrs. Bogardus
+stopped and moistened her lips again. "So--I think you and Paul had
+better make your arrangements and go as soon as you can wherever it
+suits you, without minding about the rest of us."
+
+Moya gave a little sobbing laugh. "You don't expect me to make the first
+move!"
+
+"Doesn't he say anything to you--anything at all?"
+
+"He is too ill."
+
+"He is not ill!" Mrs. Bogardus denied it fiercely. "Who says he is ill?
+He is starved and frozen. He is just out of the grave. You must be good
+to him, Moya. Warm him, comfort him! You can give him the life he needs.
+Your hands are as soft as little birds. They comfort even me. Oh, don't
+you understand!"
+
+"Of course I understand!" Moya answered, her face aflame. "But I cannot
+marry Paul. He has got to marry me."
+
+"What nonsense that is! People say to a girl: 'You can't be too cold
+before you are married or too kind after!' That does not mean you and
+Paul. If you are not kind to him _now_, you will make a great mistake."
+
+"He is not thinking of marriage," said Moya. "Something weighs on him
+all the time. I cannot ask him questions. If he wanted to tell me he
+would. That is why I come downstairs and leave him. But he won't come
+down! Is it not strange? If we could believe such things I would say a
+Presence came with, him out of that place. It is with him when I find
+him alone. It is in his eyes when he looks at me. It is not something
+past and done with, it is here--now--in this house! _What_ is it? What
+do _you_ believe?"
+
+The eyes she sought to question hardened under her gaze. Here, too, was
+a veil. Mrs. Bogardus sat with her hands clasped in her lap. She was
+motionless, but the creaking of her silks could be heard as her bosom
+rose and fell. After a moment she said: "Paul's tray is on the table in
+the dining-room. Will you take it when you go up?"
+
+Moya altered her own manner instantly. "But you?" she hesitated. "I must
+not crowd you out of all your mother privileges. You have handed over
+everything to me."
+
+"A mother's privilege is to see herself no longer needed. I can do
+nothing more for my son"--her smile was hard--"except take care of his
+money."
+
+"Paul's mother!"
+
+"My dear, do you suppose we mind? It is a very great privilege to be
+allowed to step aside when your work is done."
+
+"Paul's _mother!_" Moya insisted.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose. "You don't remember your own mother, my dear. You
+have an exaggerated idea of the--the importance of mothers. They are
+only a temporary arrangement." She put out her hands and the girl's
+cheek touched hers for an instant; then she straightened herself and
+walked calmly out of the room. Moya remained a little longer, afraid
+to follow her. "If she would not smile! If she would do anything but
+smile!"
+
+Paul was walking about his room, half an hour later, when Moya stopped
+outside his door. She placed the tray on a table in the hall. The door
+was opened from within. Paul had heard his mother go up before, heard
+her pause at the stairs, and, after a silence, enter her own room.
+
+"She knows that I know," he said to himself. "That knowledge will be
+always between us; we can never look each other in the face again." To
+Moya he endeavored to speak lightly.
+
+"It sounded very gay downstairs to-night. You must have had a houseful."
+
+"I have been with your mother the last hour," answered Moya, vaguely on
+the defensive. Since Paul's return there had been little of the old free
+intercourse in words between them, and without this outlet their mutual
+consciousness became acute. Often as they saw each other during the day,
+the keenest emotion attached to the first meeting of their eyes.
+
+Paul was unnerved by his sudden recall from death to life. Its contrasts
+were overwhelming to his starved senses: from the dirt and dearth and
+grimy despair of his burial hutch in the snow to this softly lighted,
+close-curtained room, warm and sweet with flowers; from the gaunt,
+unshaven spectre of the packer and his ghostly revelations, to Moya,
+meekly beautiful, her bright eyes lowered as she trailed her soft skirts
+across the carpet; Moya seated opposite, silent, conscious of him
+in every look and movement. Her lovely hands lay in her lap, and the
+thought of holding them in his made him tremble; and when he recalled
+the last time he had kissed her he grew faint. He longed to throw
+off this exhausting self-restraint, but feared to betray his helpless
+passion which he deemed an insult to his soul's worship of her.
+
+And she was thinking: "Is this all it is going to mean--his coming
+home--our being together? And I was almost his wife!"
+
+"So it was my mother you were talking to in the study? I thought I heard
+a man's voice."
+
+"It was the doctor. Your mother was not quite herself this evening. He
+came in to see her, but he does not think she is ill. 'Rest and change,'
+he says she needs."
+
+Paul gave the words a certain depth of consideration. "Are you as well
+as usual, Moya?"
+
+"Oh, I am always well," she answered cheerlessly. "I seem to thrive on
+anything--everything," she corrected herself, and blushed.
+
+The blush made him gasp. "You are more beautiful than ever. I had
+forgotten that beauty is a physical fact. The sight of you confuses me."
+
+"I always told you you were morbid." Moya's happy audacity returned.
+"Now, how long are you going to sit and think about that?"
+
+"Do I sit and think about things?" His reluctant, boyish smile, which
+all women loved, captured his features for a moment. "It is very rude of
+me."
+
+"Suppose I should ask you what you are thinking about?"
+
+"Ah! I am afraid you would say 'morbid' again."
+
+"Try me! You ought to let me know at once if you are going to break out
+in any new form of morbidness."
+
+"I wish it might amuse you, but it wouldn't. Let me put you a
+case--seriously."
+
+Moya smiled. "Once we were serious--ages ago. Do you remember?"
+
+"Do I remember!"
+
+"Well? You are you, and I am I, still."
+
+"Yes; and as full of fateful surprises for each other."
+
+"I bar 'fateful'! That word has the true taint of morbidness."
+
+"But you can't 'bar' fate. Listen: this is a supposing, you know.
+Suppose that an accident had happened to our leader on the way home--to
+your Lieutenant Winslow, we'll say"--
+
+"_My_ lieutenant!"
+
+"Your father's--the regiment's--Lieutenant Winslow 'of ours.' Suppose we
+had brought him back in a state to need a surgeon's help; and without a
+word to any one he should get up and walk out of the hospital with his
+hurts not healed, and no one knew why, or where he had gone? There would
+be a stir about it, would there not? And if such a poor spectre of a
+bridegroom as I were allowed to join the search, no one would think it
+strange, or call it a slight to his bride if the fellow went?"
+
+"I take your case," said Moya with a beaming look. "You want to go after
+that poor man who suffered with you."
+
+"Who went with us to save us from our own headstrong folly, and would
+have died there alone"--
+
+"Yes; oh, yes!--before you begin to think about yourself, or me. Because
+he is nobody 'of ours,' and no one seems to feel responsible, and we go
+on talking and laughing just the same!"
+
+"Do they talk of this downstairs?"
+
+"To-night they were talking--oh, with such philosophy! But how came you
+to know it?"
+
+Paul did not answer this question. "Then"--he drew a long breath,--"then
+you could bear it, dear?--the comment, even if they called it a slight
+to you and a piece of quixotic lunacy? Others will not take my case,
+remember."
+
+"What others?"
+
+"They will say: 'Why doesn't he send a better man? He is no trailer.' It
+is true. Money might find him and bring him back, but all the money
+in the world could not teach him to trust his friends. There is a
+misunderstanding here which is too bitter to be borne. It is hard to
+explain,--the intimacy that grows up between men placed as we were. But
+as soon as help reached us, the old lines were drawn. I belonged with
+the officers, he with the men. We could starve together, but we could
+not eat together. He accepted it--put himself on that basis at once.
+He would not come up here as the guest of the Post. He is done with us
+because he thinks we are done with him. And he knows that I must know
+his occupation is gone. He will never guide nor pack a mule again."
+
+"Your mother and my father, they will understand. What do the others
+matter?"
+
+"I must tell you, dear, that I do not propose to tell them--especially
+them--why I go. For I am going. I must go! There are reasons I cannot
+explain." He sighed, and looked wildly at Moya, whose smile was becoming
+mechanical. "I hate the excuse, but it will have to be said that I go
+for a change--for my health. My health! Great God! But it's 'orders,'
+dear."
+
+"Your orders are my orders. You are never going anywhere again without
+me," said Moya slowly. Her smile was gone. She stood up and faced him,
+pale and beautiful. He rose, too, and stooped above her, taking her
+hands and gazing into her full blue eyes arched like the eyes of angels.
+
+"I thought she was a girl! But she is a woman," he said in a voice of
+caressing wonder. "A woman, and not afraid!"
+
+"I am afraid. I will not be left--I will not be left again! Oh, you
+won't take me, even when I offer myself to you!"
+
+"Don't--don't tempt me!" Paul caught her to him with a groan. "You don't
+know me well enough to be afraid of _me!_"
+
+"You! You will not let me know you."
+
+"Oh, hush, dear--hush, my darling! This isn't thinking. We must think
+for our lives. I must take care of you, precious. We don't know where
+this search may take us, or where it will end, or what the end will be."
+He kissed the sleeve of her dress, and put her gently from him, so that
+he could look her in the eyes. She gave him her full pure gaze.
+
+"It is the poor man again. You said he would spoil our lives."
+
+"He is _our_ poor man. You didn't go out of your way to find him. And
+your way is mine."
+
+"It is so heavenly to be convinced! Who taught you to see things at a
+glance,--things I have toiled and bungled over and don't know now if I
+am right! _Who_ taught you?"
+
+"Do you think I stood still while you were away! Oh, my heart was sifted
+out by little pieces."
+
+"You shall sift mine. You shall tell me what to do. For I know nothing!
+Not even if I may dare to take this angel at her word!"
+
+"I knew you would not take me!" the girl whispered wildly. "But I shall
+go."
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+
+"Your tray! It is after ten o'clock. Your 'angel' is a bad nurse." Moya
+brought the tray and set it on a little stand beside Paul's chair. He
+watched her shy, excited preparations as she moved about, conscious of
+his eyes. The saucepan staggered upon the coals and they both sprang
+to save the broth, and pouring it she burnt her thumb a little, and he
+behaved quite like any ordinary young man. They were ecstatic to find
+themselves at ease with each other once more. Moya became disrespectful
+to her charge; such sweet daring looked from her eyes into his as made
+him riotous with joy.
+
+"Won't you take some with me?" He turned the cup towards her and watched
+her as she sipped.
+
+"'It was roast with fire,'" he pronounced softly and dreamily, 'because
+of the dreadful pains. It was to be eaten with bitter herbs'"--
+
+"What _are_ you saying?"--
+
+"'To remind them of their bondage.'"
+
+"I object to your talking about bondage and bitter herbs when you are
+eating aunt Annie's delicious consomm."
+
+He gravely sipped in turn, still with his eyes in hers. "Can you
+remember what you were doing on the second of November?"
+
+"Can I remember!"
+
+"Yes; tell me. I have a reason for asking."
+
+"Tell _me_ the reason first."
+
+"May we have a little more fire, darling? It gives me chills to think of
+that day. It was the last of my wretched pot-hunting. There was nothing
+to hunt for--the game had all gone down, but I did not know that.
+Somewhere in the woods, a long way from the cabin, it began to occur to
+me that I should not make shelter that night. A fool and his strength
+are soon parted. It was a little hollow with trees all around so deep
+that in the distance their trunks closed in like a wall. Snow can make
+a wonderful silence in the woods. I seemed to hear the thoughts of
+everybody I loved in the world outside. There had been a dullness over
+me for weeks. I could not make it true that I had ever been happy--that
+you really loved me. All that part of my life was a dream. Now, in that
+silence suddenly I felt you! I knew that you cared. It was cruel to
+die so if you did love me! It brought the 'pang and spur'! I fought the
+drowsiness that was taking away my pain. I had begun to lean on it as
+a comfortable breast. I woke up and tore myself away from that siren
+sleep. It was my darling,--her love that saved me. Without that thought
+of you, I never would have stirred again. Where were you, what were you
+thinking that brought you so close to me?"
+
+"Ah," said Moya in a whisper. "I was in that room across the hall,
+alone. They were good to me that day; they made excuses and left me to
+myself. In the afternoon a box came,--from poor father,--white roses,
+oh, sweet and cold as snow! I took them up to that room and forced
+myself to go in. It was where my things were kept, the trunks half
+packed, all the drawers and closets full. And my wedding dress laid
+out on the bed. We girls used to go up there at first and look at the
+things, and there was laughing and joking. Sometimes I went up alone and
+tried on my hats before the glass, and thought where I should be when
+I wore them, and--Well! all that stopped. I dreaded to pass the door.
+Everything was left just as it was; the shutters open, the poor dress
+covered with a sheet on the bed. The room was a death-chamber. I went
+in. I carried the roses to my dead. I drew down the sheet and put my
+face in that empty dress. It was my selfish self laid out there--the
+girl who knew just what she wanted and was going to get it if she could.
+Happiness I dared not even pray for--only remembrance--everlasting
+remembrance. That we might know each other again when no more life
+was left to part us--_my_ life. It seemed long to wait, but that was
+my--marriage vow. I gave you all I could, remembrance, faith till
+death."
+
+"Then you are my own!" said Paul, his face transformed. "God was our
+witness. Life of my life--for life and death!" Solemnly he took a
+bridegroom's kiss from her lips.
+
+"How do _you_ know that it is life that parts?"
+
+"Speak so I can understand you!" Moya cried. "Ah, if I might! A man
+must not have secrets from his wife. Secrets are destruction, don't you
+think?"
+
+Moya waited in silence.
+
+"Now we come to this bondage!" He let the words fall like a load from
+his breast. "This is a hideous thing to tell you, but it will cut us
+apart unless you know it. It compels me to do things." He paused, and
+they heard a door down the passage open,--the door of his mother's room.
+A step came forward a few paces. Silence; it retreated, and the door
+closed again stealthily.
+
+"She has not slept," Paul murmured. "Poor soul, poor soul! Now, in what
+I am going to say, please listen to the facts, Moya dear. Try not to
+infer anything from my way of putting things. I shall contradict myself,
+but the facts do that.
+
+"The--the guide--John, we will call him, had a long fever in the woods.
+It would come on worse at night, and then--he talked--words, of a
+shocking intimacy. They say that nothing the mind has come in contact
+with under strong emotion is ever lost, no matter how long in the past.
+It will return under similar excitement. This man had kept stored away
+in his mind, under some such pressure, the words of a woman's message,
+a woman in great distress. Over and over, as his pulse rose, countless
+times he would repeat that message. I went out of the hut at night and
+stood outside in the snow not to hear it, but I knew it as well as he
+did before we got through. Now, this was what he said, word for word.
+
+"'Do not blame me, my dear husband. I have held out in this place as
+long as I can. Don't wait for anything. Don't worry about anything. Come
+back to me with your bare hands. Come!--to your loving Emmy!'
+
+"'Come, come!' he would shout out loud. Then in another voice he would
+whisper, 'Come back to me with your bare hands!' And he would stare at
+his hands and his face would grow awful."
+
+Moya drew a long sigh of scared attention.
+
+"Those words were all over the cabin walls. I heard them and saw them
+everywhere. There was no rest from them. I could have torn the roof down
+to stop his talking, but the words it was not possible to forget. And
+where was the horror of it? Was not this what we had asked, for years,
+to know?"
+
+"You need not explain to me," said Moya, shuddering.
+
+"Yes; but all one's meanest motives were unearthed in a place like that.
+Would I have felt so with a different man? Some one less uncouth? Was it
+the man himself, or his"--
+
+"Paul, if anything could make you a snob, it would be your deadly fear
+of being one!"
+
+"Well, if they had found us then, God knows how that fight would have
+ended. But I won it--when there was nothing left to fight for. I owned
+him--in the grave. We owned each other and took a bashful sort of
+comfort in it, after we had shuffled off the 'Mister' and 'John.' I grew
+quite fond of him, when we were so near death that his English didn't
+matter, or his way of eating. I thought him a very remarkable man,
+you remember, when he was just material for description. He was, he is
+remarkable. Most remarkable in this, he was not ashamed of his son."
+
+"Do please let that part alone. I want to know what he was doing, hiding
+away by himself all these years? I believe he is an impostor!"
+
+"We came to that, of course; though somehow I forgave him before he
+could answer the question. In the long watch beside him I got very close
+to him. It was not possible to believe him a deserter, a sneak. Can you
+take my word for his answer? It was given as a death-bed confession and
+he is living."
+
+"I would take your word for anything except yourself!" Moya did not
+smile, or think what she was saying.
+
+"That answer cleared him, in my mind, with something over to the credit
+of blind, stupid heroism. He is not a clever man. But, speaking as one
+who has teen face to face with the end of things, I can say that I know
+of no act of his that should prevent his returning to his family--if he
+had a family--not even his deserting them for twenty years. _If_, I say!
+
+"When the soldiers found us we were too far gone to realize the issue
+that was upon us. He was the first to take it in. It was on the march
+home, at night, he touched me and began speaking low in our corner of
+the tent. 'As we came in here, so we go out again, and so we stay,' he
+said. I told him it could not be. To suppress what I had learned would
+make the whole of life a lie, a coward's lie. That knowledge belonged to
+my mother. I must render it up to her. To do otherwise would be to treat
+her like a child and to meddle with the purposes of God. 'No honest man
+robs another of his secrets,' he said. He was very much excited. She
+was the only one now to be considered--and what did I know about God's
+purposes? He refused to take my scruples into consideration, except such
+as concerned her. But, after a long argument, very painful, weak as we
+were and whispering in the dark, he yielded this much. If I were bent on
+digging up the dead, as he called it, it must be done in such a way as
+to leave her free. Free she was in law, and she must be given a chance
+to claim her freedom without talk or publicity. Absolute secrecy he
+demanded of me in the mean time. I begged him to see how unfair it was
+to her to bring her face to face with such a discovery without one word
+of preparation, of excuse for him. She would condemn him on the very
+fact of his being alive. So she would, he said, if she were going
+to judge him; not if she felt towards him as--as a wife feels to her
+husband. It was that he wanted to know. It was that or nothing he would
+have from her. 'Bring me face to face with her alone, and as sudden as
+you like. If she knows me, I am the man. And if she wants me back, she
+will know me--and that way I'll come and no other way.' Was not that
+wonderful? A gentleman could hardly have improved on that. Whatever
+feeling he might be supposed to have towards her in the matter we
+could never touch upon. But I think he had his hopes. That decision was
+hanging over us--and I trembled for her. Day before yesterday, was it, I
+persuaded her to see the sick guide. She wondered why I was faint as
+she kissed me good-by. I ought to have prepared her. It was a horrible
+snare. And yet he meant it all in delicacy, a passionate consideration
+for her. Poor fool. How could I prepare _him!_ How could he keep
+pace with the changes in her! After all, it is externals that make
+us,--habits, clothes. Great God! Things you could not speak of to a
+naked soul like him. But he would have it 'straight,' he said--and
+straight he got it. And he is gone; broke away like an animal out of
+a trap. And I am going to find him, to see at least that he has a roof
+over his head. God knows, he may not die for years!"
+
+"She has got years before her too."
+
+"She!--What am I saying! We have plunged into those damnable inferences
+and I haven't given you the facts. Wait. I shall contradict all this in
+a moment. I thought, she must have done this for her children. She
+must be given another chance. And I approached the thing on my very
+knees--not to let her know that I knew, only to hint that I was not
+unprepared, had guessed--could meet it, and help her to meet the
+problems it would bring into our lives. Help her! She stood and faced
+me as if I had insulted her. 'I have been your father's widow for
+twenty-two years. If that fact is not sacred to you, it is to me. Never
+dare to speak of this to me again!'"
+
+"Ah," said Moya in a long-drawn sigh, "then she did not"--
+
+"Oh, she did, explicitly! For I went on to speak of it. It was my last
+chance. I asked her how she--we--could possibly go through with it; how
+with this knowledge between us we could look each other in the face--and
+go on living.
+
+"'Put this hallucination out of your mind,' she said. 'That man and I
+are strangers.'"
+
+"Was that--would you call that a lie?" asked Moya fearfully.
+
+"You can see your answer in her face. I do not say that hers was the
+first lie. It must always be foolish, I think, to evade the facts of
+life as we make them for ourselves. He refused to meet his facts, from
+the noblest motives;--but now I'm tangling you all up again! Rest your
+head here, darling. This is such a business! It is a pity I cannot tell
+you his whole story. Half the meaning of all this is lost. But--here is
+a solemn declaration in writing, signed John Hagar, in which this man we
+are speaking of says that Adam Bogardus was his partner, who died in the
+woods and was buried by his hand; that he knew his story, all the scenes
+and circumstances of his life in many a long talk they had together, as
+well as he knew his own. In his delirium he must have confused himself
+with his old partner, and half in dreams, he said, half in the crazy
+satisfaction of pretending to himself he had a son, he allowed the
+delusion to go on; saw it work upon me, and half feared it, half
+encouraged it. Afterwards he was frightened at the thought of meeting
+my mother, who would know him for an impostor. His seeming scruples were
+fear of exposure, not consideration for her. This was why he guarded
+their interview so carefully. 'No harm's been done,' he says, 'if you'll
+act now like a sensible man. I'll be disappointed in you if you make
+your mother any trouble about this. You've treated me as square as any
+man could treat another. Remember, I say so, and think as kindly as
+you can of a harmless, loony old impostor'--and he signs himself 'John
+Hagar,'--which shows again how one lie leads to another. We go to find
+'John Hagar.'"
+
+"Have you shown your mother this letter? You have not? Paul, you will
+not rob her of her just defense!"
+
+"I will not heap coals of fire on her head! This letter simply completes
+his renunciation, and he meant it for her defense. But when a man signs
+himself 'John Hagar' in the handwriting of my father, it shows that
+somebody is not telling the truth. I used to pore over the old farm
+records in my father's hand at Stone Ridge in the old account books
+stowed away in places where a boy loves to poke and pry. I know it as
+well as I know yours. Do you suppose she would not know it? When a man
+writes as few letters as he does, the handwriting does not change." Paul
+laid the letter upon the coals. "It is the only witness against her, but
+it loses the case."
+
+"She never could have loved him. I never believed she did!" said Moya.
+
+"She thinks she can live out this deep-down, deliberate--But it will
+kill her, Moya. Her life is ended from this on. How could I have
+driven her to that excruciating choice! I ought to have listened to him
+altogether or not at all. There is a hell for meddlers, and the ones who
+meddle for conscience' sake are the deepest damned, I think."
+
+Moya came and wreathed her arm in his, and they paced the room in
+silence. At length she said, "If we go to find John Hagar, shall we not
+be meddling again? A man who respects a woman's freedom must love his
+own. It is the last thing left him. Don't hunt him down. I believe
+nothing could hurt him now like seeing you again."
+
+"He shall not see me unless he wants to, but he shall know where I stand
+on this question of the Impostor. It shall be managed so that even he
+can see I am protecting her. No, call himself what he will, the tie
+between him and me is another of those facts."
+
+"But do you love him, Paul?"
+
+"Oh--I cannot forget him! He is--just as he used to be--'poor father out
+there in the cold.' We must find him and comfort him somehow."
+
+"For our own peace of mind? Forgive me for arguing when everything is so
+difficult. But he is a man--a brave man who would rather be forever out
+in the cold than be a burden. Do not rob him of his right to _be_ John
+Hagar if he wants to, for the sake of those he loves. You do not tell me
+it was love, but I am sure it was, in some mistaken way, that drove him
+into exile. Only love as pure as his can be our excuse for dragging him
+back. He did not want shelter and comfort from her. Only one thing. Have
+we got that to give him?"
+
+"Well then, I go for my own sake--it is a physical necessity; and I go
+for hers. She has put it out of her own power to help him. It will ease
+her a little to know I am trying to reach him in his forlorn disguise."
+
+"But you were not going to tell her?"
+
+"In words, no. But she will understand. There is a strange clairvoyance
+between us, as if we were accomplices in a crime!"
+
+Moya reflected silently. This search which Paul had set his heart upon
+would equally work his own cure, she saw. Nor could she now imagine for
+themselves any lover's paradise inseparable from this moral tragedy,
+which she saw would be fibre of their fibre, life of their life. A
+family is an organism; one part may think to deny or defy another, but
+with strange pains the subtle union exerts itself; distance cannot break
+the thread.
+
+They kissed each other solemnly like little children on the eve of a
+long journey full of awed expectancy.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stood holding her door ajar as Moya passed on her way
+downstairs. "You are very late," she uttered hoarsely. "Is nothing
+settled yet?"
+
+"Everything!" Moya hesitated and forced a smile, "everything but where
+we shall go. We will start--and decide afterwards."
+
+"You go together? That is right. Moya, you have a genius for happiness!"
+
+"I wish I had a genius for making people sleep who lie awake hours in
+the night thinking about other people!"
+
+"If you mean me, people of my age need very little sleep."
+
+"May I kiss you good-night, Paul's mother?"
+
+"You may kiss me because I am Paul's mother, not because I do not
+sleep."
+
+Moya's lips touched a cheek as white and almost as cold as the frosted
+window-panes through which the moon was glimmering. She thought of the
+icy roses on her wedding dress.
+
+Downstairs her father was smoking his bedtime cigar. Mrs. Creve, very
+sleepy and cosy and flushed, leaned over the smouldering bed of coals.
+She held out her plump, soft hand to Moya.
+
+"Come here and be scolded! We have been scolding you steadily for the
+last hour."
+
+"If you want that young man to get his strength back, you'd better not
+keep him up talking half the night," the colonel growled softly. "Do you
+see what time it is?"
+
+Moya knelt and leaned her head against her father. She reached one hand
+to Mrs. Creve. They did not speak again till her weak moment had passed.
+"It will be very soon," she said, pressing the warm hand that stroked
+her own. "You will help me pack, aunt Annie; and then you'll stay--with
+father? I know you are glad to have me out of the way at last!"
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+
+Because they had set forth on a grim and sorrowful quest, it need not
+be supposed that Paul and Moya were a pair of sorrowful pilgrims. It was
+their wedding journey. At the outset Moya had said: "We are doing the
+best we know. For what we don't know, let us leave it and not brood."
+
+They did not enter at once upon the more eccentric stages of the search.
+They went by way of the Great Northern to Portland, descending from snow
+to roses and drenching rains. At Pendleton, which is at the junction
+of three great roads, Paul sent tracers out through express agents
+and train officials along the remotest slender feeders of these lines.
+Through the same agents it was made known that for any service rendered
+or expense incurred on behalf of the person described, his friends would
+hold themselves gratefully responsible.
+
+At Portland, Paul searched the steamer lists and left confidential
+orders in the different transportation offices; and Moya wrote to his
+mother--a woman's letter, every page shining with happiness and as free
+from apparent forethought as a running brook.
+
+They returned by the Great Northern and Lake Coeur d'Alene, stopping
+over at Fort Sherman to visit Mrs. Creve, who was giddy with joy
+over the wholesome change in Paul. She, too, wrote a woman's letter
+concerning that visit, to the colonel, which cleared a crowd of shadows
+from his lonely hearth.
+
+Thence again to Pendleton came the seekers, and Paul gathered in his
+lines, but found nothing; so cast them forth again. But through all
+these distant elaborations of the search, in his own mind he saw the
+old man creeping away by some near, familiar trail and lying hid in some
+warm valley in the hills, his prison and his home.
+
+It was now the last week in March. The travelers' bags were in the
+office, the carriage at the door, when a letter--pigeon-holed and
+forgotten since received some three weeks before--was put into Paul's
+hand.
+
+I run up against your ad. in the Silver City Times [the communication
+began]. If you haven't found your man yet, maybe I can put you onto
+the right lead. I'm driving a jerky on the road from Mountain Home to
+Oriana, but me and the old man we don't jibe any too well. I've got
+a sort of disgust on me. Think I'll quit soon and go to mining. Jimmy
+Breen he runs the Ferry, he can tell you all I know. Fifty miles from
+Mountain Home good road can make it in one day. Yours Respecfully,
+
+J. STRATTON.
+
+It was in following up this belated clue that the pilgrims had come to
+the Ferry inn, crossing by team from valley to valley, cutting off a
+great bend of the Oregon Short Line as it traverses the Snake River
+desert; those bare high plains escarped with basalt bluffs that
+open every fifty miles or so to let a road crawl down to some little
+rope-ferry supported by sheep-herders, ditch contractors, miners,
+emigrants, ranchmen, all the wild industries of a country in the dawn of
+enterprise.
+
+Business at the Ferry had shrunk since the railroad went through. The
+house-staff consisted of Jimmy Breen, a Chinese cook of the bony, tartar
+breed, sundry dogs, and a large bachelor cat that mooned about the empty
+piazzas. In a young farming country, hungry for capital, Jimmy could not
+do a cash business, but everything was grist that came to his mill; and
+he was quick to distinguish the perennial dead beat from a genuine case
+of hard luck.
+
+"That's a good axe ye have there," pointing suggestively to a new one
+sticking out of the rear baggage of an emigrant outfit. "Ye better l'ave
+that with me for the dollar that's owing me. If ye have money to buy
+new axes ye can't be broke entirely." Or: "Slip the halter on that calf
+behind there. The mother hasn't enough to keep it alive. There's har'ly
+a dollar's wort' of hide on its bones, but I'll take it to save it
+droppin' on the road." Or, he would try sarcasm: "Well, we'll be
+shuttin' her down in the spring. Then ye can go round be Walter's Ferry
+and see if they'll trust ye there." Or: "Why wasn't ye workin' on the
+Ditch last winter? Settin' smokin' your poipe in the tules, the wife and
+young ones packin' sagebrush to kape ye warm!"
+
+On the morning after their distinguished arrival, Jimmy's guests came
+down late to a devastated breakfast-table. Little heaps of crumbs here
+and there showed where earlier appetites had had their destined hour and
+gone their way. At an impartial distance from the top and the foot of
+the table stood the familiar group of sauce and pickle bottles, every
+brand dear to the cowboy, including the "surrup-jug" adhering to its
+saucer. There was a fresh-gathered bunch of wild phlox by Moya's plate
+in a tumbler printed round the edge with impressions of a large moist
+male thumb.
+
+"Catchee plenty," the Chinaman grinned, pointing to the plain outside
+where the pale sage-brush quivered stiffly in the wind. "Bymbye plenty
+come. Pretty col' now."
+
+"You'll be getting a large hump on yourself, Han, me boy. 'T is a cash
+crowd we have here--and a lady, by me sowl!" Thus Jimmy exhorted his
+household. Times were looking up. They would be a summer resort before
+the Ditch went through; it should be mentioned in the Ditch company's
+prospectus. Jimmy had put his savings into land-office fees and had a
+hopeful interest in the Ditch.
+
+A spur in the head is worth two in the heel. Without a word from "the
+boss" Han had found time to shave and powder and polish his brown
+forehead and put on his whitest raiment over his baggiest trousers.
+There was loud panic among the fowls in the corral. The cat had
+disappeared; the jealous dogs hung about the doors and were pushed out
+of the way by friends of other days.
+
+Seated by the office fire, Paul was conferring with Jimmy, who was
+happy with a fresh pipe and a long story to tell to a patient and paying
+listener. He rubbed the red curls back from his shining forehead,
+took the pipe from his teeth, and guided a puff of smoke away from his
+auditor.
+
+"I seen him settin' over there on his blankets,"--he pointed with
+his pipe to the opposite shore plainly visible through the office
+windows,--"but he niver hailed me, so I knowed he was broke. Some, whin
+they're broke, they holler all the louder. Ye would think they had an
+appointment wit' the Governor and he sint his car'iage to meet them. But
+he was as humble, he was, as a yaller dog.--Out! Git out from here--the
+pack of yez! Han, shut the dure an' drive thim bloody curs off the
+piazzy. They're trackin' up the whole place.--As I was sayin', sor,
+there he stayed hunched up in the wind, waitin' on the chanst of a team
+comin', and I seen he was an ould daddy. I stud the sight of him as long
+as I cud, me comin' and goin'. He fair wore me out. So I tuk the boat
+over for 'im. One of his arrums he couldn't lift from the shoulder, and
+I give him a h'ist wit' his bundle. Faith, it was light! 'Twinty years
+a-getherin',' he cackles, slappin' it. 'Ye've had harrud luck,' I says.
+''T is not much of a sheaf ye are packin' home.' 'That's as ye look at
+it,' he says.
+
+"I axed him what way was he goin'. He was thinking to get a lift as far
+as Oriana, if the stages was runnin' on that road. 'Then ye 'll have to
+bide here till morning,' I says, 'for ye must have met the stage
+goin' the other way.' 'I met nothing,' says he; 'I come be way of the
+bluffs,'--which is a strange way for one man travelin' afoot.
+
+"The grub was on the table, and I says, 'Sit by and fill yourself up.'
+His cheeks was fallin' in wit' the hunger. With that his poor ould eye
+begun to water. 'Twas one weak eye he had that was weepin' all the time.
+'I've got out of the habit of reg'lar aitin',' he says. 'It don't take
+much to kape me goin'.' 'Niver desave yourself, sor! 'T is betther feed
+three hungry men than wan "no occasion."' His appetite it grew on him
+wit' every mouthful. There was a boundless emptiness to him. He lay
+there on the bench and slep' the rest of the evening, and I left him
+there wit' a big fire at night. And the next day at noon we h'isted him
+up beside of Joe Stratton. A rip-snorter of a wind was blowin' off the
+Silver City peaks. His face was drawed like a winter apple, but he wint
+off happy. I think he was warm inside of himself."
+
+"Did you ask him his name?"
+
+"Sure. Why not? John Treagar he called himself."
+
+"Treagar? Hagar, you mean!"
+
+"It was Treagar he said."
+
+"John Hagar is the man I am looking for."
+
+"Treagar--Hagar? 'T is comin' pretty close to it."
+
+"About what height and build was he?"
+
+"He was not to say a tall man; and he wasn't so turrible short neither.
+His back was as round as a Bible. A kind of pepper and saltish beard he
+had, and his hair was blacker than his beard but white in streaks."
+
+"A _dark_ man, was he?"
+
+"He would be a _dark_ man if he was younger."
+
+"The man I want is blue-eyed."
+
+"His eyes was blue--a kind of washed-out gray that maybe was blue wanst;
+and one of them always weepin' wit' the cold."
+
+"And light brown hair mixed with gray, like sand and ashes--mostly
+ashes; and a thin straggling beard, thinner on the cheeks? A high head
+and a tall stooping figure--six feet at least; hands with large joints
+and a habit of picking at them when"--
+
+"Ye are goin' too fast for me now, sor. He was not that description of
+a man, nayther the height nor the hair of him. Sure't is a pity for ye
+comin' this far, and him not the man at all. Faith, I wish I was the man
+meself! I wonder at Joe Stratton anyhow! He's a very hasty man, is Joe.
+He jumps in wit' both feet, so he does. I could have told ye that."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Moya, always helplessly natural, and now very tired as well, when Paul
+described with his usual gravity this anti-climax, fell below all the
+dignities at once in a burst of childish giggling. Paul looked on
+with an embarrassed smile, like a puzzled affectionate dog at the
+incomprehensible mirth of humans. Paul was certainly deficient in humor
+and therefore in breadth. But what woman ever loved her lover the less
+for having discovered his limitations? Humor runs in families of the
+intenser cultivation. The son of the soil remains serious in the face of
+life's and nature's ironies.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+THE STAR IN THE EAST
+
+So the search paused, while the searchers rested and revised their
+plans. Spring opened in the valley as if for them alone. There were
+mornings "proud and sweet," when the humblest imagination could have
+pictured Aurora and her train in the jocund clouds that trooped along
+the sky,--wind-built processions which the wind dispersed. Wild flowers
+spread so fast they might have been spilled from the rainbow scarf of
+Iris fleeting overhead. The river was in flood, digging its elbows into
+its muddy banks. The willow and wild-rose thickets stooped and washed
+their spring garments in its tide.
+
+Primeval life and love were all around them. Meadow larks flung their
+brief jets of song into the sunlight; the copses rustled with wings;
+wood-doves cooed from the warm sunny hollows, and the soft booming of
+their throaty call was like a beating in the air,--the pulse of spring.
+They had found their Garden. Humanity in the valley passed before them
+in forms as interesting and as alien as the brother beasts to Adam:
+the handsome driver of the jerky, Joe Stratton's successor, who sat at
+dinner opposite and combed his flowing mustache with his fork in a lazy,
+dandified way; the darkened faces of sheep-herders enameled by sun and
+wind, their hair like the winter coats of animals; the slow-eyed farmers
+with the appetites of horses; the spring recruits for the ranks of labor
+footing it to distant ranches, each with his back-load of bedding, and
+the dust of three counties on his garments.
+
+The sweet forces of Nature shut out, for a season, Paul's _cri du
+coeur_. One may keep a chamber sacred to one's sadder obligations and
+yet the house be filled with joy. Further ramifications of the search
+were mapped out with Jimmy's indifferent assistance. For good reasons of
+his own, Jimmy did little to encourage an early start. He would explain
+that his maps were of ancient date and full of misinformation as to
+stage routes. "See that now! The stages was pulled off that line five
+year ago, on account of the railroad cuttin' in on them. Ye couldn't
+make it wid'out ye took a camp outfit. There's ne'er a station left, and
+when ye come to it, it's ruins ye'll find. A chimbly and a few rails,
+if the mule-skinners hasn't burned them. 'Tis a country very devoid
+of fuel; sagebrush and grease-wood, and a wind, bedad! that blows the
+grass-seeds into the next county."
+
+When these camping-trips were proposed to Moya, she hesitated and
+responded languidly; but when Paul suggested leaving her even for a day,
+her fears fluttered across his path and wiled him another way. Vaguely
+he felt that she was unlike herself--less buoyant, though often
+restless; and sometimes he fancied she was pale underneath her
+sun-burned color like that of rose-hips in October. Various causes kept
+him inert, while strength mounted in his veins, and life seemed made for
+the pure joy of living.
+
+The moon of May in that valley is the moon of roses, for the heats once
+due come on apace. The young people gave up their all-day horseback
+rides and took morning walks instead, following the shore-paths lazily
+to shaded coverts dedicated to those happy silences which it takes two
+to make. Or, they climbed the bluffs and gazed at the impenetrable
+vast horizon, and thought perhaps of their errand with that pang
+of self-reproach which, when shared, becomes a subtler form of
+self-indulgence.
+
+But at night, all the teeming life of the plain rushed up into the sky
+and blazed there in a million friendly stars. After the languor of the
+sleepy afternoons, it was like a fresh awakening--the dawn of those
+white May nights. The wide plain stirred softly through all its miles
+of sage. The river's cadenced roar paused beyond the bend and outbroke
+again. All that was eerie and furtive in the wild dark found a curdling
+voice in the coyote's hunting-call.
+
+In a hollow concealed by sage, not ten minutes' walk from the Ferry inn,
+unknown to the map-maker and innocent of all use, lay a perfect floor
+for evening pacing with one's eyes upon the stars. It was the death mask
+of an ancient lake, done in purest alkali silt, and needing only the
+shadows cast by a low moon to make the illusion almost unbelievable.
+Slow precipitation, season after season, as the water dried, had left
+the lake bed smooth as a cast in plaster. Subsequent warpings had lifted
+the alkali crust into thin-lipped wavelets. But once upon the floor
+itself the resemblance to water vanished. The warpings and Grumblings
+took the shape of earth as made by water and baked by fire. Moya
+compared it to a bit of the dead moon fallen to show us what we are
+coming to. They paced it soft-footed in tennis shoes lest they should
+crumble its talc-like whiteness. But they read no horoscopes, for they
+were shy of the future in speaking to each other,--and they made no
+plans.
+
+One evening Moya had said to Paul: "I can understand your mother so much
+better now that I am a wife. I think most women have a tendency towards
+the state of being _un_married. And if one had--children, it would
+increase upon one very fast. A widow and a mother--for twenty years. How
+could she be a wife again?"
+
+Paul made no reply to this speech which long continued to haunt him;
+especially as Moya wrote more frequently to his mother and did not offer
+to show him her letters. In their evening walks she seemed distrait, and
+during the day more restless.
+
+One night of their nightly pacings she stopped and stood long, her head
+thrown back, her eyes fixed upon the dizzy star-deeps. Paul waited a
+step behind her, touching her shoulders with his hands. Suddenly she
+reeled and sank backwards into his arms. He held her, watching her
+lovely face grow whiter; her eyelids closed. She breathed slowly,
+leaning her whole weight upon him.
+
+Coming to herself, she smiled and said it was nothing. She had been that
+way before. "But--we must go home. We must have a home--somewhere.
+I want to see your mother. Paul, be good to her--forgive her--for my
+sake!"
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+
+Aunt Polly Lewis was disappointed in the latest of her beneficiaries.
+It was nine years since her husband had locked up his savings in the
+Mud Springs ranch, a neglected little health-plant at the mouth of the
+Bruneau. If you were troubled with rheumatism, or a crick in the back,
+or your "pancrees" didn't act or your blood was "out o' fix, why, you'd
+better go up to Looanders' for a spell and soak yourself in that blue
+mud and let aunt Polly diet ye and dost ye with yerb tea."
+
+When Leander courted aunt Polly in the interests of his sanitarium, she
+was reputed the best nurse in Ada County. The widow--by desertion--of a
+notorious quack doctor of those parts: it was an open question whether
+his medicine had killed or her nursing had cured the greater number of
+confiding sick folk. Leander drove fifty miles to catechise this notable
+woman, and finding her sound on the theory of packs hot and cold, and
+skilled in the practice of rubbing,--and having made the incidental
+discovery that she was a person not without magnetism,--he decided on
+the spot to add her to the other attractions of Mud Springs ranch; and
+she drove home with him next day, her trunk in the back of his wagon.
+
+The place was no sinecure. Bricks without straw were a child's pastime
+to the cures aunt Polly and the Springs effected without a pretense
+to the comforts of life in health, to say nothing of sickness. Modern
+conveniences are costly, and how are you to get the facilities for "pay
+patients" when you have no patients that pay! Prosperity had overlooked
+the Bruneau, or had made false starts there, through detrimental schemes
+that gave the valley a bad name with investors. The railroad was still
+fifty miles away, and the invalid public would not seek life itself,
+in these days of luxurious travel, at the cost of a twelve hours'
+stage-ride. However, as long as the couple had a roof over their
+heads and the Springs continued to plop and vomit their strange,
+chameleon-colored slime, Leander would continue to bring home the sick
+and the suffering for Polly and the Springs to practice on. Health
+became his hobby, and in time, with isolation thrown in, it began to
+invade his common sense. He tried in succession all the diet fads of the
+day and wound up a convert to the "Ralston" school of eating. Aunt Polly
+had clung a little longer to the flesh-pots, but the charms of a system
+that abolished half the labor of cooking prevailed with her at last, and
+in the end she kept a sharper eye upon Leander at mealtime than ever he
+had upon her.
+
+The ignorant gorgings of their neighbors were a head-shaking and a
+warning to them, and more than once Leander's person was in jeopardy
+through his zealous but unappreciated concern for the brother who eats
+in darkness.
+
+He had started out one winter morning from Bisuka, a virtuous man. His
+team had breakfasted, but not he. A Ralstonite does not load up his
+stomach at dawn after the manner of cattle, and such pious substitutes
+for a cup of coffee as are permitted the faithful cannot always be had
+for a price. At Indian Creek he hauled up to water his team, and to
+make for himself a cinnamon-colored decoction by boiling in hot water
+a preparation of parched grains which he carried with him. This he
+accomplished in an angle of the old corral fence out of the wind. There
+is no comfort nor even virtue in eating cold dust with one's sandwiches.
+Leander sunk his great white tushes through the thick slices of
+whole-wheat bread and tasted the paste of peanut meal with which they
+were spread. He ate standing and slapped his leg to warm his driving
+hand.
+
+A flutter of something colored, as a garment, caught his eye, directing
+it to the shape of a man, rolled in an old blue blanket, lying
+motionless in a corner of the tumble-down wall. "Drunk, drunk as a hog!"
+pronounced Leander. For no man in command of himself would lie down to
+sleep in such a place. As if to refute this accusation, the wind
+turned a corner of the blanket quietly off a white face with closed
+eyelids,--an old, worn, gentle face, appealing in its homeliness, though
+stamped now with the dignity of death. Leander knelt and handled the
+body tenderly. It was long before he satisfied himself that life was
+still there. Another case for Polly and the Springs. A man worth saving,
+if Leander knew a man; one of the trustful, trustworthy sort. His heart
+went out to him on the instant as to a friend from home.
+
+It was closing in for dusk when he reached the Ferry. Jimmy was away,
+and Han, in high dudgeon, brought the boat over in answer to Leander's
+hail. He had grouse to dress for supper, inconsiderately flung in upon
+him at the last moment by the stage, four hours late.
+
+"Huh! Why you no come one hour ago? All time 'Hullo, hullo'! Je' Cli'!
+me no dam felly-man--me dam cook! Too much man say 'Hullo'!"
+
+The prospect was not good for help at the Ferry inn, so, putting his
+trust in Polly and the Springs, Leander pushed on up the valley.
+
+When Aunt Polly's patients were of the right sort, they stayed on after
+their recovery and helped Leander with the ranch work. But for the most
+part they "hit the trail" again as soon as their ills were healed,
+not forgetting to advertise the Springs to other patients of their own
+class. The only limit to this unenviable popularity was the size of the
+house. Leander saw no present advantage in building.
+
+But in case they ever did build--and the time was surely coming!--here
+was the very person they had been looking for. Cast your bread upon the
+waters. The winter's bread and care and shelter so ungrudgingly bestowed
+had returned to them many-fold in the comfortable sense of dependence
+and unity they felt in this last beneficiary, the old man of Indian
+Creek whom they called "Uncle John."
+
+"The kindest old creetur' ever lived! Some forgitful, but everybody's
+liable to forgit. Only tell him one thing at once, and don't confuse
+him, and he'll git through an amazin' sight of chores in a day."
+
+"Just the very one we'll want to wait on the men patients," Aunt Polly
+chimed in. "He can carry up meals and keep the bathrooms clean, and wash
+out the towels, and he's the best hand with poultry. He takes such good
+care of the old hens they're re'lly ashamed not to lay!"
+
+It was spring again; old hopes were putting forth new leaves. Leander
+had heard of a capitalist in the valley; a young one, too, more prone to
+enthusiasm if shown the right thing.
+
+"I'm going down to Jimmy's to fetch them up here!" Leander announced.
+
+"Are there two of them?"
+
+"He has brought his wife out with him. They are a young couple. He's the
+only son of a rich widow in New York, and Jimmy says they've got money
+to burn. Jimmy don't take much stock in this 'ere 'wounded guide'
+story--thinks it's more or less of a blind. He's feeling around for
+a good investment--desert land or mining claims. Jimmy thinks he
+represents big interests back East."
+
+Aunt Polly considered, and the corners of her mouth moistened as she
+thought of the dinner she would snatch from the jaws of the system on
+the day these young strangers should visit the ranch.
+
+"By Gum!" Leander shouted. "I wonder if Uncle John wouldn't know
+something about the party they're advertising for. That'd be the way
+to find out if they're really on the scent. I'll take him down with
+me--that's what I'll _do_--and let him have a talk with the young man
+himself. It'll make a good opening. Are you listening, Polly?" She was
+not. "I wish you'd git him to fix himself up a little. Layout one o'
+my clean shirts for him, and I'll take him down with me day after
+to-morrow."
+
+"I'll have a fresh churning to-morrow," Aunt Polly mused. "You can take
+a little pat of it with you. I won't put no salt in it, and I'll send
+along a glass or two of my wild strawberry jam. It takes an awful time
+to pick the berries, but I guess it'll be appreciated after the table
+Jimmy sets. I don't believe Jimmy'll be offended?"
+
+"Bogardus is their name," continued Leander. "Mr. and Mrs. Bogardus,
+from New York. Jimmy's got it down in his hotel book and he's showing
+it to everybody. Jimmy's reel childish about it. I tell him one swallow
+don't make a summer."
+
+Uncle John had come into the room and sat listening, while a yellow
+pallor crept over his forehead and cheeks. He moved to get up once, and
+then sat down again weakly.
+
+"What's the matter, Uncle?" Aunt Polly eyed him sharply. "You been out
+there chopping wood too long in this hot sun. What did I tell you?"
+
+She cleared the decks for action. Paler and paler the old man grew. He
+was not able to withstand her vigorous sympathies. She had him tucked up
+on the calico lounge and his shoes off and a hot iron at his feet; but
+while she was hurrying up the kettle to make him a drink of something
+hot, he rose and slipped up the outside stairs to his bedroom in the
+attic. There he seated himself on the side of his neat bed which he
+always made himself camp fashion,--the blankets folded lengthwise with
+just room for one quiet sleeper to crawl inside; and there he sat,
+opening and clinching his hands, a deep perplexity upon his features.
+
+Aunt Polly called to him and began to read the riot act, but Leander
+said: "Let him be! He gits tired o' being fussed over. You're at him
+about something or other the whole blessed time."
+
+"Well, I have to! My gracious! He'd forgit to come in to his meals if I
+didn't keep him on my mind."
+
+"It just strikes me--what am I going to call him when I introduce him to
+those folks? Did he ever tell you what his last name is?"
+
+"I wouldn't be surprised," Aunt Polly lowered her voice, "if he couldn't
+remember it himself! I've heard of such cases. Whenever I try to draw
+him out to talk about himself and what happened to him before you found
+him, it breaks him all up; seemingly gives him a back-set every time.
+He sort of slinks into himself in that queer, lost way--just like he was
+when he first come to."
+
+"He's had a powerful jar to his constitution, and his mind is taking a
+rest." Leander was fond of a diagnosis. "There wasn't enough life left
+in him to keep his faculties and his bod'ly organs all a-going at once.
+The upper story's to let."
+
+"I wish you'd go upstairs, and see what he is doing up there."
+
+"Aw, no! Let him be. He likes to go off by himself and do his thinking.
+I notice it rattles him to be talked to much. He sets out there on the
+choppin'-block, looking at the bluffs--ever notice? He looks and
+don't see nothin', and his lips keep moving like he was learning a
+spellin'-lesson. If I speak to him sharp, he hauls himself together and
+smiles uneasy, but he don't know what I said. I tell you he's waking up;
+coming to his memories, and trying to sort 'em out."
+
+"That's just what _I_ say," Aunt Polly retorted, "but he's got to eat
+his meals. He can't live on memories."
+
+Uncle John was restless that evening, and appeared to be excited. He
+waited upon Aunt Polly after supper with a feverish eagerness to be of
+use. When all was in order for bedtime, and Leander rose to wind the
+clock, he spoke. It was getting about time to roll up his blankets
+and pull out, he said. Leander felt for the ledge where the clock-key
+belonged, and made no answer.
+
+"I was saying--I guess it's about time for me to be moving on. The grass
+is starting"--
+
+"Are you cal'latin' to live on grass?" Leander drawled with cutting
+irony. "Gettin' tired of the old woman's cooking? Well, she ain't much
+of a cook!"
+
+Uncle John remained silent, working at his hands. His mouth, trembled
+under his thin straggling beard. "I never was better treated in my life,
+and you know it. It ain't handsome of you, Lewis, to talk that way!"
+
+"He don't mean nothing, Uncle John! What makes you so foolish, Looander!
+He just wants you to know there's no begrudgers around here. You're
+welcome, and more than welcome, to settle down and camp right along with
+us."
+
+"Winter and summer!" Leander put in, "if you're satisfied. There's
+nobody in a hurry to see the last of ye."
+
+Uncle John's mild but determined resistance was a keen disappointment
+to his friends. Leander thought himself offended. "What fly's stung you,
+anyhow! Heard from any of your folks lately?"
+
+The old man smiled.
+
+"Got any money salted down that needs turning?"
+
+"Looander! Quit teasing of him!"
+
+"Let him have his fun, ma'am. It's all he's likely to get out of me. I
+have got a little money," he pursued. "'T would be an insult to name it
+in the same breath with what you've done for me. I'd like to leave it
+here, though. You could pass it on. You'll have chances enough. 'T ain't
+likely I'll be the last one you'll take in and do for, and never git
+nothing out of it in return."
+
+There was a mild sensation, as the speaker, fumbling in his loose
+trousers, appeared to be seeking for that money. Aunt Polly's eyes
+flamed indignation behind her tears. She was a foolish, warm-hearted
+creature, and her eyes watered on the least excuse.
+
+"Looander, you shouldn't have taunted him," she admonished her husband,
+who felt he had been a little rough.
+
+"Look here, Uncle John, d'you ever know anybody who wasn't by way of
+needing help some time in their lives? We don't ask any one who comes
+here"--
+
+"He didn't come!" Aunt Polly corrected.
+
+"Well, who was brought, then! We don't ask for their character, nor
+their private history, nor their bank account. I don't know but you're
+the first one for years I've ever took a real personal shine to, and
+we've h'isted a good many up them stairs that wasn't able to walk much
+further. I'd like you to stay as a favor to us, dang it!"
+
+Leander delivered this invitation as if it were a threat. His
+straight-cut mustache stiffened and projected itself by the pressure of
+his big lips; his dark red throat showed as many obstinate creases as an
+old snapping-turtle's.
+
+"I'm much obliged to you both. I want you to remember that. We--I--I'll
+talk with ye in the morning."
+
+"That means he's going all the same," said Leander, after Uncle John had
+closed the outside door.
+
+Sure enough, next morning he had made up his little pack, oiled his
+boots, and by breakfast-time was ready for the road. They argued the
+point long and fiercely with him whether he should set out on foot or
+wait a day and ride with Leander to the Ferry. It was not supposed he
+could be thinking of any other road. By to-morrow, if he would but wait,
+Aunt Polly would have comfortably outfitted him after the custom of the
+house; given his clothes a final "going over" to see everything taut
+for the journey, shoved a week's rations into a corn-sack, choosing such
+condensed forms of nourishment as the system allowed--nay, straining a
+point and smuggling in a nefarious pound or two of real miner's coffee.
+
+Aunt Polly's distress so weighed with her patient that he consented
+to remain overnight and ride with Leander as far as the dam across the
+Bruneau, at its junction with the Snake. There he would cross and take
+the trail down the river, cutting off several miles of the road to the
+Ferry. As for going on to see Jimmy or Jimmy's "folks," the nervous
+resistance which this plan excited warned the good couple not to press
+the old man too far, or he might give them the slip altogether.
+
+A strangeness in his manner which this last discussion had brought out,
+lay heavy on aunt Polly's mind all day after the departure of the team
+for the Ferry. She watched the two men drive off in silence, Leander's
+bush beard reddening in the sun, his big body filling more than his half
+of the seat.
+
+"Well, by Gum! If he ain't the blamedest, most per-sistent old fool!"
+he complained to his wife that night. Their first words were of the old
+man, already missed like one of the family from the humble place he had
+made for himself. Leander was still irritable over his loss. "I set him
+down with his grub and blankets, and I watched him footing it acrost the
+dam. He done it real handsome, steady on his pins. Then he set down
+and waited, kind o' dreaming, like he used to, settin' on the
+choppin'-block. I hailed him. 'What's the matter?' I says. 'Left
+anything?' No: every time I hailed he took off his hat and waved to me
+real pleasant. Nothing the matter. There he set. Well, thinks I, I can't
+stay here all day watching ye take root. So I drove on a piece. And, by
+Gum! when I looked back going around the bend, there he went a-pikin'
+off up the bluffs--just a-humping himself for all he was worth. I
+wouldn't like to think he was cunning, but it looked that way for
+sure,--turning me off the scent and then taking to the bluffs like he
+was sent for! Where in thunder is he making for? He knows just as well
+as I do--you have heard me tell him a dozen times--the stages were
+hauled off that Wood River road five year and more ago. He won't git
+nowhere! And he won't meet up with a team in a week's walking."
+
+"His food will last him a week if he's careful; he's no great eater. I
+ain't afraid his feet will get lost; he's to home out of doors almost
+anywhere;--it's his head I'm afraid of. He's got some sort of a skew on
+him. I used to notice if he went out for a little walk anywhere, he'd
+always slope for the East."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+A STATION IN THE DESERT
+
+That forsworn identity which Adam Bogardus had submitted to be clothed
+in as a burial garment was now become a thing for the living to flee
+from. He had seen a woman in full health whiten and cower before
+it;--she who stood beside his bed and looked at him with dreadful eyes,
+eyes of his girl-wife growing old in the likeness of her father. Hard,
+reluctant eyes forced to own the truth which the ashen lips denied.
+Are we responsible for our silences? He had not spoken to her. Nay, the
+living must speak first, or the ghostly dead depart unquestioned. He
+asked only that he might forget her and be himself forgotten. If it were
+that woman's right to call herself Emily Bogardus, then was there no
+Adam her husband. Better the old disguise which left him free to work
+out his own sentence and pay his forfeit to the law. He had never
+desired that one breath of it should be commuted, or wished to accept an
+enslaving pardon from those for whose sake he had put himself out of the
+way. If he could have taken his own comparative spiritual measurement,
+he might have smiled at the humor of that forgiveness promised him in
+the name of the Highest by his son.
+
+For many peaceful years solitude had been the habit of his soul. Gently
+as he bore with human obligations, he escaped from them with a sense of
+relief which shamed him somewhat when he thought of the good friends to
+whom he owed this very blessed power to flee. It was quite as
+Leander had surmised. He could not command his faculties--memory
+especially--when a noise of many words and questions bruised his brain.
+
+The stillness of the desert closed about him with delicious healing.
+He was a world-weary child returned to the womb of Nature. His old
+camp-craft came back; his eye for distance, his sense of the trail, his
+little pet economies with food and fire. There was no one to tell him
+what to eat and when to eat it. He was invisible to men. Each day's
+march built up his muscle, and every night's deep sleep under the great
+high stars steadied his nerves and tightened his resolve.
+
+He thought of the young man--his son--with a mixture of pain and
+tenderness. But Paul was not the baby-boy he had put out of his arms
+with a father's smile at One Man station. Paul was himself a man now; he
+had coerced him at the last, neither did he understand.
+
+The blind instinct of flight began after a while to shape its own
+direction. It was no new leaning with the packer. As many times as he
+had crossed this trail he never had failed to experience the same pull.
+He resisted no longer. He gave way to strange fancies and made them his
+guides.
+
+At some time during his flight from the hospital, in one of those blanks
+that overtook him, he knew not how, he had met with a great loss. The
+words had slipped from his memory--of that message which had kept him in
+fancied touch with his wife all these many deluding years. Without them
+he was like a drunkard deprived of his habitual stimulant. The craving
+to connect and hold them--for they came to him sometimes in tantalizing
+freaks of memory, and slipped away again like beads rolling off a
+broken thread--was almost the only form of mental suffering he was now
+conscious of. What had become of the message itself? Had they left it
+exposed to every heartless desecration in that abandoned spot?--a scrap
+of paper driven like a bit of tumble-weed before the wind, snatched at
+by spikes of sage, trampled into the mire of cattle, nuzzled by wild
+beasts? Or, had they put it away with that other beast where he lay with
+the scoff on his dead face? Out of dreams and visions of the night that
+place of the parting ways called to him, and the time was now come when
+he must go.
+
+He approached it by one of those desert trails that circle for miles
+on the track of water and pounce as a bird drops upon its prey into the
+trampled hollow at One Man station--a place for the gathering of hoofs
+in the midst of the plain.
+
+He could trace what might have been the foundation of a house, a few
+blackened stones, a hearthstone showing where a chimney perhaps had
+stood, but these evidences of habitation would never have been marked
+except by one who knew where to look. He searched the ground over for
+signs of the tragedy that bound him to that spot--a smiling desolation,
+a sunny nothingness. The effect of this careless obliteration was
+quieting. Nature had played here once with two men and a woman. One of
+the toy men was lost, the other broken. She had forgotten where she
+put the broken one. There were mounds which looked like graves, but the
+seeker knew that artificial mounds in a place like this soon sink into
+hollows; and there were hollows like open graves, filled with unsightly
+human rubbish, washed in by the yearly rains.
+
+He spent three days in the hollow, doing nothing, steeped in sunshine,
+lying down to rest broad awake in the tender twilight, making his peace
+with this place of bitter memory before bidding it good-by. His thoughts
+turned eastward as the planets rose. Time he was working back towards
+home. He would hardly get there if he started now, before his day was
+done. He saw his mother's grave beside his father's, in the southeast
+corner of the burying-ground, where the trees were thin. All who drove
+in through the big gate of funerals could see the tall white shafts of
+the Beviers and Brodericks and Van Eltens, but only those who came on
+foot could approach his people in the gravelly side-hill plots. "I'd
+like to be put there alongside the old folks in that warm south corner."
+He could see their names on the plain gray slate stones, rain-stained
+and green with moss.
+
+On the third May evening of his stay the horizon became a dust-cloud,
+the setting sun a ball of fire. Loomed the figure of a rider topping
+the heaving backs of his herd. All together they came lumbering down
+the slopes, all heading fiercely for the water. The rider plunged down
+a side-draw out of the main cloud. Clanking bells, shuffling hoofs, the
+"Whoop-ee-youp!" came fainter up the gulch. The cowboy was not pleased
+as he dashed by to see an earlier camp-fire smoking in the hollow. But
+he was less displeased, being half French, than if he had been pure-bred
+American.
+
+The old man, squatting by his cooking-fire, gave him a civil nod, and
+he responded with a flourish of his quirt. The reek of sage smoke, the
+smell of dust and cattle rose rank on the cooling air. It was good to
+Boniface, son of the desert; it meant supper and bed, or supper and
+talk, for "Bonny" Maupin ("Bonny Moppin," it went in the vernacular)
+would talk every other man to sleep, full or empty, with songs thrown
+in. To-night, however, he must talk on an empty stomach, for his chuck
+wagon was not in sight.
+
+"W'ich way you travelin'?" he began, lighting up after a long pull at
+his flask. The old man had declined, though he looked as if he needed a
+drink.
+
+"East about," was the answer.
+
+"Goin' far?"
+
+"Well; summer's before us. I cal'late to keep moving till snow falls."
+
+"Shucks! You ain' pressed for time. Maybe you got some friend back
+there. Goin' back to git married?" He winked genially to point the jest
+and the old man smiled indulgently.
+
+"Won't you set up and take a bite with me? You don't look to have much
+of a show for supper along."
+
+"Thanks, very much! I had bully breakfast at Rock Spring middlin' late
+this morning. They butcherin' at that place. Five fat hog. My chuck
+wagon he stay behin' for chunk of fresh pig. I won' spoil my appetide
+for that tenderloin. Hol' on yourself an' take supper wis me. No?--That
+fellah be 'long 'bout Chris'mas if he don' git los'! He always behin',
+pig or no pig!"
+
+Bonny strolled away collecting fire-wood. Presently he called back,
+pointing dramatically with his small-toed boot. "Who's been coyotin'
+round here?" The hard ground was freshly disturbed in spots as by the
+paws of some small inquisitive animal. There was no answer.
+
+"What you say? Whose surface diggin's is these? I never know anybody do
+some mining here."
+
+"That was me"--Bonny backed a little nearer to catch the old man's
+words. "I was looking round here for something I lost."
+
+"What luck you have? You fin' him?"
+
+"Well, now, doos it reely matter to you, sonny?"
+
+"Pardner, it don' matter to me a d--n, if you say so! I was jus' askin'
+myself what a man _would_ look for if he los' it here. Since I strike
+this 'ell of a place the very groun' been chewed up and spit out
+reg'lar, one hundred times a year. 'T'is a gris' mill!"
+
+"I didn't gretly expect to find what I was lookin' for. I was just
+foolin' around to satisfy myself."
+
+"That satisfy me!" said Bonny pleasantly; and yet he was a trifle
+discomfited. He strolled away again and began to sing with a boyish show
+of indifference to having been called "sonny."
+
+"Oh, Sally is the gal for me! Oh, Sally's the gal for me! On moonlight
+night when the star is bright--Oh"--
+
+"Halloa! This some more your work, oncle? You ain' got no chicken wing
+for arm if you lif' this.--Ah, be dam! I see what you lif' him with.
+All same stove-lid." Talking and swearing to himself cheerfully, Bonny
+applied the end of a broken whiffletree to the blunt lip of the old
+hearthstone which marked the stage-house chimney. He had tried a
+step-dance on it and found it hollow. More fresh digging, and marks upon
+the stone where some prying tool had taken hold and slipped, showed he
+was not the first who had been curious.
+
+"There you go, over on you' back, like snap' turtle; I see where you lay
+there before. What the dev'! I say!" Bonny, much excited with his find,
+extracted a rusty tin tobacco-box from the hole, pried open the spring
+lid and drew forth its contents: a discolored canvas bag bulging with
+coin and whipped around the neck with a leather whang. The canvas was
+rotten; Bonny supported its contents tenderly as he brought it over to
+the old man.
+
+"Oncle, I ask you' pardon for tappin' that safe. Pretty good lil'
+nest-egg, eh? But now you got to find her some other place."
+
+"That don't belong to me," said the old man indifferently.
+
+"Aw--don't be bashful! I onderstan' now what you los'. You dig
+here--there--migs up the scent. I just happen to step on that
+stone--ring him, so, with my boot-heel!"
+
+"That ain't my pile," the other persisted. "I started to build a fire
+on that stone two nights ago. It rung hollow like you say. I looked and
+found what you found--"
+
+"And put her back! My soul to God! An' you here all by you'self!"
+
+"Why not? The stuff ain't mine."
+
+"Who _is_ she? How long since anybody live here?"
+
+"I don't know,--good while, I guess."
+
+"Well, sar! Look here! I open that bag. I count two hondre' thirteen
+dolla'--make it twelve for luck, an' call it you' divvee! You strike her
+first. What you say: we go snac'?"
+
+"I haven't got any use for that money. You needn't talk to me about it."
+
+"Got no h'use!--are you a reech man? Got you' private car waitin' for
+you out in d' sagebrush? Sol' a mine lately?"
+
+"I don't know why it strikes you so funny. It's no concern of mine if a
+man puts his money in the ground and goes off and leaves it."
+
+"Goes off and die! There was one man live here by himself--he die, they
+say, 'with his boots on.' He, I think, mus' be that man belong to this
+money. What an old stiff want with two hondre' thirteen dolla'? That
+money goin' into a live man's clothes." Bonny slapped his chappereros,
+and the dust flew.
+
+"I've no objection to its going into _your_ clothes," said the old man.
+
+"You thing I ain' particular, me? Well, eef the party underground was
+my frien', and I knew his fam'ly, and was sure the money was belong to
+him--I'd do differend--perhaps. Mais,--it is going--going--gone! You
+won' go snac'?"
+
+The old man smiled and looked steadily away.
+
+"Blas' me to h--l! but you aire the firs' man ever I strike that jib at
+the sight of col' coin. She don' frighten me!"
+
+Bonny always swore when he felt embarrassed.
+
+"Well, sar! Look here! You fin' you'self so blame indifferend--s'pose
+you _so_ indifferend not to say nothing 'bout this, when my swamper
+fellah git in. I don' wish to go snac' wis him. I don' feel oblige'.
+See?"
+
+"What you want to pester me about this money for!" The old man was
+weary. "I didn't come here, lookin' for money, and I don't expect to
+take none away with me. So I'll say good-night to ye."
+
+"Hol' on, hol' on! Don' git mad. What time you goin' off in the
+morning?"
+
+"Before you do, I shouldn't wonder."
+
+"But hol'! One fine idea--blazin' good idea--just hit me now in the
+head! Wan' to come on to Chicago wis me? I drop this fellah at Felton.
+He take the team back, and I get some one to help me on the treep. Why
+not you? Ever tek' care of stock?"
+
+"Some consid'able years ago I used to look after stock. Guess I'd know
+an ox from a heifer."
+
+"Ever handle 'em on cattle-car?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Well, all there is, you feed 'em, and water 'em, and keep 'em on their
+feets. If one fall down, all the others they have too much play. They
+rock"--Bonny exhibited--"and fall over and pile up in heap. I like to
+do one turn for you. We goin' the same way--you bring me the good luck,
+like a bird in the han'. This is my clean-up, you understand. You bring
+me the beautiful luck. You turn me up right bower first slap. Now it's
+goin' be my deal. I like to do by you!"
+
+The packer turned over and looked up at the cool sky, pricked through
+with early stars. He was silent a long time. His pale old face was like
+a fine bit of carving in the dusk.
+
+"What you think?" asked Moppin, almost tenderly. "I thing you better
+come wis me. You too hold a man to go like so--alone."
+
+"I'll have to think about it first;--let you know in the morning."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+
+A Rush of wheels and a spatter of hoofs coming up the drive sent
+Mrs. Dunlop to the sitting-room window. She tried to see out through
+streaming showers that darkened the panes.
+
+"Isn't that Mrs. Bogardus? Why, it is! Put on your shoes, Chauncey,
+quick! Help her in 'n' take her horse to the shed. Take an umbrella with
+you." Chauncey the younger, meekly drying his shoes by the kitchen
+fire, put them on, not stopping to lace them, and slumped down the
+porch steps, pursued by his mother's orders. She watched him a moment
+struggling with a cranky umbrella, and then turned her attention to
+herself and the room.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus made her calls in the morning, and always plainly on
+business. She had not seen the inside of Cerissa's parlor for ten years.
+This was a grievance which Cerissa referred to spasmodically, being
+seized with it when she was otherwise low in her mind.
+
+"My sakes! Can't I remember my mother telling how _her_ mother used
+to drive over and spend the afternoon, and bring her sewing and the
+baby--whichever one was the baby. They called each other Chrissy and
+Angevine, and now she don't even speak of her own children to us by
+their first names. It's 'Mrs. Bowen' and 'Mr. Paul;' just as if she was
+talking to her servants."
+
+"What's that to us? We've got a good home here for as long as we want to
+stay. She's easy to work for, if you do what she says."
+
+Chauncey respected Mrs. Bogardus's judgment and her straightforward
+business habits. Other matters he left alone. But Cerissa was ambitious
+and emotional, and she stayed indoors, doing little things and thinking
+small thoughts. She resented her commanding neighbor's casual manners.
+There was something puzzling and difficult to meet in her plainness of
+speech, which excluded the personal relation. It was like the cut and
+finish of her clothes--mysterious in their simplicity, and not to be
+imitated cheaply.
+
+When the two met, Cerissa was immediately reduced to a state of
+flimsy apology which she made up for by being particularly hot and
+self-assertive in speaking of the lady afterward.
+
+"There is the parlor, in perfect order," she fretted, as she stood
+waiting to open the front door; "but of course she wouldn't let me take
+her in there--that would be too much like visiting."
+
+The next moment she had corrected her facial expression, and was
+offering smiling condolences to Mrs. Bogardus on the state of her
+attire.
+
+"It is only my jacket. You might put that somewhere to dry," said the
+lady curtly. Raindrops sparkled on the wave of thick iron-gray hair that
+lifted itself, with a slight turn to one side, from her square low brow.
+Her eyes shone dark against the fresh wind color in her cheeks. She had
+the straight, hard, ophidian line concealing the eyelid, which gives
+such a peculiar strength to the direct gaze of a pair of dark eyes. If
+one suspects the least touch of tenderness, possibly of pain, behind
+that iron fold, it lends a fascination equal to the strength. There was
+some excitement in Mrs. Bogardus's manner, but Cerissa did not know her
+well enough to perceive it. She merely thought her looking handsomer,
+and, if possible, more formidable than usual.
+
+She sat by the fire, folding her skirts across her knees, and showing
+the edges of the most discouragingly beautiful petticoats,--a taste
+perhaps inherited from her wide-hipped Dutch progenitresses. Mrs.
+Bogardus reveled in costly petticoats, and had an unnecessary number of
+them.
+
+"How nice it is in here!" she said, looking about her. Cerissa, with the
+usual apologies, had taken her into the kitchen to dry her skirts.
+There was a slight taint of steaming shoe leather, left by Chauncey when
+driven forth. Otherwise the kitchen was perfection,--the family room
+of an old Dutch farmhouse, built when stone and hardwood lumber were
+cheap,--thick walls; deep, low window-seats; beams showing on the
+ceiling; a modern cooking-stove, where Emily Bogardus could remember
+the wrought brass andirons and iron backlog, for this room had been her
+father's dining-room. The brick tiled hearth remained, and the color of
+those century and a half old bricks made a pitiful thing of Cerissa's
+new oil-cloth. The woodwork had been painted--by Mrs. Bogardus's orders,
+and much to Cerissa's disgust--a dark kitchen green,--not that she liked
+the color herself, but it was the artistic demand of the moment,--and
+the place was filled with a green golden light from the cherry-trees
+close to the window, which a break in the clouds had suddenly illumined.
+
+"You keep it beautifully," said Mrs. Bogardus, her eyes shedding
+compliments as she looked around. "I should not dare go in my own
+kitchen at this time of day. There are no women nowadays who know how to
+work in the way ladies used to work. If I could have such a housekeeper
+as you, Cerissa."
+
+Cerissa flushed and bridled. "What would Chauncey do!"
+
+"I don't expect you to be my housekeeper," Mrs. Bogardus smiled. "But I
+envy Chauncey."
+
+"She has come to ask a favor," thought Cerissa. "I never knew her
+so pleasant, for nothing. She wants me to do up her fruit, I guess."
+Cerissa was mistaken. Mrs. Bogardus simply was happy--or almost
+happy--and deeply stirred over a piece of news which had come to her in
+that morning's mail.
+
+"I have telephoned Bradley not to send his men over on Monday. My son is
+bringing his wife home. They may be here all summer. The place belongs
+to them now. Did Chauncey tell you? Mr. Paul writes that he has some
+building plans of his own, and he wishes everything left as it is for
+the present, especially this house. He wants his wife to see it first
+just as it is."
+
+"Well, to be sure! They've been traveling a long time, haven't they? And
+how is his health now?"
+
+"Oh, he is very well indeed. You will be glad not to have the trouble of
+those carpenters, Cerissa? Pulling down old houses is dirty work."
+
+"Oh, dear! I wouldn't mind the dirt. Anything to get rid of that old
+rat's nest on top of the kitchen chamber. I hate to have such out of the
+way places on my mind. I can't get around to do every single thing,
+and it's years--years, Mrs. Bogardus, since I could get a woman to do a
+half-day's cleaning up there in broad daylight!"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stared. What was the woman talking about!
+
+"I call it a regular eyesore on the looks of the house besides. And it
+keeps all the old stories alive."
+
+"What stories?"
+
+"Why, of course your father wasn't out of his head--we all know
+that--when he built that upstairs room and slep' there and locked
+himself in every night of his life. It was only on one point he was a
+little warped: the fear of bein' robbed. A natural fear, too,--an old
+man over eighty livin' in such a lonesome place and known to be well
+off. But--you'll excuse my repeating the talk--but the story goes now
+that he re'ly went insane and was confined up there all the last years
+of his life. And that's why the windows have got bars acrost them.
+Everybody notices it, and they ask questions. It's real embarrassin',
+for of course I don't want to discuss the family."
+
+"Who asks questions?" Mrs. Bogardus's eyes were hard to meet when her
+voice took that tone.
+
+"Why, the city folks out driving. They often drive in the big gate and
+make the circle through the grounds, and they're always struck when they
+see that tower bedroom with windows like a prison. They say, 'What's the
+story about that room, up there?'"
+
+"When people ask you questions about the house, you can say you did
+not live here in the owner's time and you don't know. That's perfectly
+simple, isn't it?"
+
+"But I do know! Everybody knows," said Cerissa hotly. "It was the talk
+of the whole neighborhood when that room was put up; and I remember how
+scared I used to be when mother sent me over here of an errand."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose and shook out her skirts. "Will Chauncey bring my
+horse when it stops raining? By the way, did you get the furniture down
+that was in that room, Cerissa?--the old secretary? I am going to have
+it put in order for Mr. Paul's room. Old furniture is the fashion now,
+you know."
+
+Cerissa caught her breath nervously. "Mrs. Bogardus--I couldn't do a
+thing about it! I wanted Chauncey to tell you. All last week I tried
+to get a woman, or a man, to come and help me clear out that place,
+but just as soon as they find out what's wanted--'You'll have to get
+somebody else for that job,' they say."
+
+"What is the matter with them?"
+
+"It's the room, Mrs. Bogardus; if I was you--I'm doing now just as I'd
+be done by--I would not take Mrs. Paul Bogardus up into that room--not
+even in broad daylight; not if it was my son's wife, in the third month
+of her being a wife."
+
+"Well, upon my word!" said Mrs. Bogardus, smiling coldly. "Do you mean
+to say these women are afraid to go up there?"
+
+"It was old Mary Hornbeck who started the talk. She got what she called
+her 'warning' up there. And the fact is, she was a corpse within six
+months from that day. Chauncey and me, we used to hear noises, but old
+houses are full of noises. We never thought much about it; only, I must
+say I never had any use for that part of the house. Chauncey keeps his
+seeds and tools in the lower room, and some of the winter vegetables,
+and we store the parlor stove in there in summer."
+
+"Well, about this 'warning'?" Mrs. Bogardus interrupted.
+
+"Yes! It was three years ago in May, and I remember it was some such a
+day as this--showery and broken overhead, and Mary disappointed me; but
+she came about noon, and said she'd put in half a day anyhow. She got
+her pail and house-cloths; but she wasn't gone not half an hour when
+down she come white as a sheet, and her mouth as dry as chalk. She set
+down all of a shake, and I give her a drink of tea, and she said: 'I
+wouldn't go up there again, not for a thousand dollars.' She unlocked
+the door, she said, and stepped inside without thinkin'. Your father's
+old rocker with the green moreen cushions stood over by the east window,
+where he used to sit. She heard a creak like a heavy step on the floor,
+and that empty chair across the room, as far as from here to the window,
+begun to rock as if somebody had just rose up from them cushions. She
+watched it till it stopped. Then she took another step, and the step she
+couldn't see answered her, and the chair begun to rock again."
+
+"Was that all?"
+
+"No, ma'am; that wasn't all. I don't know if you remember an old wall
+clock with a brass ball on top and brass scrolls down the sides and a
+painted glass door in front of the pendulum with a picture of a castle
+and a lake? The paint's been wore off the glass with cleaning, so the
+pendulum shows plain. That clock has not been wound since we come to
+live here. I don't believe a hand has touched it since the night he was
+carried feet foremost out of that room. But Mary said she could count
+the strokes go tick, tick, tick! She listened till she could have
+counted fifty, for she was struck dumb, and just as plain as the clock
+before her face she could see the minute-hand and the pendulum, both of
+'em dead still. Now, how do you account for that!
+
+"I told Chauncey about it, and he said it was all foolishness. Do all I
+could he would go up there himself, that same evening. But he come down
+again after a while, and he was almost as white as Mary. 'Did you see
+anything?' I says. 'I saw what Mary said she saw,' says he, 'and I heard
+what she heard.' But no one can make Chauncey own up that he believes it
+was anything supernatural. 'There is a reason for everything,' he says.
+'The miracles and ghosts of one generation are just school-book learning
+to the next; and more of a miracle than the miracles themselves.'"
+
+"Chauncey shows his sense," Mrs. Bogardus observed.
+
+"He was real disturbed, though, I could see; and he told me particular
+not to make any talk about it. I never have opened the subject to a
+living soul. But when Mary died, within six months, folks repeated what
+she had been saying about her 'warning.' The 'death watch' she called
+it. We can't all of us control our feelings about such things, and she
+was a lonely widow woman."
+
+"Well, do you believe that ticking is going on up there now?" asked Mrs.
+Bogardus.
+
+Cerissa looked uneasy.
+
+"Is the door locked?"
+
+"I re'ly couldn't say," she confessed.
+
+"Do you mean to say that all you sensible people in this house have
+avoided that room for three years? And you don't even know if the door
+is locked?"
+
+"I--I don't use that part for anything, and cleaning is wasted on a
+place that's never used, and I can't _get_ anybody"--
+
+"I am not criticising your housekeeping. Will you go up there with me
+now, Cerissa? I want to understand about this."
+
+"What, just now, do you mean? I'm afraid I haven't got the time this
+morning, Mrs. Bogardus. Dinner's at half-past twelve. It's a quarter to
+eleven"--
+
+"Very well. You think the door is not locked?"
+
+"If it is, the key must be in the door. Oh, don't go, please, Mrs.
+Bogardus. Wait till Chauncey conies in"--
+
+"I wish you'd send Chauncey up when he does come in. Ask him to bring a
+screw-driver." Mrs. Bogardus rose and examined her jacket. It was still
+damp. She asked for a cape, or some sort of wrap, as her waist was thin,
+and the rain had chilled the morning air.
+
+For the sake of decency, Cerissa escorted her visitor across the hall
+passage into the loom-room--a loom-room in name only for upwards of
+three generations. Becky had devoted it to the rough work of the
+house, and to certain special uses, such as the care of the butchering
+products, the making of soft soap and root beer. Here the churning was
+done, by hand, with a wooden dasher, which spread a circle of white
+drops, later to become grease-spots. The floor of the loom-room was
+laid in large brick tiles, more or less loose in their sockets, with
+an occasional earthy depression marking the grave of a missing tile.
+Becky's method of cleaning was to sluice it out and scrub it with an old
+broom. The seepage of generations before her time had thus added their
+constant quota to the old well's sum of iniquity.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus had not visited this part of the old house for many years.
+After her father's death she had shrunk from its painful associations.
+Later she grew indifferent; but as she passed now into the gloomy
+place--doubly dark with the deep foliage of June on a rainy morning--she
+was afraid of her own thoughts. Henceforth she was a woman with a
+diseased consciousness. "What can't be cured must be _seared_," flashed
+over her as she set her face to the stairway.
+
+These stairs, leading up into the back attic or "kitchen chamber," being
+somewhat crowded for space, advanced two steps into the room below. As
+the stair door opened outward, and the stairs were exceedingly steep
+and dark, every child of the house, in turn, had suffered a bad fall in
+consequence; but the arrangement remained in all its natural depravity,
+for "children must learn."
+
+Little Emmy of the old days had loved to sit upon these steps, a trifle
+raised above the kitchen traffic, yet cognizant of all that was going
+on, and ready to descend promptly if she smelled fresh crullers frying,
+or baked sweet apples steaming hot from the oven. If Becky's foot were
+heard upon the stairs above, she would jump quick enough; but if the
+step had a clumping, boyish precipitancy, she sat still and laughed,
+and planted her back against the door. Often she had teased Adam in this
+way, keeping him prisoner from his duties, helpless in his good nature
+either to scold her or push her off. But once he circumvented her,
+slipping off his shoes and creeping up the stairs again, and making his
+escape by the roof and the boughs of the old maple. Then it was Emmy who
+was teased, who sat a foolish half hour on the stairs alone and missed a
+beautiful ride to the wood lot; but she would not speak to Adam for two
+days afterward.
+
+Becky's had been the larger of the two bedrooms in the attic, Adam's the
+smaller--tucked low under the eaves, and entered by crawling around the
+big chimney that came bulking up to the light like a great tree caught
+between house walls. The stairs hugged the chimney and made use of
+its support. Adam would warm his hands upon it coming down on bitter
+mornings. From force of habit, Emily Bogardus laid her smooth white hand
+upon the clammy bricks. No tombstone could be colder than that heart of
+house warmth now.
+
+The roof of the kitchen chamber had been raised a story higher, and the
+chimney as it went up contracted to quite a modern size. This elevation
+gave room for the incongruous tower bedroom that had hurt the symmetry
+of the old house, spoiled its noble sweep of roof, and given rise to so
+much unpleasant conjecture as to its use. It was this excrescence, the
+record of those last unloved and unloving years of her father's life,
+which Mrs. Bogardus would have removed, but was prevented by her son.
+
+"You go back now, Cerissa," she said to the panting woman behind her. "I
+see the key is in the lock. You may send Chauncey after a while; there
+is no hurry."
+
+"Oh!" gasped Cerissa. "Do you see _that!_"
+
+"What?"
+
+"I thought there was something--something behind that slit."
+
+"There isn't. Step this way. There, can't you see the light?"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus grasped Cerissa by the shoulders and held her firmly in
+front of a narrow loophole that pierced the partition close beside
+the door. Light from the room within showed plainly; but it gave an
+unpleasantly human expression to the entrance, like a furtive eye on the
+watch.
+
+"He would always be there," Cerissa whispered.
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Your father. If anybody wanted to see him after he shut himself in
+there for the night, they had to stand to be questioned through that
+wall-slit before he opened the door. Yes, ma'am! He was on the watch in
+there the whole time like a thing in a trap."
+
+"Are you afraid to go back alone?" Mrs. Bogardus spoke with chilling
+irony.
+
+Cerissa backed away in silence, her heart thumping. "She's putting it
+on," she said to herself. "I never see her turn so pale. Don't tell _me_
+she ain't afraid!"
+
+There was a hanging shelf against the chimney on which a bundle of dry
+herbs had been left to turn into dust. Old Becky might have put them
+there the autumn before she died; or some successor of hers in the years
+that were blank to the daughter of the house. As she pushed open the
+door a sighing draught swept past her and seemed to draw her inward.
+It shook the sere bundle. Its skeleton leaves, dissolving into motes,
+flickered an instant athwart the light. They sifted down like ashes on
+the woman's dark head as she passed in. Her color had faded, but not
+through fear of ghost clocks. It was the searing process she had to
+face. And any room where she sat alone with certain memories of her
+youth was to her a torture chamber.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She's been up there an awful long time. I wouldn't wonder if she's
+fainted away."
+
+"What would she faint at? I guess it's pretty cold, though. Give me some
+more tea; put plenty of milk so I can drink it quick."
+
+Chauncey's matter of fact tone always comforted Cerissa when she was
+nervous. She did not mind that he jeered or that his words were often
+rude; no man of her acquaintance could say things nicely to women, or
+ever tried. A certain amount of roughness passed for household wit.
+Chauncey put the screw-driver in his pocket, his wife and son watching
+him with respectful anxiety. He thought rather well of his own courage
+privately. But the familiar details of the loom-room cheered him on his
+way, the homely tools of his every-day work were like friendly faces
+nodding at him. He knocked loudly on the door above, and was answered by
+Mrs. Bogardus in her natural voice.
+
+"Bosh--every bit of it bosh!" he repeated courageously.
+
+She was seated by the window in the chair with the green cushions. Her
+face was turned towards the view outside. "What a pity those cherries
+were not picked before the rain," she observed. "The fruit is bursting
+ripe; I'm afraid you'll lose the crop."
+
+Chauncey moved forward awkwardly without answering.
+
+"Stop there one moment, will you?" Mrs. Bogardus rose and demonstrated.
+"You notice those two boards are loose. Now, I put this chair
+here,"--she laid her hand on the back to still its motion. "Step this
+way. You see? The chair rocks of itself. So would any chair with a
+spring board under it. That accounts for _that_, I think. Now come over
+here." Chauncey placed himself as she directed in front of the high
+mantel with the clock above it. She stood at his side and they listened
+in silence to that sound which Mary Hornbeck, deceased, had deemed a
+spiritual warning.
+
+"Would you call that a 'ticking'? Is that like any sound an insect could
+make?" the mistress asked.
+
+"I should call it more like a 'ting,'" said Chauncey. "It comes kind o'
+muffled like through the chimbly--a person might be mistaken if they was
+upset in their nerves considerable."
+
+"What old people call the 'death-watch' is supposed to be an insect that
+lives in the walls of old houses, isn't it? and gives warning with a
+ticking sound when somebody is going to be called away? Now to me that
+sounds like a soft blow struck regularly on a piece of hollow iron--say
+the end of a stove-pipe sticking in the chimney. When I first came up
+here, there was only a steady murmur of wind and rain. Then the clouds
+thinned and the sun came out and drops began to fall--distinctly. Your
+wife says the ticking was heard on a day like this, broken and showery.
+Now, if you will unscrew that clock, I think you will find there's a
+stove-pipe hole behind it; and a piece of pipe shoved into the chimney
+just far enough to catch the drops as they gather and fall."
+
+Chauncey went to work. He sweated in the airless room. The powerful
+screws blunted the lips of his tool but would not start.
+
+"I guess I'll have to give it up for to-day. The screws are rusted in
+solid. Want I should pry her out of the woodwork?"
+
+"No, don't do that," said Mrs. Bogardus. "Why should we spoil the panel?
+This seems a very comfortable room. My son is right. It would be foolish
+to tear it down. Such a place as this might be very useful if you people
+would get over your notions about it."
+
+"I never had no notions," Chauncey asserted. "When the women git talkin'
+they like to make out a good story, and whichever one sees the most and
+hears the most makes the biggest sensation."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus waited till he had finished without appearing to have
+heard what he was saying.
+
+"Where is the key to this door?" she laid her hand over a knob to the
+right of the stairs.
+
+"I guess if there is one it's on the other side. Yes, it's in the
+key-hole." Chauncey turned the knob and shoved and lifted. The door
+yielded to his full strength, and he allowed Mrs. Bogardus to precede
+him. She stepped into a room hardly bigger than a closet with one
+window, barred like those in the outer room. It was fitted up with
+toilet conveniences according to the best advices of its day. Over all
+the neat personal arrangements there was the slur of neglect, a sad
+squalor which even a king's palace wears with time.
+
+Chauncey tested the plumbing with a noise that was plainly offensive
+to his companion, but she bore with it--also with his reminiscences
+gathered from neighborhood gossip. "He wa'n't fond of spending money,
+but he didn't spare it here: this was his ship cabin when he started
+on his last voyage. It looked funny--a man with all his land and houses
+cooped up in a place like this; but he wanted to be independent of the
+women. He hated to have 'em fussin' around him. He had a woman to come
+and cook up stuff for him to help himself to; but she wouldn't stay here
+overnight, nor he wouldn't let her. As for a man in the house,--most
+men were thieves, he thought, or waiting their chance to be. It was real
+pitiful the way he made his end."
+
+"Open that window and shut the door when you come out," said Mrs.
+Bogardus. "I will send some one to help you down with that secretary.
+Cerissa knows about it. It is to be sent up on the Hill."
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+THE CASE STRIKES IN
+
+Christine's marriage took place while Paul and Moya were lingering in
+the Bruneau, for Paul's health ostensibly. Banks and Horace had been
+left to the smiling irony of justice. They never had a straight chance
+to define their conduct in the woods; for no one accused them. No
+awkward questions were asked in the city drawing-rooms or at the clubs.
+For a tough half hour or so at Fort Lemhi they had realized how they
+stood in the eyes of those unbiased military judges. The shock had a
+bracing effect for a time. Both boys were said to be much improved
+by their Western trip and by the hardships of that frightful homeward
+march.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus had matched her gift of Stone Ridge to her son, which
+was a gift of sentiment, with one of more substantial value to her
+daughter,--the income from certain securities settled upon her and her
+heirs. Banks was carefully unprovided for. The big house in town was
+full of ghosts--the ghosts that haunt such homes, made desolate by a
+breach of hearts. The city itself was crowded with opportunities for
+giving and receiving pain between mother and daughter. Christine had
+developed all the latent hardness of her mother's race with a sickly
+frivolity of her own. She made a great show of faith in her marriage
+venture. She boomed it in her occasional letters, which were full of
+scarce concealed bravado as graceful as snapping her fingers in her
+mother's face.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus leased her house in town, and retired before the ghosts,
+but not escaping them; Stone Ridge must be put in order for its new
+master and mistress, and Stone Ridge had its own ghosts. She informed
+her absentees that, before their return, she should have left for
+Southern California to look after some investments which she had
+neglected there of late. It was then she spoke of her plan for restoring
+the old house by pulling down that addition which disfigured it; and
+Paul had objected to this erasure. It would take from the house's
+veracity, he said. The words carried their unintentional sting.
+
+But it was Moya's six lines at the bottom of his page that changed
+and softened everything. Moya--always blessed when she took the
+initiative--contrived, as swiftly as she could set them down, to say the
+very words that made the home-coming a coming home indeed.
+
+"Will Madam Bogardus be pleased to keep her place as the head of her
+son's house?" she wrote. "This foolish person he has married wants to be
+anything rather than the mistress of Stone Ridge. She wants to be always
+out of doors, and she needs to be. Oh, must you go away now--now when we
+need you so much? It cannot be said here on paper how much _I_ need you!
+Am I not your motherless daughter? Please be there when we come, and
+please stay there!"
+
+"For a little while then," said the lonely woman, smiling at the image
+of that sweet, foolish person in her thoughts. "For a little while, till
+she learns her mistake." Such mistakes are the cornerstone of family
+friendship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was an uneventful summer on the Hill, but one of rather wearing
+intensity in the inner relations of the household, one with another; for
+nothing could be quite natural with a pit of concealment to be avoided
+by all, and an air of unconsciousness to be carefully preserved in
+avoiding it. Moya's success in this way was so remarkable that Paul half
+hated it. How was it possible for her to speak to his mother so lightly;
+never the least apparent premeditation or fear of tripping; how look at
+her with such sweet surface looks that never questioned or saw beneath?
+He could not meet his mother's eyes at all when they were alone
+together, or endure a silence in her company.
+
+Both women were of the type called elemental. They understood each other
+without knowing why. Moya felt the desperate truth contained in the
+mother's falsehood, and broke forth into passionate defense of her as
+against her husband's silence.
+
+He answered her one day by looking up a little green book of fairy tales
+and reading aloud this fragment of "The Golden Key."
+
+"'I never tell lies, even in fun.' (The mysterious Grandmother speaks.)
+
+"'How good of you!' (says the Child in the Wood.)
+
+"'I couldn't if I tried. It would come true if I said it, and then I
+should be punished enough.'"
+
+Moya's eyes narrowed reflectively.
+
+"How constantly you are thinking of this! I think of it only when I
+am with you. As if a woman like your mother, who has done _one thing_,
+should be all that thing, and nothing more to us, her children!"
+
+Moya was giving herself up, almost immorally, Paul sometimes thought,
+to the fascination Mrs. Bogardus's personality had for her. In a keenly
+susceptible state herself, at that time, there was something calming and
+strengthening in the older woman's perfected beauty, her physical poise,
+and the fitness of everything she did and said and wore to the given
+occasion. As a dark woman she was particularly striking in summer
+clothing. Her white effects were tremendous. She did not pretend to
+study these matters herself, but in years of experience, with money to
+spend, she had learned well in whom to confide. When women are shut up
+together in country houses for the summer, they can irritate each other
+in the most foolish ways. Mrs. Bogardus never got upon your nerves.
+
+But, for Paul, there was a poison in his mother's beauty, a dread in
+her influence over his impressionable young wife, thrilled with the
+awakening forces of her consonant being. Moya would drink deep of every
+cup that life presented. Motherhood was her lesson for the day. "She is
+a queen of mothers!" she would exclaim with an abandon that was painful
+to Paul; he saw deformity where Moya was ready to kneel. "I love her
+perfect love for you--for me, even! She is above all jealousy. She
+doesn't even ask to be understood."
+
+Paul was silent.
+
+"And oh, she knows, she knows! She has been through it all--in such
+despair and misery--all that is before me, with everything in the world
+to make it easy and all the beautiful care she gives me. She is the
+supreme mother. And I never had a mother to speak to before. Don't,
+don't, please, keep putting that dreadful thing between us now!"
+
+So Paul took the dreadful thing away with him and was alone with it, and
+knew that his mother saw it in his eyes when their eyes met and avoided.
+When, after a brief household absence, he would see her again he
+wondered, "Has she been alone with it? Has it passed into another
+phase?"--as of an incurable disease that must take its time and course.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus did not spare her conscience in social ways all this time.
+It was a part of her life to remember that she had neighbors--certain
+neighbors. She included Paul without particularly consulting him
+whenever it was proper for him to support her in her introduction of his
+wife to the country-house folk, many of whom they knew in town.
+
+All his mother's friends liked Paul and supposed him to be very clever,
+but they had never taken him seriously. "Now, at last," they said, "he
+has done something like other people. He is coming out." Experienced
+matrons were pleased to flatter him on his choice of a bride. The
+daughters studied Moya, and decided that she was "different," but "all
+right." She had a careless distinction of her own. Some of her "things"
+were surprisingly lovely--probably heirlooms; and army women are so
+clever about clothes.
+
+Would they spend the winter in town?
+
+Paul replied absently: they had not decided. Probably they would not go
+down till after the holidays.
+
+What an attractive plan? What an ideal family Christmas they would have
+all together in the country! Christine had not been up all summer,
+had she? Here Moya came to her husband's relief, through a wife's dual
+consciousness in company, and covered his want of spirits with a flood
+of foolish chatter.
+
+The smiling way in which women the most sincere can posture and prance
+on the brink of dissimulation was particularly sickening to Paul at this
+time. Why need they put themselves in situations where it was required?
+The situations were of his mother's creation. He imagined she must
+suffer, but had little sympathy with that side of her martyrdom. Moya
+seemed a trifle feverish in her acceptance of these affairs of which
+she was naturally the life and centre. A day of entertaining often faded
+into an evening of subtle sadness.
+
+Paul would take her out into the moonlight of that deep inland country.
+The trees were dark with leaves and brooded close above them; old
+water-fences and milldams cast inky shadows on the still, shallow ponds
+clasped in wooded hills. No region could have offered a more striking
+contrast to the empty plains. Moya felt shut in with old histories. The
+very ground was but moulding sand in which generations of human lives
+had been poured, and the sand swept over to be reshaped for them.
+
+"We are not living our own life yet," Paul would say; not adding, "We
+are protecting her." Here was the beginning of punishment helplessly
+meted out to this proud woman whose sole desire was towards her
+children--to give, and not to receive.
+
+"But this is our Garden?" Moya would muse. "We are as nearly two alone
+as any two could be."
+
+"If you include the Snake. We can't leave out the Snake, you know."
+
+"Snake or Seraph--I don't believe I know the difference. Paul, I cannot
+have you thinking things."
+
+"I?--what do I think?"
+
+"You are thinking it is bad for me to be so much with her. You, as a man
+and a husband, resent what she, as a woman and a wife, has dared to do.
+And I, as another woman and wife, I say she could do nothing else and be
+true. For, don't you see? She never loved him. The wifehood in her has
+never been reached. She was a girl, then a mother, then a widow. How
+could she"--
+
+"Do you think he would have claimed her as his wife? Oh, you do not know
+him;--she has never known him. If we could be brave and face our duty
+to the whole truth, and leave the rest to those sequences, never dreamed
+of, that wait upon great acts. Such surprises come straight from God.
+Now we can never know how he would have risen to meet a nobler choice
+in her. He had not far to rise! Well, we have our share of blessings,
+including piazza teas; but as a family we have missed one of the
+greatest spiritual opportunities,--such as come but once in a lifetime."
+
+"Ah, if she was not ready for it, it was not _her_ opportunity. God is
+very patient with us, I believe."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+RESTIVENESS
+
+Mothers and sons are rarely very personal in their intimacy after
+the son has taken to himself a wife. Apart from certain moments
+not appropriate to piazza teas, Paul and his mother were perhaps as
+comfortable together as the relation averages. It was much that they
+never talked emotionally. Private judgments which we have refrained from
+putting into words may die unfruitful and many a bitter crop be spared.
+
+"This is Paul's apology for being happy in spite of himself--and of
+us!" Moya teased, as she admired the beautifully drawn plans for the
+quarrymen's club-house.
+
+"It doesn't need any apology; it's a very good thing," said Mrs.
+Bogardus, ignoring double meanings. No caps that were flying around ever
+fitted her head. Paul's dreams and his mother's practical experience
+had met once more on a common ground of philanthropy. This time it was
+a workingmen's club in which the interests of social and mental
+improvement were conjoined with facilities for outdoor sport. Up to date
+philanthropy is an expensive toy. Paul, though now a landowner, was far
+from rich in his own right. His mother financed this as she had many
+another scheme for him. She was more openhanded than heretofore, but all
+was done with that ennuyd air which she ever wore as of an older
+child who has outgrown the game. It was in Moya and Moya's prospective
+maternity that her pride reinstated itself. Her own history and
+generation she trod underfoot. Mistakes, humiliations, whichever way she
+turned. Paul had never satisfied her entirely in anything he did until
+he chose this girl for the mother of his children. Now their house might
+come to something. Moya moved before her eyes crowned in the light of
+the future. And that this noble and innocent girl, with her perfect
+intuitions, should turn to _her_ now with such impetuous affection was
+perhaps the sweetest pain the blighted woman had ever known. She lay
+awake many a night thinking mute blessings on the mother and the child
+to be. Yet she resisted that generous initiative so dear to herself,
+aware with a subtle agony of the pain it gave her son.
+
+One day she said to Paul (they were driving home together through a
+bit of woodland, the horses stepping softly on the mould of fallen
+leaves)--"I don't expect you to account for every dollar of mine you
+spend in helping those who can be helped that way. You have a free
+hand."
+
+"I understand," said Paul. "I have used your money freely--for a purpose
+that I never have accounted for."
+
+"Don't you need more?"
+
+"No; there is no need now."
+
+"Why is there not?"
+
+Paul was silent. "I cannot go into particulars. It is a long story."
+
+"Does the purpose still exist?" his mother asked sharply.
+
+"It does; but not as a claim--for that sort of help."
+
+"Let me know if such a claim should ever return."
+
+"I will, mother," said Paul.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There came a day when mother and son reaped the reward of their mutual
+forbearance. There was a night and a day when Paul became a boy again in
+his mother's hands, and she took the place that was hers in Nature. She
+was the priestess acquainted with mysteries. He followed her, and hung
+upon her words. The expression of her face meant life and death to him.
+The dreadful consciousness passed out of his eyes; tears washed it out
+as he rose from his knees by Moya's bed, and his mother kissed him, and
+laid his son in his arms.
+
+The following summer saw the club-house and all its affiliations in
+working order. The beneficiaries took to it most kindly, but were
+disposed to manage it in their own way: not in all respects the way of
+the founder's intention.
+
+"To make a gift complete, you must keep yourself out of it," Mrs.
+Bogardus advised. "You have done your part; now let them have it and run
+it themselves."
+
+Paul was not hungry for leadership, but he had hoped that his interest
+in the men's amusements would bring him closer to them and equalize the
+difference between the Hill and the quarry.
+
+"You have never worked with them; how can you expect to play with them?"
+was another of his mother's cool aphorisms. Alas! Paul, the son of the
+poor man, had no work, and hence no play.
+
+It was time to be making winter plans again. Mrs. Bogardus knew that
+her son's young family was now complete without her presence. Moya had
+gained confidence in the care of her child; she no longer brought every
+new symptom to the grandmother. Yet Mrs. Bogardus put off discussing the
+change, dreading to expose her own isolation, a point on which she was
+as sensitive as if it were a crime. Paul was never entirely frank with
+her: she knew he would not be frank in this. They never expressed their
+wills or their won'ts to each other with the careless rudeness of a
+sound family faith, and always she felt the burden of his unrelenting
+pity. She began to take long drives alone, coming in late and excusing
+herself for dinner. At such times she would send for her grandson in
+his nurse's arms to bid him good-night. The mother would put off her
+own good-night, not to intrude at these sessions. One evening, going up
+later to kiss her little son, she found his crib empty, the nurse gone
+to her dinner. He was fast asleep in his grandmother's arms, where she
+had held him for an hour in front of the open fire in her bedroom. She
+looked up guiltily. "He was so comfortable! And his crib is cold. Will
+he take cold when Ellen puts him back?"
+
+"I am sure he won't," Moya whispered, gathering up the rosy sleeper. But
+she was disturbed by the breach of bedtime rules.
+
+In the drawing-room a few nights later she said energetically to Paul.
+
+"One might as well be dead as to live with a grudge."
+
+"A good grudge?"
+
+"There are no good grudges."
+
+"There are some honest ones--honestly come by."
+
+"I don't care how they are come by. Grudges 'is p'ison.'" She laughed,
+but her cheeks were hot.
+
+"Do you know that Christine has been at death's door? Your mother heard
+of it--through Mrs. Bowen! Was that why you didn't show me her letter?"
+
+"It was not in my letter from Mrs. Bowen."
+
+"I think she has known it some time," said Moya, "and kept it to
+herself."
+
+"Mrs. Bowen!"
+
+"Your mother. Isn't it terrible? Think how Chrissy must have needed her.
+They need each other so! Christine was her constant thought. How can
+all that change in one year! But she cannot go to Banks Bowen's house
+without an invitation. We must go to New York and make her come with
+us--we must open the way."
+
+"Yes," said Paul, "I have seen it was coming. In the end we always do
+the thing we have forsworn."
+
+"_I_ was the one. I take it back. Your work is there. I know it calls
+you. Was not Mrs. Bowen's letter an appeal?"
+
+Paul was silent.
+
+"She must think you a deserter. And there is bigger work for you, too!
+Here is a great political fight on, and my husband is not in it. Every
+man must slay his dragon. There is a whole city of dragons!"
+
+"Yes," smiled Paul; "I see. You want me to put my legs under the same
+cloth with Banks and ask him about his golf score."
+
+"If you want to fight him, have it out on public grounds; fight him in
+politics."
+
+"We are on the same side!"
+
+Moya laughed, but she looked a little dashed.
+
+"Banks comes of gentlemen. He inherited his opinions," said Paul.
+
+"He may have inherited a few other things, if we could have patience
+with him."
+
+"Are you sorry for Banks?"
+
+"I shall be sorry for him--when he meets you. He has been spared that
+too long."
+
+"Dispenser of destinies, I bow as I always do!"
+
+"You will speak to your mother at once?"
+
+"I will."
+
+"And do it beautifully?"
+
+"As well as I know how."
+
+"Ah, you have had such practice! How good it would be if we could only
+dare to quarrel in this family! You and I--of course!"
+
+"_We_ quarrel, of course!" laughed Paul.
+
+"I _love_ to quarrel with you!"
+
+"You do it beautifully. You have had such practice!"
+
+"I am so happy! It is clear to me now that we shall live down this
+misery. Christine will love to see me again; I know she will. A wife is
+a very different thing from a girl--a haughty girl!"
+
+"I should think the wife of Banks Bowen might be."
+
+"And we'll part with our ancient and honorable grudge! We are getting
+too big for it. _We_ are parents!"
+
+Paul made the proposition to his mother and she agreed to it in every
+particular save the one. She would remain at Stone Ridge. It was
+impossible to move her. Moya was in despair. She had cultivated an
+overweening conscience in her relations with Mrs. Bogardus. It turned
+upon her now and showed her the true state of her own mind at the
+thought of being Two once more and alone with the child God had given
+them. Mrs. Bogardus appeared to see nothing but her own interests in
+the matter. She had made up her mind. And in spite of the conscientious
+scruples on all sides, the hedging and pleading and explaining, all were
+happier in the end for her decision. She herself was softened by it, and
+she yielded one point in return. Paul had steadily opposed his mother's
+plan of housekeeping, alone with one maid and a man who slept at the
+stables. The Dunlops, as it happened, were childless for the winter,
+young Chauncey attending a "commercial college" in a neighboring town.
+After many interviews and a good deal of self-importance on Cerissa's
+part, the pair were persuaded to close the old house and occupy the
+servants' wing on the Hill, as a distinct family, yet at hand in case
+of need. It was late autumn before all these arrangements could be made.
+Paul and Moya, leaving the young scion aged nineteen months in the care
+of his nurse and his grandmother, went down the river to open the New
+York house.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+INDIAN SUMMER
+
+The upper fields of Stone Ridge, so the farmers said, were infested that
+autumn by a shy and solitary vagrant, who never could be met with face
+to face, but numbers of times had been seen across the width of a lot,
+climbing the bars, or closing a gate, or vanishing up some crooked lane
+that quickly shut him from view.
+
+"I would look after that old chap if I was you, Chauncey. He'll be
+smoking in your hay barns, and burn you out some o' these cold nights."
+
+Chauncey took these neighborly warnings with good-humored indifference.
+"I haven't seen no signs of his doin' any harm," he said. "Anybody's at
+liberty to walk in the fields if there ain't a 'No Trespass' posted.
+I rather guess he makes his bed among the corn stouks. I see prints of
+someone's feet, goin' and comin'."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus was more herself in those days than she had been at
+any time since the great North-western wilderness sent her its second
+message of fear. Old memories were losing their sting. She could bear to
+review her decision with a certain shrinking hardihood. Had the choice
+been given her to repeat, her action had been the same. In so far as she
+had perjured herself for the sake of peace in the family, she owned the
+sacrifice was vain; but her own personality was the true reason for what
+she had done. She was free in her unimpeachable widowhood--a mother who
+had never been at heart a wife. She feared no ghosts this keen autumn
+weather, at the summit of her conscious powers. Her dark eye unsheathed
+its glance of authority. It was an eye that went everywhere, and
+everywhere was met with signs that praised its oversight. Here was
+an out-worn inheritance which one woman, in less than a third of her
+lifetime, had developed into a competence for her son. He could afford
+to dream dreams of beneficence with his mother to make them good. Yes,
+he needed her still. His child was in her keeping; and, though brief the
+lease, that trust was no accident. It was the surest proof he could have
+given her of his vital allegiance. In the step which Paul and Moya were
+taking, she saw the first promise of that wisdom she had despaired of in
+her son. In the course of years he would understand her. And Christine?
+She rested bitterly secure in her daughter's inevitable physical need
+of her. Christine was a born parasite. She had no true pride; she was
+capable merely of pique which would wear itself out and pass into other
+forms of selfishness.
+
+This woman had been governed all her life by a habit of decision, and
+a strong personality rooted in the powers of nature. Therefore she
+was seldom mistaken in her conclusions when they dealt with material
+results. Occasionally she left out the spirit; but the spirit leaves out
+no one.
+
+Her long dark skirts were sweeping the autumn grass at sunset as she
+paced back and forth under the red-gold tents of the maples. It was a
+row of young trees she had planted to grace a certain turf walk at the
+top of the low wall that divided, by a drop of a few feet, the west
+lawn at Stone Ridge from the meadow where the beautiful Alderneys were
+pastured. The maples turned purple as the light faded out of their tops
+and struck flat across the meadow, making the grass vivid as in spring.
+Two spots of color moved across it slowly--a young woman capped and
+aproned, urging along a little trotting child. Down the path of their
+united shadows they came, and the shadows had reached already the
+dividing wall. The waiting smile was sweet upon the grandmother's
+features; her face was transformed like the meadow into a memory of
+spring. The child saw her, and waved to her with something scarlet which
+he held in his free hand. She admired the stride of his brown legs above
+their crumpled socks, the imperishable look of health on his broad,
+sweet glowing face. She lifted him high in her embrace and bore him up
+the hill, his dusty shoes dangling against her silk front breadths,
+his knees pressed tight against her waist, and over her shoulder he
+flourished the scarlet cardinal flower.
+
+"Where have you been with him so long?" she asked the nursemaid.
+
+"Only up in the lane, as far as the three gates, ma'am."
+
+"Then where did he get this flower?"
+
+"Oh," said the pretty Irish girl, half scared by her tone, and tempted
+to prevaricate. "Why--he must have picked it, I guess."
+
+"Not in the lane. It's a swamp-flower. It doesn't grow anywhere within
+four miles of the lane!"
+
+"It must have been the old man gev it him then," said the maid. "Is it
+unhealthy, ma'am? I tried to get it from him, but he screamed and fussed
+so."
+
+"What old man do you mean?"
+
+"Why, him that was passin' up the lane. I didn't see him till he was
+clean by--and Middy had the flower. I don't know where in the world he
+could have got it, else, for we wasn't one step out of the lane, was we,
+Middy! That's the very truth."
+
+"But where were you when strangers were giving him flowers?"
+
+"Why, sure, ma'am, I was only just a step away be the fence, having a
+word with one o' the boys. I was lookin' in the field, speakin' to him
+and he was lookin' at me with me back to the lane. 'There's the old man
+again,' he says, shiftin' his eye. I turned me round and there, so he
+was, but he was by and walkin' on up the lane. And Middy had the flower.
+He wouldn't be parted from it and squeezed it so tight I thought the
+juice might be bad on his hands, and he promised he'd not put it to his
+mouth. I kep' my eye on him. Ah, the nasty, na-asty flower! Give it here
+to Katy till I throw it!"
+
+"There's no harm in the flower. But there is harm in strangers making up
+to him when your back is turned. Don't you know the dreadful things we
+read in the papers?"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus said no more. It was Middy's supper-time. But later she
+questioned Katy particularly concerning this old man who was spoken of
+quite as if his appearance were taken for granted in the heart of the
+farm. Katy recalled one other day when she had seen him asleep as she
+thought in a corner of the fence by the big chestnut tree when she and
+the boy were nutting. They had moved away to the other side of the tree,
+but while she was busy hunting for nuts Middy had strayed off a bit and
+foregathered with the old man, who was not asleep at all, but stood with
+his back to her pouring a handful of big fat chestnuts into the child's
+little skirt, which he held up. She called to him and the old man had
+stepped back, and the nuts were spilled. Middy had cried and made her
+pick them up, and when that was done the stranger was gone quite out of
+sight.
+
+Chauncey, too, was questioned, and testified that the old man of the
+fields was no myth. But he deprecated all this exaggerated alarm. The
+stranger was some simple-minded old work-house candidate putting off the
+evil day. In a few weeks he would have to make for shelter in one of the
+neighboring towns. Chauncey could not see what legal hold they had upon
+him even if they could catch him. He hardly came under the vagrancy law,
+since he had neither begged, nor helped himself appreciably to the means
+of subsistence.
+
+"That is just the point," Mrs. Bogardus insisted. "He has the
+means--from somewhere--to lurk around here and make friends with that
+child. There may be a gang of kidnappers behind him. He is the harmless
+looking decoy. I insist that you keep a sharp lookout, Chauncey. There
+shall be a hold upon him, law or no law, if we catch him on our ground."
+
+A cold rain set in. Paul and Moya wrote of delays in the house
+preparations, and hoped the grandmother was not growing tired of her
+charge. On the last of the rainy days, in a burst of dubious sunshine,
+came a young girl on horseback to have tea with Mrs. Bogardus. She was
+one of that lady's discoverers, so she claimed, Miss Sallie Remsen, very
+pretty and full of fantastic little affectations founded on her intense
+appreciation of the picturesque. She called Mrs. Bogardus "Madam," and
+likened her to various female personages in history more celebrated for
+strength of purpose than for the Christian virtues. Mrs. Bogardus, in
+her restful ignorance of such futilities, went no deeper into these
+allusions than their intention, which she took to be complimentary. Miss
+Sallie hugged herself with joy when the rain came down in torrents for
+a clear-up shower. Her groom was sent home with a note to inform her
+mother that Mrs. Bogardus wished to keep her overnight. All the mothers
+were flattered when Mrs. Bogardus took notice of their daughters,--even
+much grander dames than she herself could pretend to be.
+
+They had a charming little dinner by themselves to the tune of the rain
+outside, and were having their coffee by the drawing-room fire; and Miss
+Sallie was thinking by what phrase one could do justice to the massive,
+crass ugliness of that self-satisfied apartment, furnished in the
+hideous sixties, when the word was sent in that Mrs. Dunlop wished to
+speak with Mrs. Bogardus. Something of Cerissa's injured importance
+survived the transmission of the message, causing Mrs. Bogardus to smile
+to herself as she rose. Cerissa was waiting in the dining-room. She kept
+her seat as Mrs. Bogardus entered. Her eyes did not rise higher than the
+lady's dress, which she examined with a fierce intentness of comparison
+while she opened her errand.
+
+"I thought you'd like to know you've got a strange lodger down to the
+old house. I don't seem to ever get moved!" she enlarged. "I'm always
+runnin' down there after first one thing 'n' another we've forgot. This
+morning 't was my stone batter-pot. Chauncey said he thought it was
+getting cold enough for buckwheat cakes. I don't suppose you want to
+have stray tramps in there in the old house, building fires in the
+loom-room, where, if a spark got loose, it would blaze up them draughty
+stairs, and the whole house would go in a minute." Cerissa stopped to
+gain breath.
+
+"Making fires? Are you sure of that? Has any smoke been seen coming out
+of that chimney?"
+
+"Why, it's been raining so! And the trees have got so tall! But I could
+show you the shucks an' shells he's left there. I know how we left it!"
+
+"You had better speak--No; I will see Chauncey in the morning." Mrs.
+Bogardus never, if she could avoid it, gave an order through a third
+person.
+
+"Well, I thought I'd just step in. Chauncey said 't was no use
+disturbing you to-night, but he's just that way--so easy about
+everything! I thought you wouldn't want to be harboring tramps this wet
+weather when most anybody would be tempted to build a fire. I'm more
+concerned about what goes on down there now we're _out_ of the house! I
+seem to have it on my mind the whole time. A house is just like a child:
+the more you don't see it the more you worry about it."
+
+"I'm glad you have such a home feeling about the place," said Mrs.
+Bogardus, avoiding the onset of words. "Well, good-evening, Cerissa.
+Thank you for your trouble. I will see about it in the morning."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus mentioned what she had just heard to Miss Sallie, who
+remarked, with her keen sense of antithesis, what a contrast _that_
+fireside must be to _this_.
+
+"Which fireside?"
+
+"Oh, your lodger upon the cold ground,--making his little bit of a
+stolen blaze in that cavern of a chimney in the midst of the wet trees!
+What a nice thing to have an unwatched place like that where a poor
+bird of passage can creep in and make his nest, and not trouble any one.
+Think what Jean Valjeans one might shelter"--
+
+"Who?"
+
+"What 'angels unawares.'"
+
+"It will be unawares, my dear,--very much unawares,--when I shelter any
+angels of that sort."
+
+"Oh, you wouldn't turn him out, such weather as this?"
+
+"The house is not mine, in the first place," Mrs. Bogardus explained
+as to a child. "I can't entertain tramps or even angels on my son's
+premises, when he's away."
+
+"Oh, he! He would build the fires himself, and make up their beds,"
+laughed Miss Sallie. "If he were here, I believe he would start down
+there now, and stock the place with everything you've got in the house
+to eat."
+
+"I hope he'd leave us a little something for breakfast," said Mrs.
+Bogardus a trifle coldly. But she did not mention the cause of her
+uneasiness about this particular visitor. She never defended herself.
+
+Miss Sallie was delighted with her callousness to the sentimental rebuke
+which had been rather rubbed in. It was so unmodern; one got so weary
+of fashionable philanthropy, women who talked of their social sympathies
+and their principles in life. She almost hoped that Mrs. Bogardus had
+neither. Certainly she never mentioned them.
+
+"What did she say? Did she tell you what I said to her last night?"
+Cerissa questioned her husband feverishly after his interview with Mrs.
+Bogardus.
+
+"She didn't mention your name," Chauncey took some pleasure in stating.
+"If you hadn't told me yourself, I shouldn't have known you'd meddled in
+it at all."
+
+"What's she going to do about it?"
+
+"How crazy you women are! 'Cause some poor old Sooner-die-than-work
+warms his bones by a bit of fire that wouldn't scare a chimbly swaller
+out of its nest! Don't you s'pose if there'd been any fire there to
+speak of, I'd 'a' seen it? What am I here for? Now I've got to drop
+everything, and git a padlock on that door, and lock it up every night,
+and search the whole place from top to bottom for fear there's some one
+in there hidin' in a rathole!"
+
+"Chauncey! If you've got to do that I don't want you to go in there
+alone. You take one of the men with you; and you better have a pistol or
+one of the dogs anyhow. Suppose you was to ketch some one in there, and
+corner him! He might turn on you, and shoot you!"
+
+"I wish you wouldn't work yourself up so about nothin' at all! Want
+me to make a blame jackass of myself raisin' the whole place about a
+potato-peel or a bacon-rind!"
+
+"I think you might have some little regard for my feelings," Cerissa
+whimpered. "If you ain't afraid, I'm afraid for you; and I don't see
+anything to be ashamed of either. I wish you _wouldn't_ go _alone_
+searching through that spooky old place. It just puts me beside myself
+to think of it!"
+
+"Well, well! That's enough about it anyhow. I ain't going to do anything
+foolish, and you needn't think no more about it."
+
+Whether it was the effect of his wife's fears, or his promise to her,
+or the inhospitable nature of his errand founded on suspicion, certainly
+Chauncey showed no spirit of rashness in conducting his search. He
+knocked the mud off his boots loudly on the doorsill before proceeding
+to attach the padlock to the outer door. He searched the loom-room,
+lighting a candle and peering into all its cobwebbed corners. He
+examined the rooms lately inhabited, unlocking and locking doors
+behind him noisily with increasing confidence in the good old house's
+emptiness. Still, in the fireplace in the loom-room there were signs of
+furtive cooking which a housekeeper's eye would infallibly detect.
+He saw that the search must proceed. It was not all a question of his
+wife's fears, as he opened the stair-door cautiously and tramped slowly
+up towards the tower bedroom. He could not remember who had gone out
+last, on the day the old secretary was moved down. There had been
+four men up there, and--yes, the key was still in the lock outside. He
+clutched it and it fell rattling on the steps. He swung the door open
+and stared into the further darkness beyond his range of vision. He
+waved his candle as far as his arm would reach. "Anybody _in_ here?" he
+shouted. The silence made his flesh prick. "I'm goin' to lock up now.
+Better show up. It's the last chance." He waited while one could count
+ten. "Anybody in here that wants to be let free? Nobody's goin' to hurt
+ye."
+
+To his anxious relief there was no reply. But as he listened, he heard
+the loud, measured tick, tick, of the old clock, appalling in the
+darkness, on the silence of that empty room. Chauncey could not have
+told just how he got the door to, nor where he found strength to lock it
+and drag his feet downstairs, but the hand that held the key was moist
+with cold perspiration as he reached the open air.
+
+"Well, if that's rain I'd like to know where it comes from!" He looked
+up at the moon breaking through drifting clouds. The night was keen and
+clear.
+
+"If I was to tell that to Cerissa she'd never go within a mile o' that
+house again! Maybe I was mistaken--but I ain't goin' back to see!"
+
+Next morning on calmer reflection he changed his mind about removing the
+lawn-mower and other hand-tools from the loom-room as he had determined
+overnight should be done. The place continued to be used as a storeroom,
+open by day.
+
+At night it was Chauncey's business to lock it up, and he was careful to
+repeat his search--as far as the stair-door. Never did the silent room
+above give forth a protest, a sound of human restraint or occupation. He
+reported to the mistress that all was snug at the old house, and nobody
+anywhere about the place.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+THE FELL FROST
+
+After the rain came milder days. The still white mornings slowly
+brightened into hazy afternoons. The old moon like a sleep walker stood
+exposed in the morning sky. The roads to Stone Ridge were deep in fallen
+leaves. Soft-tired wheels rustled up the avenue and horses' feet fell
+light, as the last of the summer neighbors came to say good-by.
+
+It was a party of four--Miss Sallie and a good-looking youth of the
+football cult on horseback, her mother and an elder sister, the delicate
+Miss Remsen, in a hired carriage. Their own traps had been sent to town.
+
+Tea was served promptly, as the visitors had a long road home before
+their dinner-hour. In the reduced state of the establishment it was
+Katy who brought the tea while Cerissa looked after her little charge.
+Cerissa sat on the kitchen porch sewing and expanding under the deep
+attention of the cook; they could see Middy a little way off on the
+tennis-court wiping the mud gravely from a truant ball he had found
+among the nasturtiums. All was as peaceful as the time of day and the
+season of the year.
+
+"Yes," said Cerissa solemnly. "Old Abraham Van Elten was too much
+cumbered up with this world to get quit of it as easy as some. If his
+spirit is burdened with a message to anybody it's to _her_. He died
+unreconciled to her, and she inherited all this place in spite of him,
+as you may say. I've come as near believin' in such things since the
+goings on up there in that room"--
+
+"She wants Middy fetched in to see the comp'ny," cried Katy, bursting
+into the sentence. "Where is he, till I clean him? And she wants some
+more bread and butter as quick as ye can spread it."
+
+"Well, Katy!" said Cerissa slowly, with severe emphasis. "When I was a
+girl, my mother used to tell me it wasn't manners to"--
+
+"I haven't got time to hear about yer mother," said Katy rudely. "What
+have ye done with me boy?" The tennis-court lay vacant on the terrace in
+the sun; the steep lawn sloped away and dipped into the trees.
+
+"Don't call," said the cook warily. "It'll only scare her. He was there
+only a minute ago. Run, Katy, and see if he's at the stables."
+
+It was not noticed, except by Mrs. Bogardus, that no Katy, and no boy,
+and no bread and butter, had appeared. Possibly the last deficiency had
+attracted a little playful attention from the young horseback riders,
+who were accusing each other of eating more than their respective
+shares.
+
+At length Miss Sallie perceived there was something on her hostess's
+mind. "Where is John Middleton?" she whispered. "Katy is dressing him
+all over, from head to foot, isn't she? I hope she isn't curling his
+hair. John Middleton has such wonderful hair! I refuse to go back to
+New York till I have introduced you to John Middleton Bogardus," she
+announced to the young man, who laughed at everything she said. Mrs.
+Bogardus smiled vacantly and glanced at the door.
+
+"Let me go find Katy," cried Miss Sally. Katy entered as she spoke,
+and said a few words to the mistress. "Excuse me." Mrs. Bogardus rose
+hastily. She asked Miss Sallie to take her place at the tea-tray.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"The boy--they cannot find him. Don't say anything." She had turned ashy
+white, and Katy's pretty flushed face had a wild expression.
+
+In five minutes the search had begun. Mrs. Bogardus was at the
+telephone, calling up the quarry, for she was short of men. One order
+followed another quickly. Her voice was harsh and deep. She had frankly
+forgotten her guests. Embarrassed by their own uselessness, yet unable
+to take leave, they lingered and discussed the mystery of this sudden,
+acute alarm.
+
+"It is the sore spot," said Miss Sally sentimentally. "You know her
+husband was missing for years before she gave him up; and then that
+dreadful time, three years ago, when they were so frightened about
+Paul."
+
+Having spread the alarm, Mrs. Bogardus took the field in person. Her
+head was bare in the keen, sunset light. She moved with strong, fleet
+steps, but a look of sudden age stamped her face.
+
+"Go back, all of you!" she said to the women, who crowded on her heels.
+"There are plenty of places to look." Her stern eyes resisted their
+frightened sympathy. She was not ready to yield to the consciousness of
+her own fears.
+
+To the old house she went, by some sure instinct that told her the road
+to trouble. But her trouble stood off from her, and spared her for one
+moment of exquisite relief; as if the child of Paul and Moya had no part
+in what was waiting for her. The door at the foot of the stairs stood
+open. She heard a soft, repeated thud. Panting, she climbed the stairs;
+and as she rounded the shoulder of the chimney, there, on the top step
+above her, stood the fair-haired child, making the only light in the
+place. He was knocking, with his foolish ball, on the door of the
+chamber of fear. Three generations of the living and the dead were
+brought together in this coil of fate, and the child, in his happy
+innocence, had joined the knot.
+
+The woman crouching on the stairs could barely whisper, "Middy!" lest
+if she startled him he might turn and fall. He looked down at her,
+unsurprised, and paused in his knocking. "Man--in there--won't 'peak to
+Middy!" he said.
+
+She crept towards him and sat below him, coaxing him into her lap. The
+strange motions of her breast, as she pressed his head against her, kept
+the boy quiet, and in that silence she heard an inner sound--the awful
+pulse of the old clock beating steadily, calling her, demanding the
+evidence of her senses,--she who feared no ghosts,--beating out the
+hours of an agony she was there to witness. And she was yet in time. The
+hapless creature entrapped within that room dragged its weight
+slowly across the floor. The clock, sole witness and companion of its
+sufferings, ticked on impartially. Neither is this any new thing, it
+seemed to say. A life was starved in here before--not for lack of food,
+but love,--love,--love!
+
+She carried the child out into the air, and he ran before her like a
+breeze. The women who met them stared at her sick and desperate face.
+She made herself quickly understood, and as each listener drained her
+meaning the horror spread. There was but one man left on the place,
+within call, he with the boyish face and clean brown hands, who had
+ridden across the fields for an afternoon's idle pleasure. He stepped to
+her side and took the key out of her hand. "You ought not to do this,"
+he said gently, as their eyes met.
+
+"Wednesday, Thursday, Friday," she counted mechanically. "He has been
+in there six days and seven nights by my orders." She looked straight
+before her, seeing no one, as she gave her commands to the women: fire
+and hot water and stimulants, in the kitchen of the old house at once,
+and another man, if one could be found to follow her.
+
+The two figures moving across the grass might have stepped out of an
+illustration in the pages of some current magazine. In their thoughts
+they had already unlocked the door of that living death and were face to
+face with the insupportable facts of nature.
+
+The morbid, sickening, prison odor met them at the door--humanity's
+helpless protest against bolts and bars. Again the young man begged his
+companion not to enter. She took one deep breath of the pure outside
+air and stepped before him. They searched the emptiness of the barely
+furnished room. The clock ticked on to itself. Mrs. Bogardus's companion
+stood irresolute, not knowing the place. The fetid air confused
+his senses. But she went past him through the inner door, guided by
+remembrance of the sounds she had heard.
+
+She had seen it. She approached it cautiously, stooping for a better
+view, and closing in upon it warily, as one cuts off the retreat of a
+creature in the last agonies of flight. Her companion heard her say:
+"Show me your face!--Uncover his face," she repeated, not moving her
+eyes as he stepped behind her. "He will not let me near him. Uncover
+it."
+
+The thing in the corner had some time been a man. There was still enough
+manhood left to feel her eyes and to shrink as an earthworm from the
+spade. He had crawled close to the baseboard of the room. An old man's
+ashen beard straggled through the brown claws wrapped about the face. As
+the dust of the threshing floor to the summer grain, so was his likeness
+to one she remembered.
+
+"I must see that man's face!" she panted. "He will die if I touch him.
+Take away his hands." It was done, with set teeth, and the face of the
+football hero was bathed in sweat. He breathed through tense nostrils,
+and a sickly whiteness spread backward from his lips. Suddenly he loosed
+his burden. It fell, doubling in a ghastly heap, and he rushed for the
+open air.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus groaned. She raised herself up slowly, stretching back her
+head. Her face was like the terrible tortured mask of the Medusa. She
+had but a moment in which to recover herself. Deliberately she spoke
+when her companion returned and stood beside her.
+
+"That was my husband. If he lives I am still his wife. You are not to
+forget this. It is no secret. Are you able to help me now? Get a blanket
+from the women. I hear some one coming."
+
+She waited, with head erect and eyes closed and rigid tortured lips
+apart, till the feet were heard at the door.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+
+Mrs. Remsen and her delicate daughter had driven away to avoid
+excitement and the night air.
+
+Chauncey hovered round the piazza steps, talking, with but little
+encouragement, to Miss Sallie and the young man who had become the
+centre of all eyes.
+
+"I don't see how anybody on the face of the earth could blame her, nor
+me either!" Chauncey protested. "If the critter wanted to git out, why
+couldn't he say so? I stood there holdin' the door open much as five
+minutes. 'Who's in there?' I says. I called it loud enough to wake the
+dead. 'Nobody wants to hurt ye,' says I. There want nothing to be afraid
+of. He hadn't done nothing anyway. It's the strangest case ever I heard
+tell of. And the doctor don't think he was much crazy either."
+
+"Can he live?" asked Miss Sallie.
+
+"He's alive now, but doctor don't know how long he'll last. There he
+comes now. I must go and git his horse."
+
+The doctor, who seemed nervous,--he was a young local
+practitioner,--asked to speak with Miss Sallie's hero apart.
+
+"Did Mrs. Bogardus say anything when she first saw that man? Did you
+notice what she said?--how she took it?"
+
+The hero, who was also a gentleman, looked at the doctor coolly.
+
+"It was not a nice thing," he said. "I saw just as little as I could."
+
+"You don't understand me," said the doctor. "I want to know if Mrs.
+Bogardus appeared to you to have made any discovery--received any shock
+not to be accounted for by--by what you both saw?"
+
+"I shouldn't attempt to answer such a question," said the youngster
+bluntly. "I never saw Mrs. Bogardus in my life before to-day."
+
+The doctor colored. "Mrs. Bogardus has given me a telegram to send, and
+I don't know whether to send it or not. It's going to make a whole lot
+of talk. I am not much acquainted with Mrs. Bogardus myself, except by
+hearsay. That's partly what surprises me. It looks a little reckless
+to send out such a message as that, by the first hand that comes along.
+Hadn't we better give her time to think it over?" He opened the telegram
+for the other to read. "The man himself can't speak. But he just pants
+for breath every time she comes near him: he tries to hide his face. He
+acts like a criminal afraid of being caught."
+
+"He didn't look that way to me--what was left of him. Not in the least
+like a criminal."
+
+"Well, no; that's a fact, too. Now they've got him laid out clean and
+neat, he looks as if he might have been a very decent sort of man. But
+_that_, you know--that's incredible. If she knows him, why doesn't he
+know her? Why won't he own her? He's afraid of her. His eyes are ready
+to burst out of his head whenever she comes near him."
+
+"Did Mrs. Bogardus write that telegram herself?"
+
+"She did."
+
+"And what did she tell you to do with it?"
+
+"Send it to her son."
+
+"Then why don't you send it?"
+
+This was the disputed message: "Come. Your father has been found. Bring
+Doctor Gainsworth."
+
+In the local man's opinion, the writer of that dispatch was Doctor
+Gainsworth's true patient. What could induce a woman in Mrs. Bogardus's
+position to give such hasty publicity to this shocking disclosure,
+allowing it were true? The more he dwelt on it the less he liked the
+responsibility he was taking. He discussed it openly; and, with the
+best intentions, this much-impressed young man gave out his own
+counter-theory of the case, hoping to forestall whatever mischief might
+have been done. He put himself in the place of Mr. Paul Bogardus, whom
+he liked extremely, and tried to imagine that young gentleman's state
+of mind when he should look upon this new-found parent, and learn the
+manner of his resurrection.
+
+This was the explanation he boldly set forth in behalf of those most
+nearly concerned. [He was getting up his diagnosis for an interesting
+half hour with the great doctor who had been called in consultation.]
+The shock of that awful discovery in the locked chamber, he attested,
+had put Mrs. Bogardus temporarily beside herself. Outwardly composed,
+her nerves were ripped and torn by the terrible sight that met her
+eyes. She was the prey of an hallucination founded on memories of former
+suffering, which had worn a channel for every fresh fear to seek. There
+was something truly noble and loyal and pathetic in the nature of her
+possession. It threw a softened light upon her past. How must she have
+brooded, all these years, for that one thought to have ploughed so deep!
+It was quite commonly known in the neighborhood that she had come back
+from the West years ago without her husband, yet with no proof of his
+death. But who could have believed she would cling for half a lifetime
+to this forlorn expectancy, depicting her own loss in every sad hulk of
+humanity cast upon her prosperous shores!
+
+Every one believed she was deceiving herself, but great honor was hers
+among the neighbors for the plain truth and courage of her astonishing
+avowal. They had thought her proud, exclusive, hard in the security
+of wealth. Here she stood by a pauper's bed in the name of simple
+constancy, stripping herself of all earthly surplusage, exposing her
+deepest wound, proclaiming the bond--herself its only witness--between
+her and this speechless wreck, drifting out on the tide of death. She
+had but to let him go. It was the wild word she had spoken in the name
+of truth and deathless love that fired the imagination of that slow
+countryside. It was the touch beyond nature that appeals to the higher
+sense of a community, and there is no community without a soul.
+
+The straight demands of justice are frequently hard to meet, but its
+ironies are crushing. Mrs. Bogardus had fallen back on the line of a
+mother's duty since that moment of personal accountability. She read
+the unspoken reverence in the eyes of all around her, but she put in
+no disclaimer. Her past was not her own. She could not sin alone. Only
+those who have been honest are privileged under all conditions to remain
+so.
+
+On his arrival with the doctor, Paul endeavored first to see his
+mother alone. For some reason she would not have it so. She took the
+unspeakable situation as it came. He was shown into the room where she
+sat, and by her orders Doctor Gainsworth was with him.
+
+She rose quietly and came to meet them. Placing her hand in her son's
+arm, and looking towards the bed, she said:--
+
+"Doctor--my husband."
+
+"Madam!" said Doctor Gainsworth. He had been Mrs. Bogardus's family
+physician for many years.
+
+"My husband," she repeated.
+
+The doctor appeared to accept the statement. As the three approached the
+bed Mrs. Bogardus leaned heavily upon her son. Paul released his arm and
+placed it firmly around her. He felt her shudder. "Mother," he said to
+her with an indescribable accent that tore her heart.
+
+The doctor began his examination. He addressed his patient as "Mr.
+Bogardus."
+
+"Mistake," said a low, husky voice from the bed. "This ain't the man."
+
+Doctor Gainsworth pursued his investigations. "What is your name?" he
+asked the patient suddenly.
+
+The hunted eyes turned with ghastly appeal upon the faces around him.
+
+"Paul, speak to him! Own your father," Mrs. Bogardus whispered
+passionately.
+
+"It is for him to speak now," said Paul. "When he is well, Doctor," he
+added aloud, "he will know his own name."
+
+"This man will never be well," the doctor answered. "If there is
+anything to prove, for or against the identity you claim for him, it
+will have to be done within a very few days."
+
+Doctor Gainsworth rose and held out his hand. He was a man of delicate
+perceptions. His respect at that moment for Mrs. Bogardus, though
+founded on blindest conjecture, was an emotion which the mask of his
+professional manner could barely conceal. "As a friend, Mrs. Bogardus, I
+hope you will command me--but you need no doctor here."
+
+"As a friend I ask you to believe me," she said. "This man _is_ my
+husband. He came back here because this was his home. I cannot tell you
+any more, but this we expect you and every one who knows"--
+
+The dissenting voice from the bed closed her assertion with a hoarse
+"No! Not the man."
+
+"Good-by, Mrs. Bogardus," said the doctor. "Don't trouble to explain.
+You and I have lived too long and seen too much of life not to recognize
+its fatalities: the mysterious trend in the actions of men and women
+that cannot be comprised in--in the locking of a door."
+
+"It is of little consequence--what was done, compared to what was not
+done." This was all the room for truth she could give herself to turn
+in. The doctor did not try to understand her: yet she had snatched a
+little comfort from merely uttering the words.
+
+Paul and the doctor dined together, Mrs. Bogardus excusing herself.
+
+"There seems to be an impression here," said the doctor, examining
+the initials on his fish-fork, "that your mother is indulging an
+overstrained fancy in this melancholy resemblance she has traced.
+It does not appear to have made much headway as a fact, which rather
+surprises me in a country neighborhood. Possibly your doctor here, who
+seems a very good fellow, has wished to spare the family any unnecessary
+explanations. If you'll let me advise you, Paul, I would leave it as
+it is,--open to conjecture. But, in whatever shape this impression
+may reach you from outside, I hope you won't let it disturb you in the
+least, so far as it describes your mother's condition. She is one of the
+few well-balanced women I have had the honor to know."
+
+Paul did not take advantage of the doctor's period. He went on.
+
+"Not that I do know her. Possibly you may not yourself feel that you
+altogether understand your mother? She has had many demands upon her
+powers of adaptation. I should imagine her not one who would adapt
+herself easily, yet, once she had recognized a necessity of that sort,
+I believe she would fit herself to its conditions with an exacting
+thoroughness which in time would become almost, one might say, a second,
+an external self. The 'lendings' we must all of us wear."
+
+"There will be no explanations," said Paul, not coldly, but helplessly.
+
+"Much the best way," said the doctor relieved, and glad to be done with
+a difficult undertaking. "If we are ever understood in this world, it
+is not through our own explanations, but in spite of them. My daughters
+hope to see a good deal of your charming wife this winter. I hear great
+pleasure expressed at your coming back to town."
+
+"Thank you, Doctor. She will be up this evening. We shall stay here
+with my mother for a time. It will be her desire to carry out
+this--recognition--to the end. We must honor her wishes in the matter."
+
+The talk then fell upon the patient's condition. The doctor left certain
+directions and took shelter in professional platitudes, but his eyes
+rested with candid kindness upon the young man, and his farewell
+hand-clasp was a second prolonged.
+
+He went away in a state of simple wonderment, deeply marveling at Paul's
+serenity.
+
+"Extraordinary poise! Where does it come from? No: the boy is happy! He
+hides it; but it is the one change in him. He has experienced a great
+relief. Is it possible"--
+
+On his way down the river the doctor continued to muse upon the dignity,
+the amazingly beautiful behavior of this rising family in whose somewhat
+commonplace city fortunes he had taken a friendly interest for years. He
+owned that he had sounded them with too short a line.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Watching with the dying man hours when she was with him alone, Emily
+Bogardus continued to test his resolution. He never retracted by a
+look--faithful to the word she had spoken which made them strangers.
+
+It was the slightest shell of mortality that ever detained a soul on
+earth. The face, small like the face of an old, old child, waxed finer
+and more spiritual, yet ever more startlingly did it bear the stamp of
+that individuality which the spirit had held so cheap--the earthly
+so impenetrated with the spiritual part that the face had become a
+sublimation. As one sees a sheet of paper covered with writing wither
+in flame and become a quivering ash, yet to the last attenuation of
+its fibre the human characters will stand forth, till all is blown up
+chimney to the stars.
+
+Still, peaceful, implacable in its peace, settling down for the silence
+of eternity. Still no sign.
+
+The younger ones came and went. The little boy stole in alone and pushed
+against his grandmother's knee,--she seated always by the bed,--gazed,
+puzzled, at the strange, still face, and whispered obediently,
+"Gran'faver." There was no response. Once she took the boy and drew him
+close and placed his little tender hand within the dry, crumpled husk
+extended on the bedclothes. The eyes unclosed and rested long and
+earnestly on the face of the child, who yawned as if hypnotized and
+flung his head back on the grandmother's breast. She bent suddenly and
+laid her own hand where the child's had been. The eyes turned inward
+and shut again, but a sigh, so deep it seemed that another breath might
+never come, was all her answer.
+
+Past midnight of the fourth night's watch Paul was awakened by a light
+in his room. His mother stood beside him, white and worn. "He is
+going," she said. It was the final rally of the body's resistance. A
+few moments' expenditure, and that stubborn vitality would loose its
+hold.--The strength of the soil!
+
+The wife stood aside and gave up her place to the children. Her
+expression was noble, like a queen rebuked before her people. There was
+comfort in that, too. A great, solemn, mutual understanding drew this
+death-bed group together. Within the sickle's compass so they stood:
+the woman God gave this man to found a home; the son who inherited
+his father's gentleness and purity of purpose; the fair flower of the
+generations that father's sacrifice had helped him win; the bud of
+promise on the topmost bough. Those astonished eyes shed their last
+earthly light on this human group, turned and rested in the eyes of
+the woman, faded, and the light went out. He died, blessing her in one
+whispered word. Her name.
+
+Before daybreak on the morning of the funeral, Paul awoke under pressure
+of disturbing dreams. There were sounds of hushed movements in the
+house. He traced them to the door of the room below stairs where his
+father lay. Some one had softly unlocked that door, and entered. He knew
+who that one must be. His place was there alone with his mother, before
+they were called together as a family, and the mask of decency resumed
+for those ironic rites in the presence of the unaccusing dead.
+
+The windows had been lowered behind closed curtains, and the air of the
+death chamber, as he entered, was like the touch of chilled iron to the
+warm pulse of sleep. Without, a still dark night of November had frosted
+the dead grass.
+
+The unappeasable curiosity of the living concerning the Great
+Transition, for the moment appeared to have swept all that was personal
+out of the watcher's gaze, as she bent above the straightened body.
+And something of the peace there dawning on the cold, still face was
+reflected in her own.
+
+"You have never seen your father before. There he is." She drew a
+deep sigh, as if she had been too intent to breathe naturally. All her
+self-consciousness suddenly was gone. And Paul remembered his dream,
+that had goaded him out of sleep, and vanished with the shock of waking.
+It gave him the key to this long-expected moment of confidence.
+
+"The old likeness has come back," his mother repeated, with that new
+quietness which restored her to herself.
+
+"I dreamed of that likeness," said Paul, "only it was much
+stronger--startling--so that the room was full of whispers and
+exclamations as the neighbors--there were hundreds of them--filed past.
+And you stood there, mother, flushed, and talking to each person who
+passed and looked at him and then at you; you said--you"--
+
+Mrs. Bogardus raised her head. "I know! I have been thinking all night.
+Am I to do that? Is that what you wish me to do? Don't hesitate--to
+spare me."
+
+"Mother! I could not imagine you doing such a thing. It was like
+insanity. I wanted to tell you how horrible, how unseemly it was,
+because I was sure you had been dwelling on some form--some outward"--
+
+"No," she said. "I know how I should face this if it were left to me.
+But you are my only earthly judge, my son. Judge now between us two. Ask
+of me anything you think is due to him. As to outsiders, what do they
+matter! I will do anything you say."
+
+"_I_ say! Oh, mother! Every hand he loved was against him--bruising his
+gentle will. Each one of us has cast a stone upon his grave. But you
+took the brunt of it. You spoke out plain the denial that was in my
+coward's heart from the first. And I judged you! I--who uncovered
+my father's soul to ease my own conscience, and put him to shame and
+torture, and you to a trial worse than death. Now let us think of the
+whole of his life. I have much to tell you. You could not listen before;
+but now he is listening. I speak for him. This is how he loved us!"
+
+In hard, brief words Paul told the story of his father's sin and
+self-judgment; his abdication in the flesh; what he esteemed the rights
+to be of a woman placed as he had placed his wife; how carefully he had
+guarded her in those rights, and perjured himself at the last to
+leave her free in peace and honor with her children. She listened, not
+weeping, but with her great eyes shining in her pallid face.
+
+"All that came after," said Paul, taking her cold hands in his--"after
+his last solemn recantation does not touch the true spirit of his
+sacrifice. It was finished. My father died to us then as he meant to
+die. The body remained--to serve out its time, as he said. But his brain
+was tired. I do not think he connected the past very clearly with the
+present. I think you should forget what has happened here. It was a
+hideous net of circumstance that did it."
+
+"There is no such thing as circumstance," said Mrs. Bogardus with
+loftiness. Her face was calm and sweet in its exaltation. "I cannot
+say things as you can, but this is what I mean. I was the wife of his
+body--sworn flesh of his flesh. In the flesh that made us one I denied
+him, and caused his death. And if I could believe as I used to about
+punishment, I would lock myself in that room, and for every hour he
+suffered there, I would suffer two. And no one should prevent me,
+or hasten the end. And the feet of the young men that carried out my
+husband who lied to save me, should wait there for me who lied to save
+myself. All lies are death. But what is a made-up punishment to me! I
+shall take it as it comes--drop by drop--slowly."
+
+"Mother--my mother! The fashion of this world does not last; but one
+thing does. Is it nothing to you, mother?"
+
+"Have I my son--after all?" she said as one dreaming.
+
+The night lamp expired in smoke that tainted the cold air. Paul drew
+back the curtains one by one, and let in the new-born day.
+
+"'Peace to this house,'" he said; "'not as the world giveth,'" his
+thought concluded.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Desert and the Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ .side { float: right; font-size: 75%; width: 25%; padding-left: 0.8em;
+ border-left: dashed thin; margin-left: 0.8em; text-align: left;
+ text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
+ font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Desert and The Sown
+
+Author: Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8219]
+This file was first posted on July 3, 2003
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DESERT AND THE SOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Eric Eldred, Clay Massei and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE DESERT AND THE SOWN
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Mary Hallock Foote
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> I. &mdash; A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> II. &mdash; INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> III. &mdash; THE INITIAL LOVE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV. &mdash; A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN
+ COURT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> V. &mdash; DISINHERITED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI. &mdash; AN APPEAL TO NATURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> VII. &mdash; MARKING TIME </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VIII. &mdash; A HUNTER'S DIARY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> IX. &mdash; THE POWER OF WEAKNESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> X. &mdash; THE WHITE PERIL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> XI. &mdash; A SEARCHING OF HEARTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> XII. &mdash; THE BLOOD-WITE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XIII. &mdash; CURTAIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XIV. &mdash; KIND INQUIRIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XV. &mdash; A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XVI. &mdash; THE NATURE OF AN OATH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XVII. &mdash; THE HIDDEN TRAIL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XVIII. &mdash; THE STAR IN THE EAST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XIX. &mdash; PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XX. &mdash; A STATION IN THE DESERT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> XXI. &mdash; INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD
+ HOUSE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XXII. &mdash; THE CASE STRIKES IN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XXIII. &mdash; RESTIVENESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXIV. &mdash; INDIAN SUMMER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXV. &mdash; THE FELL FROST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXVI. &mdash; PEACE TO THIS HOUSE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. &mdash; A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was an evening of sudden mildness following a dry October gale. The
+ colonel had miscalculated the temperature by one log&mdash;only one, he
+ declared, but that had proved a pitchy one, and the chimney bellowed with
+ flame. From end to end the room was alight with it, as if the stored-up
+ energies of a whole pine-tree had been sacrificed in the consumption of
+ that four-foot stick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young persons of the house had escaped, laughing, into the fresh night
+ air, but the colonel was hemmed in on every side; deserted by his
+ daughter, mocked by the work of his own hands, and torn between the duties
+ of a host and the host's helpless craving for his after-dinner cigar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the hearth, filling with her silks all the visible room in his own
+ favorite settle corner, sat the one woman on earth it most behooved him to
+ be civil to,&mdash;the future mother-in-law of his only child. That Moya
+ was a willing, nay, a reckless hostage, did not lessen her father's awe of
+ the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus, according to her wont at this hour, was composedly doing
+ nothing. The colonel could not make his retreat under cover of her real or
+ feigned absorption in any of the small scattering pursuits which distract
+ the female mind. When she read she read&mdash;she never &ldquo;looked at books.&rdquo;
+ When she sewed she sewed&mdash;presumably, but no one ever saw her do it.
+ Her mind was economic and practical, and she saved it whole, like many men
+ of force, for whatever she deemed her best paying sphere of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a silence that crackled with heat! The colonel, wrathfully
+ perspiring in the glow of that impenitent stick, frowned at it like an
+ inquisitor. Presently Mrs. Bogardus looked up, and her expression softened
+ as she saw the energetic despair upon his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, don't you always smoke after dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is my bad habit, madam. I belong to the generation that smokes&mdash;after
+ dinner and most other times&mdash;more than is good for us.&rdquo; Colonel
+ Middleton belonged also to the generation that can carry a sentence
+ through to the finish in handsome style, and he did it with a suave
+ Virginian accent as easy as his seat in the saddle. Mrs. Bogardus always
+ gave him her respectful attention during his best performances, though she
+ was a woman of short sentences herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you smoke in this room sometimes?&rdquo; she asked, with a barely
+ perceptible sniff the merest contraction of her housewifely nostrils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;h! Those rascally curtains and cushions! You ladies&mdash;women,
+ I should say&mdash;Moya won't let me say ladies&mdash;you bolster us up
+ with comforts on purpose to betray us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can say 'ladies' to me,&rdquo; smiled the very handsome one before him.
+ &ldquo;That's the generation <i>I</i> belong to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel bowed playfully. &ldquo;Well, you know, I don't detect myself, but
+ there's no doubt I have infected the premises.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open fires are good ventilators. I wish you would smoke now. If you
+ don't, I shall have to go away, and I'm exceedingly comfortable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are exceedingly charming to say so&mdash;on top of that last stick,
+ too!&rdquo; The colonel had Irish as well as Virginian progenitors. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he
+ sighed, proceeding to make himself conditionally happy, &ldquo;Moya will never
+ forgive me! We spoil each other shamefully when we're alone, but of course
+ we try to jack each other up when company comes. It's a great comfort to
+ have some one to spoil, isn't it, now? I needn't ask which it is in your
+ family!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The spoiled one?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus smiled rather coldly. &ldquo;A woman we had for
+ governess, when Christine was a little thing, used to say: 'That child is
+ the stuff that tyrants are made of!' Tyrants are made by the will of their
+ subjects, don't you think, generally speaking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you couldn't have made a tyrant of your son, Mrs. Bogardus. He's
+ the Universal Spoiler! He'll ruin my striker, Jephson. I shall have to
+ send the fellow back to the ranks. I don't know how you keep a servant
+ good for anything with Paul around.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul thinks he doesn't like to be waited on,&rdquo; Paul's mother observed
+ shrewdly. &ldquo;He says that only invalids, old people, and children have any
+ claim on the personal service of others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By George! I found him blacking his own boots!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I'm paying a man to do it for him. It upsets my contract with that
+ other fellow for Paul to do his work. We have a claim on what we pay for
+ in this world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose we have. But Paul thinks that nothing can pay the price of
+ those artificial relations between man and man. I think that's the way he
+ puts it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Heavens! Has the boy read history? It's a relation that began when
+ the world was made, and will last while men are in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not defending Paul's ideas, Colonel. I have a great sympathy with
+ tyrants myself. You must talk to him. He will amuse you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My word! It's a ticklish kind of amusement when <i>we</i> get talking.
+ Why, the boy wants to turn the poor old world upside down&mdash;make us
+ all stand on our heads to give our feet a rest. Now, I respect my feet,&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ colonel drew them in a little as the lady's eyes involuntarily took the
+ direction of his allusion,&mdash;&ldquo;I take the best care I can of them; but
+ I propose to keep my head, such as it is, on top, till I go under
+ altogether. These young philanthropists! They assume that the Hands and
+ the Feet of the world, the class that serves in that capacity, have got
+ the same nerves as the Brain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a sort of connection,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus carelessly. &ldquo;Some of
+ our Heads have come from the class that you call the Hands and Feet,
+ haven't they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel admitted the fact, but the fact was the exception. &ldquo;Why,
+ that's just the matter with us now! We've got no class of legislators. I
+ don't wish to plume myself, but, upon my word, the two services are about
+ all we have left to show what selection and training can do. And we're
+ only just getting the army into shape, after the raw material that was
+ dumped into it by the civil war.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weren't you in the civil war yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was&mdash;a West Pointer, madam; and I was true to my salt and false to
+ my blood. But, the flag over all!&mdash;at the cost of everything I held
+ dear on earth.&rdquo; After this speech the colonel looked hotter than ever and
+ a trifle ashamed of himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus's face wore its most unobservant expression. &ldquo;I don't agree
+ with Paul,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I wish in some ways he were more like other young
+ men&mdash;exercise, for instance. It's a pity for young men not to love
+ activity and leadership. Besides, it's the fashion. A young man might as
+ well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Blood is a strange thing,&rdquo;
+ she mused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel looked at her curiously. In a woman so unfrank, her occasional
+ bursts of frankness were surprising and, as he thought, not altogether
+ complimentary. It was as if she felt herself so far removed from his
+ conception of her that she might say anything she pleased, sure of his
+ miscomprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not lazy intellectually,&rdquo; said the colonel, aiming to comfort her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not say he was lazy&mdash;only he won't do things except to what he
+ calls some 'purpose.' At his age amusement ought to be purpose enough. He
+ ought to take his pleasures seriously&mdash;this hunting-trip, for
+ instance. I believe, on the very least encouragement, he would give it all
+ up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mustn't let him do that,&rdquo; said the colonel, warming. &ldquo;All that
+ country above Yankee Fork, for a hundred miles, after you've gone fifty
+ north from Bonanza, is practically virgin forest. Wonderful flora and
+ fauna! It's late for the weeds and things, but if Paul wants game trophies
+ for your country-house, he can load a pack-train.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus continued to be amused, in a quiet way. &ldquo;He calls them
+ relics of barbarism! He would as soon festoon his walls with scalps, as
+ decorate them with the heads of beautiful animals,&mdash;nearer the
+ Creator's design than most men, he would say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's right there! But that doesn't change the distinction between men and
+ animals. He is your son, madam&mdash;and he's going to be mine. But, fine
+ boy as he is, I call him a crank of the first water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll find him quite good to Moya,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus remarked
+ dispassionately. &ldquo;And he's not quite twenty-four.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true. Well, <i>I</i> should send him into the woods for the sake of
+ getting a little sense into him, of an every-day sort. He 'll take in
+ sanity with every breath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you don't think it's too late in the season for them to go out?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no change in Mrs. Bogardus's voice, unconcerned as it was; yet
+ the colonel felt at once that this simple question lay at the root of all
+ her previous skirmishing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The guide will decide as to that,&rdquo; he said definitely. &ldquo;If it is, he
+ won't go out with them. They have got a good man, you say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are waiting for a good man; they have waited too long, I think. He
+ is expected in with another party on Monday, perhaps, Paul is to meet the
+ Bowens at Challis, where they buy their outfit. I do believe&rdquo;&mdash;she
+ laughed constrainedly&mdash;&ldquo;that he is going up there more to head them
+ off than for any other reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it's very stupid of them! They seem to think an army post is part of
+ the public domain. They have been threatening, if Paul gives up the trip,
+ to come down here on a gratuitous visit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, let them come by all means! The more the merrier! We will quarter
+ them on the garrison at large.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherever they were quartered, they would be here all the time. They are
+ not intimate friends of Paul's. <i>Mrs.</i> Bowen is&mdash;a very great
+ friend. He is her right-hand in all that Hartley House work. The boys are
+ just fashionable young men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can't they go hunting without Paul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wheels within wheels!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus sighed impatiently. &ldquo;Hunting trips
+ are expensive, and&mdash;when young men are living on their fathers, it is
+ convenient sometimes to have a third. However, Paul goes, I half believe,
+ to prevent their making a descent upon us here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; I should ask them to come, or make it plain they were not
+ expected.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, would you?&mdash;if their mother was one of the nicest women, and
+ your friend? Besides, the reservation does not cover the whole valley.
+ Banks Bowen talks of a mine he wants to look at&mdash;I don't think it
+ will make much difference to the mine! This is simply to say that I wish
+ Paul cared more about the trip for its own sake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, frankly, I think he's better out of the way for the next fortnight.
+ The girls ought to go to bed early, and keep the roses in their cheeks for
+ the wedding. Moya's head is full of her frocks and fripperies. She is
+ trying to run a brace of sewing women; and all those boxes are coming from
+ the East to be 'inspected, and condemned' mostly. The child seems to make
+ a great many mistakes, doesn't she? About every other day I see a box as
+ big as a coffin in the hall, addressed to some dry-goods house, 'returned
+ by &mdash;&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya should have sent to me for her things,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus. &ldquo;I am
+ the one who makes her return them. She can do much better when she is in
+ town herself. It doesn't matter, for the few weeks they will be away, what
+ she wears. I shall take her measures home with me and set the people to
+ work. She has never been <i>fitted</i> in her life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel looked rather aghast. He had seldom heard Mrs. Bogardus speak
+ with so much animation. He wondered if really his household was so very
+ far behind the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's very kind of you, I'm sure, if Moya will let you. Most girls think
+ they can manage these matters for themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's impossible to shop by mail,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus said decidedly. &ldquo;They
+ always keep a certain style of things for the Western and Southern trade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel was crushed. Mrs. Bogardus rose, and he picked up her
+ handkerchief, breathing a little hard after the exertion. She passed out,
+ thanking him with a smile as he opened the door. In the hall she stopped
+ to choose a wrap from a collection of unconventional garments hanging on a
+ rack of moose horns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I shall go out,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The air is quite soft to-night. Do
+ you know which way the children went?&rdquo; By the &ldquo;children,&rdquo; as the colonel
+ had noted, Mrs. Bogardus usually meant her daughter, the budding tyrant,
+ Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fine woman!&rdquo; he mused, alone with himself in his study. &ldquo;Splendid
+ character head. Regular Dutch beauty. But hard&mdash;eh?&mdash;a trifle
+ hard in the grain. Eyes that tell you nothing. Mouth set like a stone.
+ Never rambles in her talk. Never speculates or exaggerates for fun. Never
+ runs into hyperbole&mdash;the more fool some other folks! Speaks to the
+ point or keeps still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. &mdash; INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The colonel's papers failed to hold him somehow. He rose and paced the
+ room with his short, stiff-kneed tread. He stopped and stared into the
+ fire; his face began to get red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So! Moya's clothes are not good enough. Going to set the people to work,
+ is she? Wants an outfit worthy of her son. And who's to pay for it, by
+ gad? Post-nuptial bills for wedding finery are going to hurt poor little
+ Moya like the deuce. Confound the woman! Dressing my daughter for me,
+ right in my own house. Takes it in her hands as if it were her right, by&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo;
+ The colonel let slip another expletive. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he sighed, half amused at
+ his own violence, &ldquo;I'll write to Annie. I promised Moya, and it's high
+ time I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Annie was the colonel's sister, the wife of an infantry captain, stationed
+ at Fort Sherman. She was a very understanding woman; at least she
+ understood her brother. But she was not solely dependent upon his laggard
+ letters for information concerning his private affairs. The approaching
+ wedding at Bisuka Barracks was the topic of most of the military families
+ in the Department of the Columbia. Moya herself had written some time
+ before, in the self-conscious manner of the newly engaged. Her aunt knew
+ of course that Moya and Christine Bogardus had been room-mates at Miss
+ Howard's, that the girls had fallen in love with each other first, and
+ with visits at holidays and vacations, when the army girl could not go to
+ her father, it was easily seen how the rest had followed. And well for
+ Moya that it had, was Mrs. Creve's indorsement. As a family they were
+ quite sufficiently represented in the army; and if one should ever get an
+ Eastern detail it would be very pleasant to have a young niece charmingly
+ settled in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel drew a match across the top bar of the grate and set it to his
+ pipe. His big nostrils whitened as he took a deep in-breath. He reseated
+ himself and began his duty letter in the tone of a judicious parent; but,
+ warming as he wrote, under the influence of Annie's imagined sympathy, he
+ presently broke forth with his usual arrogant colloquialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She might have had her pick of the junior officers in both branches. And
+ there was a captain of engineers at the Presidio, a widower, but an
+ awfully good fellow. And she has chosen a boy, full of transcendental
+ moonshine, who climbs upon a horse as if it were a stone fence, and has
+ mixed ideas which side of himself to hang a pistol on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no particular quarrel with the lad, barring his great burly
+ mouthful of a name, Bo&mdash;gardus! To call a child Moya and have her
+ fetch up with her soft, Irish vowels against such a name as that! She had
+ a fond idea that it was from Beauregard. But she has had to give that up.
+ It's Dutch&mdash;Hudson River Dutch&mdash;for something horticultural&mdash;a
+ tree, or an orchard, or a brush-pile; and she says it's a good name where
+ it belongs. Pity it couldn't have stayed where it belongs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;However, you won't find him quite so scrubby as he sounds. He's very
+ proper and clean-shaven, with a good pair of dark, Dutch eyes, which he
+ gets from his mother; and I wish he had got her business ability with
+ them, and her horse sense, if the lady will excuse me. She runs the
+ property and he spends it, as far as she'll let him, on the newest
+ reforms. And there's another hitch!&mdash;To belong to the Truly Good at
+ twenty-four! But beggars can't be choosers. He's going to settle something
+ handsome on Moya out of the portion Madame gives him on his marriage. My
+ poor little girl, as you know, will get nothing from me but a few old bits
+ and trinkets and a father's blessing,&mdash;the same doesn't go for much
+ in these days. I have been a better dispenser than accumulator, like
+ others of our name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do assure you, Annie, it bores me down to the ground, this humanitarian
+ racket from children with ugly names who have just chipped the shell. This
+ one owns his surprise that we <i>work</i> in the army! That our junior
+ officers teach, and study a bit perforce themselves. His own idea is that
+ every West Pointer, before he gets his commission, should serve a year or
+ two in the ranks, to raise the type of the enlisted man, and chiefly, mark
+ you, to get his point of view, the which he is to bear in mind when he
+ comes to his command. Oh, we've had some pretty arguments! But I suspect
+ the rascal of drawing it mild, at this stage, for the old dragon who
+ guards his Golden Apple. He doesn't want to poke me up. How far he'd go if
+ he were not hampered in his principles by the fact that he is in love, I
+ cannot say. And I'd rather not imagine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commandant's house at Bisuka Barracks is the nearest one to the
+ flag-pole as you go up a flight of wooden steps from the parade ground.
+ These steps, and their landings, flanked by the dry grass terrace of the
+ line, are a favorite gathering place for young persons of leisure at the
+ Post. They face the valley and the mountains; they lead past the
+ adjutant's office to the main road to town; they command the daily pageant
+ of garrison duty as performed at such distant, unvisited posts, with only
+ the ladies and the mountains looking on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Retreat had sounded at half after five, for the autumn days grew short.
+ The colonel's orderly had been dismissed to his quarters. There was no
+ excuse, at this hour, for two young persons lingering in sentimental
+ corners of the steps, beyond a flagrant satisfaction in the shadow thereof
+ which covered them since the lighting of lamps on Officers' Row.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel stood at his study window keeping his pipe alive with slow and
+ dreamy puffs. The moon was just clearing the roof of the men's quarters.
+ His eye caught a shape, or a commingling of shapes, ensconced in an angle
+ of the steps; the which he made out to be his daughter, in her light
+ evening frock with one of his own old army capes over her shoulders,
+ seated in close formation beside the only man at the Post who wore
+ civilian black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel had the feelings of a man as well as a father. He went back to
+ his letter with a softened look in his face. He had said too much; he
+ always did&mdash;to Annie; and now he must hedge a little or she would
+ think there was trouble brewing, and that he was going to be nasty about
+ Moya's choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. &mdash; THE INITIAL LOVE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us be simple! Not every one can be, but we can. We can afford to be,
+ and we know how!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya was speaking rapidly, in her singularly articulate tones. A reader of
+ voices would have pronounced hers the physical record of unbroken health
+ and constant, joyous poise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear the word of your prophet Emerson!&rdquo; she brought a little fist down
+ upon her knee for emphasis, a hand several sizes larger closed upon it and
+ held it fast. &ldquo;Hear the word&mdash;are you listening? 'Only <i>two</i> in
+ the Garden walked and with Snake and Seraph talked.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man's answer was an instant's impassioned silence. Too close it
+ touched him, that vital image of the Garden. Then, with an effect of
+ sternness, he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have we the right to do as we please? Have we the courage that comes of
+ right to cut ourselves off from all those calls and cries for help?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> have,&rdquo; said the girl; &ldquo;I have just that right&mdash;of one who
+ knows exactly what she wants, and is going to get it if she can!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed at her happy insolence, with which all the youth and nature in
+ him made common cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shouldn't mind thinking about your Poor Man,&rdquo; she tripped along, &ldquo;if he
+ liked being poor, or if it seemed to improve him any; or if it were only
+ now and then. But there is so dreadfully much of him! Once we begin, how
+ should we ever think about anything else? He'd rise up and sit down with
+ us, and eat and drink with us, and tell us what to wear. Every pleasure of
+ our lives would be spoiled with his eternal 'Where do <i>I</i> come in?'
+ It was simple enough in <i>that</i> garden, with only those two and nobody
+ outside to feel injured. But we are those two, aren't we? Isn't everybody&mdash;once
+ in a life, and once only?&rdquo; She turned her face aside, slighting by her
+ manner the excessive meaning of her words. &ldquo;I ask for myself only what I
+ think I have a right to give you&mdash;my absolute undivided attention for
+ those first few years. They say it never lasts!&rdquo; she hastened to add with
+ playful cynicism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Bogardus seemed incapable under the circumstances of any adequate
+ reply. Free as they were in words, there was an extreme personal shyness
+ between these proud young persons, undeveloped on the side of passion and
+ better versed in theories of life than in life itself. They had separated
+ the day after their sudden engagement, and their nearest approaches to
+ intimacy had been through letters. Naturally the girl was the bolder,
+ having less in herself to fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is what <i>I</i> call being simple,&rdquo; she went on briskly. &ldquo;If you
+ think we can be that in New York, let us live there. <i>I</i> could be
+ simple there, but not with you, sir! That terrible East Side would be
+ shaking its gory locks at us. We should feel that we did it&mdash;or you
+ would! Then good-by to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are my life, liberty, and happiness, and I will be your almoner,&rdquo;
+ said Paul, &ldquo;and dispense you&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dispense <i>with</i> me!&rdquo; laughed the girl. &ldquo;And what shall I be doing
+ while you are dispensing me on the East Side? New York has other sides.
+ While you go slumming with the Seraph, I shall be talking to the Snake!
+ Now, <i>do</i> laugh!&rdquo; she entreated childishly, turning her sparkling
+ face to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I expected to laugh at that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what shall we do? Don't make me harden my heart before it has had
+ time to soften naturally. Give my poor pagan sympathies a little time to
+ ripen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you have lived in New York. Did you find it such a strain on your
+ sympathies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was a visitor; and a girl is not expected to have sympathies. But to
+ begin our home there: we should have to strike a note of some sort. How if
+ my note should jar with yours? Paul, dear, it isn't nice to have
+ convictions when one is young and going to be married. You know it isn't.
+ It's not poetic, and it's not polite, and it's a dreadful bore!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The altruist and lover winced at this. Allowing for exaggeration, which
+ was the life of speech with her, he knew that Moya was giving him a bit of
+ her true self, that changeful, changeless self which goes behind all law
+ and &ldquo;follows joy and only joy.&rdquo; Her voice dropped into its sweetest tones
+ of intimacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why need we live in a crowd? Why must we be pressed upon with all this
+ fuss and doing? Doing, doing! We are not ready to do anything yet. Every
+ day must have its dawn;&mdash;and I don't see my way yet; I'm hardly
+ awake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Darling, hush! You must not say such things to me. For you only to look
+ at me like that is the most terrible temptation of my life. You make me
+ forget everything a man is bound&mdash;that I of all men am bound to
+ remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will keep on looking! Behold, I am Happiness, Selfishness, if you
+ like! I have come to stay. No, really, it's not nice of you to act as if
+ you were under higher orders. You are under my orders. What right have we
+ to choose each other if we are not to be better to each other than to any
+ one else?&mdash;if our lives belong to any one who needs us, or our time
+ and money, more than we need it ourselves? Why did you choose me? Why not
+ somebody pathetic&mdash;one of your Poor Things; or else save yourself
+ whole for all the Poor Things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you are 'talking for victory,'&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;You don't believe we must
+ be as consistent as all that. Hearts don't have to be coddled like pears
+ picked for market. But I'm not preaching to you. The heavens forbid! I'm
+ trying to explain. You don't think this whole thing with me is a pose? I
+ know I'm a bore with my convictions; but how do we come by such things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! How do I come not to have any, or to want any?&rdquo; she rejoined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once for all, let me tell you how I came by mine. Then you will know just
+ where and how those cries for help take hold on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't wish to know. Preserve me from knowing! Why didn't you choose
+ somebody different?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her with all his passion in his eyes. &ldquo;I did not choose. Did
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn't too late,&rdquo; she whispered. Her face grew hot in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; it is too late&mdash;for anything but the truth. Will you listen,
+ sweet? Will you let the nonsense wait?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Deeper and deeper! Haven't we reached the bottom yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on! It's the dearest nonsense,&rdquo; she heard him say; but she detected
+ pain in his voice and a new constraint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it? What is the 'truth'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it's not so dreadful. Only, you always put me in quite a different
+ class from where I belong, and I haven't had the courage to set you
+ right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Children, children!&rdquo; a young voice called, from the lighted walk above.
+ Two figures were going down the line, one in uniform keeping step beside a
+ girl in white who reefed back her skirts with one hand, the other was
+ raised to her hair which was blowing across her forehead in bewitching
+ disorder. Every gesture and turn of her shape announced that she was
+ pretty and gay in the knowledge of her power. It was Chrissy, walking with
+ Lieutenant Lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are you&mdash;ridiculous ones? Don't you want to come with us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Now who were they?'&rdquo; Paul quoted derisively out of the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are going to Captain Dawson's to play Hearts. Come! Don't be stupid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not stupid, we are busy!&rdquo; Moya called back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Busy! Doing what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, deciding things. We are talking about the Poor Man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The poor men, she means.&rdquo; Christine's high laugh followed the
+ lieutenant's speech, as the pair went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He <i>is</i> a bore!&rdquo; Moya declared. &ldquo;We can't even use him for a joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speaking of Lane, dear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Poor Man. Are you sure that you've got a sense of humor, Paul? Can't
+ we have charity for jokes among the other poor things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul had raised himself to the step beside her. &ldquo;You are shivering,&rdquo; he
+ said, &ldquo;I must let you go in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not shivering&mdash;I'm chattering,&rdquo; she mocked. &ldquo;Why should I go in
+ when we are going to be really serious?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul waited a moment; his breath came short, as if he were facing a
+ postponed dread. &ldquo;Moya, dear,&rdquo; he began in a forced tone, &ldquo;I can't help my
+ constraints and convictions that bore you so, any more than you can help
+ your light heart&mdash;God bless it&mdash;and your theory of class which
+ to me seems mediaeval. I have cringed to it, like the coward a man is when
+ he is in love. But now I want you to know me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took her hand and kissed it repeatedly, as if impressing upon her the
+ one important fact back of all hypothesis and perilous efforts at
+ statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, are you bidding me good-by?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must give me time,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It takes courage in these days for a
+ good American to tell the girl he loves that his father was a hired man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled, but there was little mirth and less color in his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What absurdity!&rdquo; cried Moya. Then glancing at him she added quickly, &ldquo;<i>My</i>
+ father is a hired man. Most fathers who are worth anything are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father was because he came of that class. His father was one before
+ him. His mother took in tailoring in the village where he was born. He had
+ only the commonest common-school education and not much of that. At eleven
+ he worked for his board and clothes at my Grandfather Van Elten's, and
+ from that time he earned his bread with his hands. Don't imagine that I'm
+ apologizing,&rdquo; Paul went on rapidly. &ldquo;The apology belongs on the other
+ side. In New York, for instance, the Bogardus blood is quite as good as
+ the Bevier or the Broderick or the Van Elten; but up the Hudson, owing to
+ those chances or mischances that selected our farming aristocracy for us,
+ my father's people had slipped out of their holdings and sunk to the poor
+ artisan class which the old Dutch landowners held in contempt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not landowners,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;What does it matter? What does any of
+ it matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It matters to be honest and not sail under false colors. I thought you
+ would not speak of the Poor Man as you do if you knew that I am his son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Money has nothing to do with position in the army. I am a poor man's
+ daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, child! Your father gives orders&mdash;mine took them, all his life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father has to take what he gives. There is no escaping 'orders.' Even
+ I know that!&rdquo; said Moya. A slight shiver passed over her as she spoke,
+ laughing off as usual the touch of seriousness in her words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did you do that?&rdquo; Paul touched her shoulder. &ldquo;Is it the wind? There
+ is a wind creeping down these steps.&rdquo; He improved the formation slightly
+ in respect to the wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;Isn't that your mother walking on the porch? Father,
+ I know, is writing. She will be lonely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is never lonely, more or less. It is always the same loneliness&mdash;of
+ a woman widowed for years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How very much she must have cared for him!&rdquo; Moya sighed incredulously.
+ What a pity, she thought, that among the humbler vocations Paul's father
+ should have been just a plain &ldquo;hired man.&rdquo; Cowboy, miner, man-o'-war's
+ man, even enlisted man, though that were bad enough&mdash;any of these he
+ might have been in an accidental way, that at least would have been
+ picturesque; but it is only the possession of land, by whatsoever means or
+ title, that can dignify an habitual personal contact with it in the form
+ of soil. That is one of the accepted prejudices which one does not meddle
+ with at nineteen. &ldquo;Youth is conservative because it is afraid.&rdquo; Moya, for
+ all her fighting blood, was traditionally and in social ways much more in
+ bonds than Paul, who had inherited his father's dreamy speculative habit
+ of thought, with something of the farm-hand's distrust of society and its
+ forms and shibboleth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul's voice took a narrative tone, and Moya gave herself up to listening&mdash;to
+ him rather more, perhaps, than to his story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few young men of twenty-four can go very deeply into questions of
+ heredity. Of what follows here much was not known to Paul. Much that he
+ did know he would have interpreted differently. The old well at Stone
+ Ridge, for instance, had no place in his recital; and yet out of it sprang
+ the history of his shorn generation. Had Paul's mother grown up in a
+ houseful of brothers and sisters, governed by her mother instead of an old
+ ignorant servant, in all likelihood she would have married differently&mdash;more
+ wisely but not perhaps so well, her son would loyally have maintained. The
+ sons of the rich farmers who would have been her suitors were men inferior
+ to their fathers. They inherited the vigor and coarseness of constitution,
+ the unabashed materialism of that earlier generation that spent its
+ energies coping with Nature on its stony farms, but the sons were spared
+ the need of that hard labor which their blood required. They supplied an
+ element of force, but one of great corruption later, in the state politics
+ of their time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. &mdash; A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the kitchen court called the &ldquo;Airy&rdquo; at Abraham Van Elten's, there was
+ one of those old family wells which our ancestors used to locate so
+ artlessly. And when it tapped the kitchen drain, and typhoid took the
+ elder children, and the mother followed the children, it was called the
+ will of God. A gloomy distinction rested on the house. Abraham felt the
+ importance attaching to any supreme experience in a community where life
+ runs on in the middle key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young doctor who had been called in at the close of the last case went
+ prying about the premises, asking foolish questions that angered Abraham.
+ It is easier for some natures to suffer than to change. If the farmer had
+ ever drunk water himself, except as tea or coffee, or mixed with something
+ stronger, he must have been an early victim, to his own crass ignorance.
+ He was a vigorous, heavy-set man, a grand field for typhoid. But he
+ prospered, and the young doctor was turned down with the full weight and
+ breadth of the Van Elten thumb, or the Broderick; Abraham's build was that
+ of his maternal grandmother, Hillotje Broderick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Ridge, which later developed into a valuable slate quarry, there
+ was a spring of water, cold and perpetual, flowing out of the
+ trap-formation. Abraham had piped this water down to his barns and
+ cattle-sheds; it furnished power for the farm-work. But to bring it to the
+ house, in obedience to the doctor's meddlesome advice, would be an
+ acknowledgment of fatal mistakes in the past; would raise talk and blame
+ among the neighbors, and do away with the honor of a special visitation;
+ would cost no trifle of money; would justify the doctor's interference,
+ and insult the old well of his father and his father's father, the
+ fountain of generations. To seal its mouth and bid its usefulness cease in
+ the house where it had ministered for upwards of a hundred years was an
+ act of desecration impossible to the man who in his stolid way loved the
+ very stones that lined its slimy sides. The few sentiments that had taken
+ hold on Abraham's arid nature went as deep as his obstinacy and clung as
+ fast as his distrust of new opinions and new men. The question of water
+ supply was closed in his house; but the well remained open and kept up its
+ illicit connection with the drain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Becky, keeper of the widower's keys, had followed closely the history
+ of those unhappy &ldquo;cases;&rdquo; she had listened to discussions, violent or
+ suppressed, she had heard much talk that went on behind her master's back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Employers of that day and generation were masters; and masters are meant
+ to be outwitted. Emily, the youngest and last of the flock, was now a
+ child of four, dark like her mother, sturdy and strong like her father. On
+ an August day soon after the mother's funeral, Becky took her little
+ charge to the well and showed her a tumbler filled, with water not freshly
+ drawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See them little specks and squirmy things?&rdquo; Emmy saw them. She followed
+ their wavering motion in the glass as the stern forefinger pointed. &ldquo;Those
+ are little baby snakes,&rdquo; said Becky mysteriously. &ldquo;The well is full of
+ 'em. Sometimes you can see 'em, sometimes you can't, but they're always
+ there. They never grow big down the well; it's too dark 'n' cold. But you
+ drink that water and the snakes will grow and wriggle and work all through
+ ye, and eat your insides out, and you'll die. Your mother&rdquo;&mdash;in a
+ whisper&mdash;&ldquo;she drunk that water, and she died. Your sister Ruth, and
+ Dirck, and Jimmy, they drunk it, and they died. Now if Emmy wants to die&rdquo;&mdash;Large
+ eyes of horror fastened on the speaker's face. &ldquo;No&mdash;o, she don't want
+ to die, the Loveums! She don't want Becky to have no little girl left at
+ all! No; we mustn't ever drink any of that bad water&mdash;all full of
+ snakes, ugh! But if Emmy's thirsty, see here! Here's good nice water. It's
+ going to be always here in this pail&mdash;same water the little lambs
+ drink up in the fields. Becky 'll take Emmy up on the hill sometime and
+ show where the little lambs drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grief had not clouded the farmer's oversight in petty things. He noticed
+ the innocent pail on the area bench, never empty, always specklessly
+ clean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is this water?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becky was surly. &ldquo;Drinking water. Want some?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's it doing here all the time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I set it there for Emmy. She can't reach up to the bucket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham tasted the water suspiciously. The well-water was hard, with a
+ tang of iron. The spring soft, and less cold for its journey to the barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where did you get this water?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help yourself. There's plenty more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Becky, where did this water come from? Out o' the well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becky gave a snort of exasperation. &ldquo;Sam Lewis brought it from the barn!
+ I'm too lame to be histin' buckets. I've got the rheumatiz' awful in my
+ back and shoulders, if ye want to know!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Becky, you're lying to me. You've been listening to what don't concern
+ you. Now, see here. You are not going to ask the men to carry water for
+ you. They've got something else to do. <i>There's</i> your water, as handy
+ as ever a woman had it; use that or go without.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham caught up the pail and flung its contents out upon the grass,
+ scattering the hens that came sidling back with squawks of inquiring
+ temerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When next Emmy came for water, the old woman took her by the hand in
+ silence and led her into the dim meat-cellar, a half-basement with one low
+ window level with the grass. There was the pail, safe hidden behind the
+ soft-soap barrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had to hide it from your pa,&rdquo; Becky whispered. &ldquo;Don't you never let him
+ know you're afraid o' the well-water. He drunk it when he was a little
+ boy. He don't believe in the snakes. But <i>there wa'n't none then</i>.
+ It's when water gets old and rotten. You can believe what Becky says. <i>She</i>
+ knows! But you mustn't ever tell. Your father 'd be as mad as fire if he
+ knowed I said anything about snakes. He'd send me right away, and some
+ strange woman would come, and maybe she'd whip Emmy. Emmy want Becky to
+ go?&rdquo; Sobs, and little arms clinging wildly to Becky's aproned skirts. &ldquo;No,
+ no! Well, she ain't goin'. But Emmy mustn't tell tales or she might have
+ to. Tattlers are wicked anyway. 'Telltale tit! Your tongue shall be slit,
+ and all the little dogs'&mdash;There! run now! There's your poppy. Don't
+ you never,&mdash;never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emmy let her eyes be wiped, and with one long, solemn, secret look of awed
+ intelligence she ran out to meet her father. She did not love him, and the
+ smile with which she met him was no new lesson in diplomacy. But her first
+ secret from him lay deep in the beautiful eyes, her mother's eyes, as she
+ raised them to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ain't that wonderful!&rdquo; said Becky, with a satisfied sigh, watching her.
+ &ldquo;Safe as a jug! An' she not five years old!&rdquo; For vital reasons she had
+ taught the child an ugly lesson. Such lessons were common enough in her
+ experience of family discipline. She never thought of it again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That year which took Emmy's mother from her brought to the child her first
+ young companion and friend. Adam Bogardus came as chore-boy to the farm,&mdash;an
+ only child himself, and sensitive through the clashing of gentle instincts
+ with rough and inferior surroundings; brought up in that depressed
+ God-fearing attitude in which a widow not strong, and earning her bread,
+ would do her duty by an only son. Not a natural fighter, she took what
+ little combativeness he had out of him, and made his school-days miserable&mdash;a
+ record of humiliations that sunk deep and drove him from his kind. He was
+ a big, clumsy, sagacious boy, grave as an old man, always snubbed and
+ condescended to, yet always trusted. Little Emmy made him her bondslave at
+ sight. His whole soul blossomed in adoration of the beautiful, masterful
+ child who ordered him about as her vassal, while slipping a soft little
+ trustful hand in his. She trotted at his heels like one of the lambs or
+ chickens that he fed. She brought him into perpetual disgrace with Becky,
+ for wasting his time through her imperious demands. She was the burden,
+ the delight, the handicap, the incentive, and the reward of his humble
+ apprenticeship. And when he was promoted to be one of the regular hands
+ she followed him still, and got her pleasure out of his day's work. No one
+ had such patience to tell her things, to wait for her and help her over
+ places where her tagging powers fell short. But though she bullied him,
+ she looked up to him as well. His occupations commanded her respect. He
+ was the god of the orchards and of the cider-making; he presided at all
+ the functions of the farm year. He was a perfect calendar besides of
+ country sports in their season. He swept the ice pools in the meadow for
+ winter sliding, after his day's work was done. He saved up paper and
+ string for kite-making in March. He knew when willow bark would slip for
+ April's whistles. In the first heats of June he climbed the tall
+ locust-trees to put up a swing in which she could dream away the perfumed
+ hours. At harvest she waited in the meadow for him to toss her up on the
+ hay-loads, and his great arms received her when she slid off in the barn.
+ She knelt at his feet on the bumping boards of the farm-wagon while he
+ braced himself like a charioteer, holding the reins above her head. He
+ threshed the nut-trees and routed marauding boys from her preserves, and
+ carved pumpkin lanterns to light her to her attic chamber on cold November
+ nights, where she would lie awake watching strange shadows on the sloping
+ roof, half worshiping, half afraid of her idol's ugliness in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were some of Paul's illustrations of that pastoral beginning, and no
+ doubt they were sympathetically close to the truth. He lingered over them,
+ dressing up his mother's choice instinctively to the little aristocrat
+ beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Emmy grew big enough to go to the Academy, three miles from the farm,
+ it was all in the day's work that Adam should take her and fetch her home.
+ He combined her with the mail, the blacksmith, and other village errands.
+ Whoever met her father's team on those long stony hills of Saugerties
+ would see his little daughter seated beside his hired man, her face turned
+ up to his in endless confiding talk. It was a face, as we say, to dream
+ of. But there were few dreamers in that little world. The farmers would
+ nod gravely to Adam. &ldquo;Abraham's girl takes after her mother; heartier
+ lookin', though. Guess he'll need a set o' new tires before spring.&rdquo; The
+ comments went no deeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham was now well on in years; he made no visits, and he never drove
+ his own team at night. When his daughter began to let down her frocks and
+ be asked to evening parties, it was still Adam who escorted her. He sat in
+ the kitchen while she was amusing herself in the parlor. She discussed her
+ young acquaintances with him on their way home. The time for distinctions
+ had come, but she was too innocent to feel them herself, and too proud to
+ accept the standards of others. He was absolutely honest and unworldly. He
+ thought it no treachery to love her for herself, and he believed, as most
+ of us do, that his family was as good as hers or any other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be hard to explain the old man's obliviousness. Perhaps he had
+ forgotten his own youth; or class prejudice had gone so deep with him as
+ to preclude the bare thought of a child of his falling in love with one of
+ his &ldquo;men.&rdquo; His imagination could not so insult his own blood. But when the
+ awakening came, his passion of anger and resentment knew no bounds. To
+ discharge his faithless employee out of hand would be the cripple throwing
+ away his crutch. Though he called Adam <i>one</i> of his men, and though
+ his pay was that of a common laborer, his duties had long been of a much
+ higher order. Abraham had made a very good bargain out of the widow's son.
+ Adam knew well that he could not be spared, and pitied the old man's
+ helpless rage. He took his frantic insults as part of his senility, and
+ felt it no unmanliness to appease it by giving his promise that he would
+ speak no more of love to Emmy while he was taking her father's wages. But
+ Emmy did not indorse this promise fully. To her it looked like weakness,
+ and implied a sort of patience which did not become a lover such as she
+ wished hers to be. The winter wore on uncomfortably for all. Towards
+ spring, Becky's last illness and passing away brought the younger ones
+ together again, and closer than before. Adam kept his promise through days
+ and nights of sickroom intimacy; but though no word of love was spoken,
+ each bore silent witness to what was loveliest in the other, and the bond
+ between them deepened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then spring came, and its restlessness was strong upon them both. But it
+ was Emmy to whom it meant action and rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stood on the orchard hill one Sunday afternoon at the pause of the
+ year. Buds were swelling and the edges of the woods wore a soft blush
+ against the vaporous sky. The bare brown slopes were streaked with snow. A
+ floe of winter ice, grinding upon itself with the tide, glared yellow as
+ an old man's teeth in the setting sun. From across the river came the
+ thunder of a train, bound north, two engines dragging forty cars of
+ freight piled up by some recent traffic-jam; it plunged into a tunnel, and
+ they waited, listening to the monster's smothered roar. Out it burst, its
+ breath packed into clouds, the engines whooped, and round the curve where
+ a point of cedars cut the sky the huge creature unwound itself, the hills
+ echoing to its tread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emmy watched it out of sight, and breathed again. &ldquo;Hundreds, hundreds
+ going every day! It seems easy enough for everybody else. Oh, if I were a
+ man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want I should do, Emmy?&rdquo; Adam knew well what man she was
+ thinking of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> want? Don't you ever want things yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I want a thing bad, I gen'ly think it's worth waiting for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;People don't get things by waiting. I don't know how you can stand it,&mdash;to
+ stay here year after year. And now you've tied yourself up with a promise,
+ and you know you cannot keep it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm trying to keep it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You couldn't keep it if you cared&mdash;really and truly&mdash;as some
+ do!&rdquo; She dropped her voice hurriedly. &ldquo;To live here and eat your meals day
+ after day and pass me like a stick or a stone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slow blood burned in Adam's face and hammered in his pulses. His blue
+ eyes were bashful through its heat. &ldquo;I don't feel like a stick nor a
+ stone. You know it, Emmy. You want to be careful,&rdquo; he added gently. &ldquo;Would
+ going away look as if I cared?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why&mdash;why don't you ask me to go with you?&rdquo; The girl tried to meet
+ his eyes. She turned off her question with a proud laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be&mdash;careful, child! You know why I can't take you up on that. Would
+ you want we should leave him here alone&mdash;without even Becky? You're
+ only trying me for fun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I am not!&rdquo; Emmy was pale now. Her breast was rising in strong
+ excitement. &ldquo;If we were gone, he would know then what you are worth to
+ him. Now, you're only Adam! He thinks he can put you down like a boy. He
+ won't believe I care for you. There's only one way to show him&mdash;that
+ is, if we do care. In one month he would be sending for us back. Then we
+ could come, and you would take your right place here, and be somebody. You
+ would not eat in the kitchen, then. Haven't you been like a son to him?
+ And why shouldn't he own it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he won't? Suppose he don't send for us to come back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you could strike out for yourself. What was Tom Madden, before he
+ went away to Colorado, or somewhere&mdash;where was it? And now everybody
+ stops to shake hands with him;&mdash;he's as much of a man as anybody. If
+ you could make a little money. That's the proof he wants. If you were
+ rich, you'd be all right with him. You know that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd hate to think it. But I'll never be rich. Put that out of your mind,
+ Emmy. It don't run in the blood. I don't come of a money-making breed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a silly thing to say! Of course, if you don't believe you can, you
+ can't. Who has made the money here for the last ten years?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was his capital done it. It ain't hard to make money after you've
+ scraped the first few thousands together. But it's the first thousand that
+ costs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much have you got ahead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adam answered awkwardly, &ldquo;Eleven hundred and sixty odd.&rdquo; He did not like
+ to talk of money to the girl who was the prayer, the inspiration, of his
+ life. It hurt him to be questioned by her in this sordid way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You earned it all, didn't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've took no risks. Here was my home. He give me the chance and he showed
+ me how. And&mdash;he's your father. I don't like to talk about his money,
+ nor about my own, to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you are good, good! Nobody knows! But it's all wasted if you haven't
+ got any push&mdash;anything inside of yourself that makes people know what
+ you are. I wish I could put into you some of my <i>fury</i> that I feel
+ when things get in my way! You have held yourself in too long. You can't&mdash;<i>can't</i>
+ love a girl, and be so careful&mdash;like a mother. Don't you understand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop right there, Emmy! You needn't push no harder. I can let go whenever
+ you say so. But&mdash;do <i>you</i> understand, little girl? Man and wife
+ it will have to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emmy did not shrink at the words. Her face grew set, her dark eyes full of
+ mystery fixed themselves on the slow-moving ice-floe grinding along the
+ shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; she assented slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't give you no farm, nor horses and carriages, nor help in the
+ kitchen. It's bucklin' right down with our bare hands&mdash;me outside and
+ you in? And you only eighteen. See what little hands&mdash;If I could do
+ it all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your promise is broken,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;I made you break it. You will
+ have to tell him now, or&mdash;we must go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be!&rdquo; said Adam solemnly. &ldquo;And God do so to me and more also, if I have
+ to hurt my little girl,&mdash;Emmy&mdash;wife!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He folded her in his great arms clumsily&mdash;the man she had said was
+ like a mother. He was almost as ignorant as she, and more hopeful than he
+ had dared to seem, as to their worldly chances. But the love he had for
+ her told him it was not love that made her so bold. The first touch of
+ such love as his would have made her fear him as he feared her. And the
+ subtle pain of this instinctive knowledge, together with that broken
+ promise, shackled the wings of his great joy. It was not as he had hoped
+ to win the crown of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul, it may be supposed, had never liked to think of his mother's
+ elopement. It had been the one hard point to get over in his conception of
+ his father, but he could never have explained it by such a scene as this.
+ It would have hampered him terribly in his tale had he dreamed of it. He
+ passed over the unfortunate incident with a romancer's touch, and dwelt
+ upon his grandfather's bitter resentment which he resented as the son of
+ his mother's choice. The Van Eltens and Brodericks all fared hardly at the
+ hands of their legatee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not only in the person of a hireling who had abused his trust that
+ Abraham had felt himself outraged. There were old neighborhood spites and
+ feuds going back, dividing blood from blood&mdash;even brothers of the
+ same blood. There was trouble between him and his brother Jacob, of New
+ York, dating from the settlement of their father's, Broderick Van Elten's,
+ estate; and no one knows what besides that was private and personal may
+ have entered into it. It was years since they had met, but Jacob kept well
+ abreast of his brother's misfortunes. A bachelor himself, with no children
+ to lose or to quarrel with, it was not displeasing to him to hear of the
+ breaks in his brother's household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, what, what! The last one left him,&mdash;run off with one of his
+ men! What a fool the man must be. Can't he look after his women folks
+ better than that? Better have lost her with the others. Two boys, and
+ Chrissy, and the girl&mdash;and now the last girl gone off with his hired
+ man. Poor Chrissy! Guess she had about enough of it. Things have come out
+ pretty much even, after all! There was more love and lickin's wasted on
+ Abe. Father was proudest of him, but he couldn't break him. Hi! but I've
+ crawled under the woodshed to hear him yell, and father would tan him with
+ a raw-hide, but he couldn't break him; couldn't get a sound out of him.
+ Big, and hard, and tough&mdash;Chrissy thought she knew a man; she thought
+ she took the best one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With slow, cold spite Jacob had tracked his brother's path in life through
+ its failures. Jacob had no failures, and no life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. &mdash; DISINHERITED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Proud little Emmy, heiress no longer, had put her spirit into her
+ farm-hand and incited him to the first rebellion of his life. They crossed
+ the river at night, poling through floating ice, and climbed aboard one of
+ those great through trains whose rushing thunder had made the girlish
+ heart so often beat. This was long before the West Shore Line was built.
+ Neither of them had ever seen the inside of a Pullman sleeper. Emmy could
+ count the purchased meals she had eaten in her life; she had never slept
+ in a hotel or hired lodging till after her marriage. Hardly any one could
+ be so provincial in these days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adam Bogardus was a plodder in the West as he had been in the East. He was
+ an honest man, and he was wise enough not to try to be a shrewd one. He
+ tried none of the short-cuts to a fortune. Hard work suited him best, and
+ no work was too hard for his iron strength and patient resolution. But it
+ broke the spirit of a man in him to see his young wife's despair. Poverty
+ frightened and quelled her. The deep-rooted security of her old home was
+ something she missed every day of her makeshift existence. It was
+ degradation to live in &ldquo;rooms,&rdquo; or a room; to move for want of means to
+ pay the rent. She pined for the good food she had been used to. Her health
+ suffered through anxiety and hard work. She was too proud to complain, but
+ the sight of her dumb unacceptance of what had come to her through him
+ undoubtedly added the last straw to her husband's mental strain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is hard for me to realize it as I once did,&rdquo; said Paul, as the story
+ paused. &ldquo;You make tragedy a dream. But there is a deep vein of tragedy in
+ our blood. And my theory is that it always crops out in families where
+ it's the keynote, as it were.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, you old care-taker! We Middletons carry sail enough to need a
+ ton or two of lead in our keel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, you understand?&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand the distinction between what I call your good blood, and the
+ sort of blood I thought you had. It explains a certain funny way you have
+ with arms&mdash;weapons. Do you mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; said Paul coldly. &ldquo;I hate a weapon. I am always ashamed of
+ myself when I get one in my hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You act that way, dear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God made tools and the Devil made weapons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are civil to my father's profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father is what he is aside from his profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are quite mistaken, Paul. My father and his profession are one. His
+ sword is a symbol of healing. The army is the great surgeon of the nation
+ when the time comes for a capital operation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It grows harder to tell my story,&rdquo; said Paul gloomily;&mdash;&ldquo;the short
+ and simple annals of the poor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now come! Have I been a snob about my father's profession?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but you love it, naturally. You have grown up with its pomp and
+ circumstance around you. You are the history makers when history is most
+ exciting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on with your story, you proud little Dutchman! When I despise you for
+ your farming relatives, you can taunt me with my history making.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was about two years old when his parents broke up in the Wood River
+ country and came south by wagon on the old stage-road to Felton. Whenever
+ he saw a &ldquo;string-bean freighter's&rdquo; outfit moving into Bisuka, if there was
+ a woman on the driver's seat, he wanted to take off his hat to her. For so
+ his mother sat beside his father and held him in her arms two hundred
+ miles across the Snake River desert. The stages have been laid off since
+ the Oregon Short Line went through, but there were stations then all along
+ the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night they made camp at a lonely place between Soul's Rest and
+ Mountain Home. Oneman Station it was called; afterwards Deadman Station,
+ when the keeper's body was found one morning stiff and cold in his bunk.
+ He died in the night alone. Emily Bogardus had cause to hate the man when
+ he was living, and his dreary end was long a shuddering remembrance to
+ her, like the answer to an unforgiving prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The station was in a hollow with bare hills around, rising to the highest
+ point of that rolling plain country. The mountains sink below the plain,
+ only their white tops showing. It was October. All the wild grass had been
+ eaten close for miles on both sides of the road, but over a gap in the
+ Western divide was the Bruneau Valley, where the bell-mare of the team had
+ been raised. In the night she broke her hopples and struck out across the
+ summit with the four mules at her heels. Towards morning a light snow fell
+ and covered their tracks. Adam was compelled to hunt his stock on foot;
+ the keeper refusing him a horse, saying he had got himself into trouble
+ before through being friendly with the company's horses. He started out
+ across the hills, expecting that the same night would see him back, and
+ his wife was left in the wagon camp alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know this story very well,&rdquo; said Paul, &ldquo;and yet I never heard it but
+ once, when mother decided I was old enough to know all. But every word was
+ bitten into me&mdash;especially this ugly part I am coming to. I wish it
+ need not be told, yet all the rest depends on it; and that such an
+ experience could come to a woman like my mother shows what exposure and
+ humiliation lie in the straightest path if there is no money to smooth the
+ way. You hear it said that in the West the toughest men will be chivalrous
+ to a woman if she is the right sort of a woman. I'm afraid that is a
+ romantic theory of the Western man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That night, before his team stampeded, as he sat by the keeper's fire,
+ father had made up his mind that the less they had to do with that man the
+ better. He may have warned mother; and she, left alone with the brute, did
+ not know the wisdom of hiding her fear and loathing of him. He may have
+ meant no more than a low kind of teasing, but her suffering was the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father did not come. She dared not leave the camp. She knew no place to
+ go to, and in his haste, believing he would soon be with her again, he had
+ taken all their little stock of funds. But he had left her his gun, and
+ with this within reach of her hand in the shelter of the wagon hood,
+ without fire and without cooked food, she kept a sleepless watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The stages came and went; help was within sound of her voice, but she
+ dared make no sign. The passengers were few at that season, always men, on
+ the best of terms with the keeper. He had threatened&mdash;well, no matter&mdash;such
+ a threat as a more sophisticated woman would have smiled at. She was
+ simple, but she was not weak. It was a moral battle between them. There
+ were hours when she held him by the power of her eye alone; she conquered,
+ but it nearly killed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One morning a man jumped down from the stage whose face she knew. He had
+ recognized my father's outfit and he came to speak to her, amazed to find
+ her in that place alone. There was no need to put her worst fear into
+ words; he knew the keeper. He made the best he could of father's
+ detention, but he assured her, as she knew too well, that she could not
+ wait for him there. He was on his way East, and he took us with him as far
+ as Mountain Home. To this day she believes that if Bud Granger had led the
+ search, my father would have been found; but he went East to sell his
+ cattle, the snows set in, and the search party came straggling home. The
+ man, Granger, had left a letter of explanation, inclosing one from mother
+ to father, with the keeper. He bribed and frightened him, but for years
+ she used to agonize over a fear that father had come back and the keeper
+ had withheld the letter and belied her to him with some devilish story
+ that maddened him and drove him from her. Such a fancy might have come out
+ of her mental state at that time. I believe that Granger left the letter
+ simply to satisfy her. He must have believed my father was dead. He could
+ not have conceived of a man's being lost in that broad country at that
+ season; but my father was a man of hills and farms, all small, compact.
+ The plains were another planet to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The letter was found in the keeper's clothing after his death; no one
+ ever came to claim it of his successor. Somewhere in this great wilderness
+ a tired man found rest. What would we not give if we knew where!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she worked in a hotel in Mountain Home. Can you imagine it! Then
+ Christine was born and the multiplied strain overcame her. Strangers took
+ care of her children while she lay between life and death. She had been
+ silent about herself and her past, but they found a letter from one of her
+ old schoolmates asking about teachers' salaries in the West, and they
+ wrote to her begging her to make known my mother's condition to her
+ relatives if any were living. At length came a letter from grandfather&mdash;characteristic
+ to the last. The old home was there, for her and for her children, but no
+ home for the traitor, as he called father. She must give him up even to
+ his name. No Bogardus could inherit of a Van Elten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She had not then lost all hope of father's return, and she never forgave
+ her father for trying to buy her back for the price of what she considered
+ her birthright. She settled down miserably to earn bread for her children.
+ Then, when hope and pride were crushed in her, and faith had nothing left
+ to cling to, there came a letter from Uncle Jacob, the bachelor, who had
+ bided his time. Out of the division in his brother's house he proposed to
+ build up his own; just as he would step in and buy depreciated bonds to
+ hold them for a rise. He offered her a home and maintenance during his
+ lifetime, and his estate for herself and her children when he was through.
+ There were no conditions referring to our father, but it was understood
+ that she should give up her own. This, mainly, to spite his brother, yet
+ under all there was an old man's plea. She felt she could make the
+ obligation good, though there might not be much love on either side.
+ Perhaps it came later; but I remember enough of that time to believe that
+ her children's future was dearly paid for. Grandfather died alone, in the
+ old rat-ridden house up the Hudson. He left no will, to every one's
+ surprise. It might have been his negative way of owning his debt to nature
+ at the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is how we came to be rich; and no one detects in us now the crime of
+ those early struggles. But my father was a hired man; and my mother has
+ done every menial thing with those soft hands of hers.&rdquo; A softer one was
+ folded in his own. Its answering clasp was loyal and strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is <i>this</i> the story you had not the courage to tell me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the story I had the courage to tell you&mdash;not any too soon,
+ perhaps you think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you think it needed courage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The question is what you think. What are we to do with Uncle Jacob's
+ money? Go off by ourselves and have a good time with it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will not decide to-night,&rdquo; said Moya, tenderly subdued. But, though
+ the story had interested and touched her, as accounting for her lover's
+ saddened, conscience-ridden youth, it was no argument against teaching him
+ what youth meant in her philosophy. The differences were explained, but
+ not abolished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was spite money, remember, not love money,&rdquo; he continued, reverting to
+ his story. &ldquo;It purchased my mother's compliance to one who hated her
+ father, who forced her to listen, year after year, to bitter, unnatural
+ words against him. I am not sure but it kept her from him at the last; for
+ if Uncle Jacob had not stepped in and made her his, I can't help thinking
+ she would have found somehow a way to the soft place in his heart.
+ Something good ought to be done with that money to redeem its history.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must not be morbid, Paul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That sounds like mother,&rdquo; said Paul, smiling. &ldquo;She is always jealous for
+ our happiness; because she lost her own, I think, and paid so heavily for
+ ours. She prizes pleasure and success, even worldly success, for us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't blame her!&rdquo; cried Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; of course not. But you mustn't both be against me, and Chrissy, too.
+ She is so, unconsciously; she does not know the pull there is on me,
+ through knowing things she doesn't dream of, and that I can never forget.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;I am sure she is perfectly unconscious. We exchanged
+ biographies at school, and there was nothing at all like this in hers. Why
+ was she never told?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has always been too strained, too excitable. Every least incident is
+ an emotion with her. When she laughs, her laugh is like a cry. Haven't you
+ noticed that? Startle her, and her eyes are the very eyes of fear. Mother
+ was wise, I think, not to pour those old sorrows into her little fragile
+ cup.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So she emptied them all into yours!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was my right, of the elder and stronger. I wouldn't have missed the
+ knowledge of our beginnings for the world. What a prosperous fool and ass
+ I might have made of myself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Morbid again,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;You belong to your own day and generation. You
+ might as well wear country shoes and clothes because your father wore
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, if we have such a thing in this country as class, then you and I
+ do not belong to the same class except by virtue of Uncle Jacob's money.
+ Confess you are glad I am a Bevier and a Broderick and a Van Elten, as
+ well as a Bogardus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall confess nothing of the kind. Now you do talk like a <i>nouveau</i>
+ Paul, dear,&rdquo; said Moya, with her caressing eyes on his&mdash;they had
+ paused under the lamp at the top of the steps&mdash;&ldquo;I think your father
+ must have been a very good man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All our fathers were,&rdquo; Paul averred, smiling at her earnestness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but yours in particular; because <i>you</i> are an angel; and your
+ mother is quite human, is she not?&mdash;almost as human as I am? That
+ carriage of the head,&mdash;if that does not mean the world!&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has needed all her pride.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't object to pride, myself,&rdquo; said the girl, &ldquo;but you dwell so upon
+ her humiliations. I see no such record in her face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has had much to hide, you must remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she can hide things; but one's self must escape sometimes. What has
+ become of little Emily Van Elten who ran away with her father's hired man?
+ What has become of the freighter's wife?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is all mother now. She brought us back to the world, and for our
+ sakes she has learned to take her place in it. Herself she has buried.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but which is&mdash;was herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you cannot see her story in her face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the crushing reserve, the long suspense, the silence of a sorrow that
+ even her children could not share?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know her silence. Your mother is a most reticent woman. But is she now
+ the woman of that story?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand you quite,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;How much are we ourselves
+ after we have passed through fires of grief, and been recast under the
+ pressure of circumstances! She was that woman once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The saddest part of the story to me is, that your father, who loved her
+ so, and worked so hard for his family, should have served you all the
+ better by his death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don't say that, dear! Who knows what is best? But one thing we do
+ know. The sorrow that cut my mother's life in two brought you and me
+ together. It rent the stratum on which I was born and raised it to the
+ level of yours, my lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall not forget,&rdquo; whispered Moya with blissful irony, &ldquo;that you are
+ the Poor Man's son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. &mdash; AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The autumn days were shortening imperceptibly and the sunsets had gained
+ an almost articulate splendor: cloud calling unto cloud, the west horizon
+ signaling to the east, and answering again, while the mute dark circle of
+ hills sat like a council of chiefs with their blankets drawn over their
+ heads. Soon those blankets would be white with snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind the Post where the hills climb toward the Cottonwood Creek divide,
+ there is a little canon which at sunset is especially inviting. It hastens
+ twilight by at least an hour during midsummer, and in autumn it leads up a
+ stairway of shadow to the great spectacle of the day&mdash;the day's
+ departure from the hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canon has its companion rivulet always coming down to meet the
+ stage-road going up. As this road is the only outlet hillward for all the
+ life of the plain, and as the tendency of every valley population is to
+ climb, one thinks of it as a way out rather than a way in. Higher up, the
+ stage-road becomes a pass cut through a wall of splintered cliffs; and
+ here it leads its companion, the brook, a wild dance over boulders, and
+ under culverts of fallen rock. At last it emerges on what is called The
+ Summit; and between are green, deep valleys where the little ranches,
+ fields and fences and houses, seem to have slid down to the bottom and lie
+ there at rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A party of young riders from the post had gone up this road one evening,
+ and two had come down, laughing and talking; but the other two remained in
+ the circle of light that rested on the summit. Prom where they sat in the
+ dry grass they could hear a hollow sound of moving feet as the cattle
+ wandered down through folds of the hills, seeking the willow copses by the
+ water. On the breast of her habit Moya wore the blossoms of the wild
+ evening primrose, which in this region flowers till the coming of frost.
+ They had been gathered for her on the way up, and as she had waited for
+ them, sitting her horse in silence, the brown owls gurgled and hooted
+ overhead from nest to nest in the crannies of the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not hold the horses,&rdquo; she commanded, in her fresh voice. &ldquo;Throw
+ my bridle over your saddle pommel and yours over mine.&mdash;There!&rdquo; she
+ said, watching the horses as they shuffled about interlinked. &ldquo;That is
+ like half the marriages in this world. They don't separate and they don't
+ go astray, but they don't <i>get</i> anywhere!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been thinking of those 'two in the Garden,'&rdquo; mused Paul, resting
+ his dark, abstracted eyes on her. &ldquo;Whether or no your humble servant has a
+ claim to unchallenged bliss in this world, there's no doubt about your
+ claim. If my plans interfere, I must take myself out of the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you funny old croaker!&rdquo; laughed the girl. &ldquo;Take yourself out of the
+ way, indeed! Haven't you chosen me to show you the way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya, Moya!&rdquo; said Paul in a smothered voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know what you are thinking. But stop it!&rdquo; she held one of her crushed
+ blossoms to his lips. &ldquo;What was this made for? Why hasn't it some work to
+ do? Isn't it a skulker&mdash;blooming here for only a night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ripen, fall, and cease!'&rdquo; Paul murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much more am I&mdash;are you, then? The sum of us may amount to
+ something, if we mind our own business and keep step with each other, and
+ finish one thing before we begin the next. I will not be in a hurry about
+ being good. Goodness can take care of itself. What you need is to be
+ happy! And it's my first duty to make you so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God knows what bliss it would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't say 'would be.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God knows it is!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then hush and be thankful!&rdquo; There was a long hush. They heard the far,
+ faint notes of a bugle sounding from the Post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lights out,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;We must go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You haven't told me yet where our Garden is to be,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell you on the way home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had come down into the neighborhood of ranches, and Bisuka's
+ lights were twinkling below them, she asked: &ldquo;Who lives now in the
+ grandfather's house on the Hudson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The farmer, Chauncey Dunlop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there any other house on the place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Mother built a new one on the Ridge some years ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of a house is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was called a good house once; but now it's rather everything it
+ shouldn't be. It was one of the few rash things mother ever did; build a
+ house for her children while they were children. Now she will not change
+ it. She says we shall build for ourselves, how and where we please. Stone
+ Ridge is her shop. Of course, if Chrissy liked it&mdash;But Chrissy
+ considers it a 'hole.' Mother goes up there and indulges in secret orgies
+ of economy; one man in the stable, one in the garden&mdash;'Economy has
+ its pleasures for all healthy minds.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Economy is as delicious as bread and butter after too much candy. I
+ should love to go up to Stone Ridge and wear out my old clothes. Did any
+ one tell me that place would some day be yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be my wife's on the day we are married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is where your wife, sir, would like to live.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a stony Garden, dear! The summer people have their places nearer
+ the river. Our land lies back, with no view but hills. For one who has the
+ world before her where to choose, it strikes me she has picked out a very
+ humble Paradise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you think my idea was to travel&mdash;a poor army girl who spends her
+ life in trunks? Do we ever buy a book or frame a picture without thinking
+ of our next move? As for houses, who am I that I should be particular? In
+ the Army's House are many mansions, but none that we can call our own. Oh,
+ I'm very primitive; I have the savage instinct to gather sticks and
+ stones, and get a roof over my head before winter sets in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To such a speech as this there was but one obvious answer, as she rode at
+ his side, her appealing slenderness within reach of his arm. It did not
+ matter what thousands he proposed to spend upon the roof that should cover
+ her; it was the same as if they were planning a hut of tules or a burrow
+ in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a poor man's country,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;stony hillsides, stony roads lined
+ with stone fences. The chief crop of the country is ice and stone. In one
+ of my grandfather's fields there is a great cairn which Adam Bogardus,
+ they say, picked up, stone by stone, with his bare hands, and carted there
+ when he was fourteen years old. We will build them into the walls of our
+ new house for a blessing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;We will let sleeping stones lie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. &mdash; MARKING TIME
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was impatience at the garrison for news that the hunters had
+ started. Every day's delay at Challis meant an abridgment of the
+ bridegroom's leave, and the wedding was now but a fortnight away. It began
+ to seem preposterous that he should go at all, and the colonel was annoyed
+ with himself for his enthusiasm over the plan in the first place. Mrs.
+ Bogardus's watchfulness of dates told the story of her thoughts, but she
+ said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mamsie is restless,&rdquo; said Christine, putting an arm around her mother's
+ solid waist and giving her a tight little hug apropos of nothing. &ldquo;I
+ believe it's another case of 'mail-time fever.' The colonel says it comes
+ on with Moya every afternoon about First Sergeant's call. But Moya is
+ cunning. She goes off and pretends she isn't listening for the bugle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'First Sergeant or Second,' it's all one to me,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus. &ldquo;I
+ never know one call from another, except when the gun goes off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mamsie! 'When the gun goes off!' What a civilian way of talking. You are
+ not getting on at all with your military training. Now let me give you
+ some useful information. In two seconds the bugle will call the first
+ sergeant&mdash;of each company&mdash;to the adjutant's office, and there
+ he'll get the mail for his men. The orderly trumpeter will bring it to the
+ houses on the line, and the colonel's orderly&mdash;beautiful creature!
+ There he goes! How I wish we could take him home with us and have him in
+ our front hall. Fancy the feelings of the maids! And the rage on the noble
+ brow of Parkins&mdash;awful Parkins. I should like to give his pride a
+ bump.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mother and daughter were pacing the colonel's veranda, behind a partial
+ screen of rose vines&mdash;October vines fast shedding their leaves. Every
+ breeze shook a handful down, which the women's skirts swept with them as
+ they walked. Mrs. Bogardus turned and clasped Christine's arm above the
+ elbow; through the thin sleeve she could feel its cool roundness. It was a
+ soft, small, unmuscular arm, that had never borne its own burdens, to say
+ nothing of a share in the burdens of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get your jacket,&rdquo; said the mother. &ldquo;There is a chill in the air.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no chill in me,&rdquo; laughed Christine. &ldquo;You know, mamsie, you
+ aren't a girl. I should simply die in those awful things that you wear.
+ Did you ever know such a hot house as the colonel keeps!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The rooms are small, and the colonel is&mdash;impulsive,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus
+ added with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is something very like him about his fire-making. I should know by
+ the way he puts on wood that he never would have &ldquo;&mdash;Mrs. Bogardus
+ checked herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A large bank account?&rdquo; Christine supplied, with her quick wit, which was
+ not of a highly sensitive order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has a large heart,&rdquo; said her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And plenty of room for it, bless him! The slope of his chest is like the
+ roof of a house. The only time I envy Moya is when she lays her head down
+ on it and tries to meet her arms around him as if he were a tree, and he
+ strokes her hair as if his hand was a bough! If ever I marry a soldier he
+ shall be a colonel with a white mustache and a burnt-sienna complexion,
+ and a sword-belt that measures&mdash;what is the colonel's waist-measure,
+ do you suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus listened to this nonsense with the smile of a silent woman
+ who has borne a child that can talk. Moya had often noticed how uncritical
+ she was of Christine's &ldquo;unruly member.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn't polite to speak of waist-measures to middle-aged persons like
+ your mother and the colonel,&rdquo; she said placidly. &ldquo;You like it very much
+ out here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fascinating! Never had such a good time in my whole life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you like the West altogether? Would you like to live here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, if it came to living, I should want to be sure there was a way out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There generally is a way out of most things. But it costs something.&rdquo;
+ Mrs. Bogardus was so concise in her speech as at times to be almost
+ oracular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Army people are sure of their way out,&rdquo; said Christine, &ldquo;and I guess they
+ find it costs something.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do they buy so many books, I wonder? If I moved as often as they do,
+ I'd have only paper covers and leave them behind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not a reader, mummy. You're a business woman. You look at
+ everything from the practical side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I didn't, who would?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus spoke with earnestness. &ldquo;We
+ can't all be dreamers like Paul or privileged persons like you. There has
+ to be one in every family to say the things no one likes to hear and do
+ the things nobody likes to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are the rich repiners and you are the household drudge!&rdquo; Christine
+ shouted, laughing at her own wit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush!&rdquo; her mother smiled. &ldquo;Don't make so much noise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to know who's to be the drudge in Paul's privileged family.
+ It doesn't strike me it's going to be Moya. And Paul only drudges for
+ people he doesn't know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya is a girl you can expect anything of. She is a wonderful mixture of
+ opposites. She has the Irish quickness, and yet she has learned to obey.
+ She has had the freedom and the discipline of these little lordly army
+ posts. She is one of the few girls of her age who does not measure
+ everything from her own point of view.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that a dig at me, ma'am?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment Moya came out upon the porch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was very striking with the high color and brilliant eyes that
+ mail-time fever breeds. Christine looked at her with freshly aroused
+ curiosity, moved by her mother's unwonted burst of praise. The faintest
+ tinge of jealousy made her feel naughty. As Moya went down the board walk,
+ the colonel's orderly came springing up the steps to meet her with the
+ mail-bag. He saluted and turned off at an angle down the embankment not to
+ present his back to the ladies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you see that! He never raised his eyes. They are like priests. You
+ can't make them look at you.&rdquo; Moya looked at Christine in amazement. The
+ man himself might have heard her. It was not the first time this
+ privileged guest had rubbed against garrison customs in certain directions
+ hardly worth mentioning. Moya hesitated. Then she laughed a little, and
+ said: &ldquo;Only a raw recruity would look at an officer's daughter, or any
+ lady of the line.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you horrid little aristocrat! Well, I look at them, when they are as
+ pretty as that one, and I forgive them if they look at me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya turned and hovered over the contents of the mail-bag. In the exercise
+ of one of her prerogatives, it was her habit to sort its contents before
+ delivering it at the official door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All, all for you!&rdquo; she offered a huge packet of letters, smiling, to Mrs.
+ Bogardus. It was faced with one on top in Paul's handwriting. &ldquo;All but
+ one,&rdquo; she added, and proceeded to open her own much fatter one in the same
+ hand. She stood reading it in the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus presently followed and remained beside her. &ldquo;Could I speak
+ to your father a moment?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, I will call him,&rdquo; said Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait: I hear him now.&rdquo; The study door opened and Colonel Middleton joined
+ them. Mrs. Bogardus leading the way into the sitting-room, the colonel
+ followed her, and Moya, not having been invited, lingered in the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, have the hunters started yet?&rdquo; the colonel inquired in his breezy
+ voice, which made you want to open the doors and windows to give it room.
+ &ldquo;Be seated! Be seated! I hope you have got a long letter to read me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus stood reflecting. &ldquo;The day this letter was mailed they got
+ off&mdash;only two days ago,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Could I reach them, Colonel, with
+ a telegram?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two days ago,&rdquo; the colonel considered. &ldquo;They must have made Yankee Fork
+ by yesterday. Today they are deep in the woods. No; I should say a man on
+ horseback would be your surest telegram. Is it anything important?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, I wish we could call them back! They have gone off, it seems to
+ me, in a most crazy way&mdash;against the judgment of every one who knows.
+ The guide, this man whom they waited for, refused, it appears, to go out
+ again with another party so late in the fall. But the Bowens were
+ determined. They insisted on making arrangements with another man. Then,
+ when 'Packer John,' they call him, heard of this, he went to Paul and
+ urged him, if he could not prevent the others from going, to give up the
+ trip himself. The Bowens were very much annoyed at his interference, and
+ with Paul for listening to him. And Paul, rather than make things
+ unpleasant, gave in. You know how young men are! What silly grounds are
+ enough for the most serious decisions when it is a question of pride or
+ good faith. The Bowens had bought their outfit on Paul's assurance that he
+ would go. He felt he could not leave them in the lurch. On that, the guide
+ suddenly changed his mind and said he would go with them sooner than see
+ them fall into worse hands. They were, in a way, committed to the other
+ man, so they took <i>him</i> along as cook&mdash;the whole thing done in
+ haste, you see, and unpleasant feelings all around. Do you call that a
+ good start for a pleasure trip?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's very much the way with young troops when they start out&mdash;everything
+ wrong end foremost, everybody mad with everybody else. A day in the saddle
+ will set their little tempers all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't the point,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus persisted gloomily. As she spoke,
+ the two girls came into the room and stood listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the point, then?&rdquo; Christine demanded. &ldquo;Moya has no news; all
+ those pages and pages, and nothing for anybody or about anybody!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Such an intolerable deal of sack to such a poor pennyworth of bread,'&rdquo;
+ the colonel quoted, smiling at Moya's bloated envelope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what do you think?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus recalled him. &ldquo;Don't you think it's
+ a mistake all around?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all, if they have a good man. This flat-footed fellow, John, will
+ take command, as he should. There is no danger in the woods at any season
+ unless the party gets rattled and goes to pieces for want of a head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; exclaimed Moya. &ldquo;You know there is danger. Often, things have
+ happened!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what could happen?&rdquo; asked Christine, with wide eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many things very interesting could happen,&rdquo; the colonel boasted
+ cheerfully. &ldquo;That is the object of the trip. You want things to happen. It
+ is the emergency that makes the man&mdash;sifts him, and takes the chaff
+ out of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take the chaff out of Banks Bowen,&rdquo; Moya imprudently struck in, &ldquo;and what
+ would you have left?&rdquo; She had met Banks Bowen in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tut, tut!&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;Silence, or a good word for the absent&mdash;same
+ as the&rdquo;&mdash;The colonel stopped short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are so scornful about the other men, now you have chosen one!&rdquo;
+ Christine's face turned red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Chrissy! You would not compare your brother to those men! Papa, I
+ beg your pardon; this is only for argument.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't compare him; but that's not to say all the other men are chaff!&rdquo;
+ Christine joined constrainedly in the laugh that followed her speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not go fancying things, Moya,&rdquo; she cried, in answer to a
+ quizzical look. &ldquo;As if I hadn't known the Bowen boys since I was so high!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might know them from the cradle to the grave, my dear young lady, and
+ not know them as Paul will, after a week in the woods with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel had missed the drift of the girls' discussion. He was
+ considering, privately, whether he had not better send a special messenger
+ on the young men's trail. His assurances to the women left a wide margin
+ for personal doubt as to the prudence of the trip. Aside from the lateness
+ of the start, it was, undoubtedly, an ill-assorted company for the woods.
+ There was a wide margin also for suspense, as all mail facilities ceased
+ at Challis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. &mdash; A HUNTER'S DIARY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Early in November, about a week before the hunters were expected home, a
+ packet came addressed to Moya. It was a journal letter from Paul, mailed
+ by some returning prospector chance encountered in the forest as the party
+ were going in. Moya read it aloud, with asterisks, to a family audience
+ which did not include her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-day,&rdquo; one of the first entries read, &ldquo;we halt at Twelve-Mile Cabin,
+ the last roof we shall sleep under. There are pine-trees near the cabin
+ cut off fifteen feet above the ground, felled in winter, John tells us, <i>at
+ the level of the snow!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These cabins are all deserted now; the tide of prospecting has turned
+ another way. The great hills that crowd one another up against the sky are
+ so infested and overridden by this enormous forest-growth, and the
+ underbrush is so dense, it would be impossible for a 'tenderfoot' to gain
+ any clear idea of his direction. I should be a lost man the moment I
+ ventured out of call. Woodcraft must be a sixth sense which we lost with
+ the rest of our Eden birthright when we strayed from innocence, when we
+ ceased to sleep with one ear on the ground, and to spell our way by the
+ moss on tree-trunks. In these solitudes, as we call them, ranks and clouds
+ of witnesses rise up to prove us deaf and blind. Busy couriers are passing
+ every moment of the day; and we do not see, nor hear, nor understand. We
+ are the stocks and stones. Packer John is our only wood-sharp;&mdash;yet
+ the last half of the name doesn't altogether fit him. He is a one-sided
+ character, handicapped, I should say, by some experience that has humbled
+ and perplexed him. Two and two perhaps refused to make four in his account
+ with men, and he gave up the proposition. And now he consorts with trees,
+ and hunts to live, not to kill. He has an impersonal, out-door odor about
+ him, such as the cleanest animals have. I would as soon eat out of his
+ dry, hard, cool hand, as from a chunk of pine-bark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is amusing to see him with a certain member of the party who tries to
+ be fresh with him. He has a disconcerting eye when he fixes it on a man,
+ or turns it away from one who has said a coarse or a foolish thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'The jungle is large,' he seems to say, 'and the cub he is small. Let him
+ think and be still!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is this 'certain member' who tries to be 'fresh'?&rdquo; Christine inquired
+ with perceptible warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The cook, perhaps,&rdquo; said Moya prudently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The cook isn't a 'member'!&mdash;Well, can't you go on, Moya? Paul seems
+ to need a lot of editing.&rdquo; Moya had paused and was glancing ahead, smiling
+ to herself constrainedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there more disparagement of his comrades?&rdquo; Christine persisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christine, be still!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus interfered. &ldquo;Moya ought to have the
+ first reading of her own letter. It's very good of her to let us hear it
+ at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh dear, there's no disparagement. Quite the contrary! I'll go on with
+ pleasure if you don't mind.&rdquo; Moya read hurriedly, laughing through her
+ words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'If you were here, (Ah, <i>if</i> you were here!) You should lend me an
+ ear&mdash;One at the least Of a pair the prettiest'&mdash;which is, within
+ a foot or two, the rhythm of 'Wood Notes.' Of course you don't know it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a gibe at me,&rdquo; Moya explained, &ldquo;because I don't read Emerson. 'It
+ is the very measure of a marching chorus,' he goes on to say, 'where the
+ step is broken by rocks and tree-roots;'&mdash;and he is chanting it to
+ himself (to her it was in the original) as they go in single file through
+ these 'haughty solitudes, the twilight of the gods!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Haughty solitudes'!&rdquo; Christine derided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus sighed with impatience, and Moya's face became set. &ldquo;Well,
+ here he quotes again,&rdquo; she haughtily resumed. &ldquo;Anybody who is tired of
+ this can be excused. Emerson won't mind, and I'm sure Paul won't!&rdquo; She
+ looked a mute apology to Paul's mother, who smiled and said, &ldquo;Go on, dear.
+ I don't read Emerson either, but I like him when Paul reads him for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I warn you there is an awful lot of him here!&rdquo; Moya's voice was a
+ trifle husky as she read on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old as Jove, Old as Love'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought Love was young!&rdquo;&mdash;Christine in a whisper aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Who of me Tells the pedigree? Only the mountains old, Only the waters
+ cold, Only the moon and stars, My coevals are.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya sighed, and sank into prose again. &ldquo;There is a gaudy yellow moss in
+ these woods that flecks the straight and mournful tree-trunks like a
+ wandering glint of sunlight; and there is a crêpe-like black moss that
+ hangs funeral scarfs upon the boughs, as if there had been a death in the
+ forest, and the trees were in line for the burial procession. The grating
+ of our voices on this supreme silence reminds one of 'Why will you still
+ be talking, Monsieur Benedick?&mdash;nobody marks you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are silences, and again there are whole symphonies of sound. The
+ winds smites the tree-tops over our heads, a surf-like roar comes up the
+ slope, and the yellow pine-needles fall across the deepest darks as motes
+ sail down a sunbeam. One wearies of the constant perpendicular, always
+ these stiff, columnar lines, varied only by the melancholy incline where
+ some great pine-chieftain is leaning to his fall supported in the arms of
+ his comrades, or by the tragic prostration of the 'down timber'&mdash;beautiful
+ straight-cut English these woodsmen talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last evening John and I sat by the stove in the men's tent, while the
+ others were in the cabin playing penny-ante with the cook (a sodden brute
+ who toadies to the Bowens, and sulks with John because he objected to our
+ hiring the fellow&mdash;an objection which I sustained, hence his logical
+ spite includes me). John was melting pine gum and elk tallow into a
+ dressing for our boots. I took a mean advantage of him, his hands being in
+ the tallow and the tent-flap down, and tried on him a little of&mdash;now,
+ don't deride me!&mdash;'Wood Notes.' It is seldom one can get the comment
+ of a genuine woodsman on Nature according to the poets.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya read on perfunctorily, feeling that she was not carrying her audience
+ with her, and longing for the time when she could take her letter away and
+ have it all to herself. If she stopped now, Christine, in this sudden new
+ freak of distrustfulness, would be sure to misunderstand.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'For Nature ever faithful is
+ To such as trust her faithfulness.
+ When the forest shall mislead me,
+ When the night and morning lie,
+ When sea and land refuse to feed me,
+ Will be time enough to die.
+
+ Then will yet my Mother yield
+ A pillow in her greenest field;
+ Nor the June flowers scorn to cover
+ The clay of their departed lover.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is beautiful,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus murmured hastily. &ldquo;Even I can
+ understand that.&rdquo; Moya thanked her with a glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what did the infallible John say?&rdquo; Christine inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John looked at me and smiled, as at a babbling infant&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good for John!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christine, be still!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John looked at me and smiled,&rdquo; Moya repeated steadily. Nothing could have
+ stopped her now. She only hoped for some further scattering mention of
+ that &ldquo;certain member&rdquo; who had set them all at odds and spoiled what should
+ have been an hour's pure happiness. &ldquo;'You'll get the pillow all right,' he
+ said. 'It might not be a green one, nor I wouldn't bank much on the
+ flowers; but you'll be tired enough to sleep without rocking about the
+ time you trust to Nature's tuckin' you in and puttin' victuals in your
+ mouth. I never <i>see</i> nature till I came out here. I'd seen pretty
+ woods and views, that a young lady could take down with her paints; but
+ how are you going to paint that?'&mdash;he waved his tallow-stick towards
+ the night outside. 'Ears can't reach the bottom of that stillness. That's
+ creation before God ever thought of man. Long as I've been in the woods, I
+ never get over the feeling that there's <i>something behind me</i>. If you
+ go towards the trees, they come to meet you; if you go backwards, they go
+ back; but you can't sit down and sit still without they'll come a-creeping
+ up and creeping up, and crowding in'&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He stirred his 'dope' awhile, and then he struck another note. 'I've
+ wintered alone in these mountains,' he said, 'and I've seen snowslides
+ pounce out of a clear sky&mdash;a puff and a flash and a roar; an' trees
+ four foot across snappin' like kindlin' wood&mdash;not because it hit 'em;
+ only the breath of it struck them; and maybe a man lying dead somewheres
+ under his cabin timbers. That's no mother's love-tap. Pillows and flowers
+ ain't in it. But it's good poetry,' he added condescendingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not quoted him right, not being much of a snap-shot at dialect;
+ and his is an undefined, unclassifiable mixture. Eastern farm-hand and
+ Western ranchman, prospector, who knows what? His real language is in his
+ eye and his rare, pure smile. And just as his countenance expresses his
+ thoughts without circumlocution or attempt at effect, so his body informs
+ his clothing. Wind and rain have moulded his hat to his head, his shoes
+ grip the ground like paws; his buckskins have a surface like a cast after
+ Rodin. They are repousséed by the hard bones and sinews underneath. I can
+ think of nothing but the clothing of Millet's peasants to compare with
+ this exterior of John's. He is himself a peasant of the woods. He has not
+ the predatory instincts. If he could have his way, not a shot would be
+ fired by any of us for the mere idle sport of killing. Shooting these
+ innocent, fearless creatures, who have not learned that we are here for
+ their destruction, is too like murder and treachery combined. Hunger
+ should be our only excuse. My forbearance, or weakness, is a sort of
+ unspoken bond between us. But I am a peasant, too, you know. I do not come
+ of the lordly, arms-bearing blood. I shoot at a live mark always under
+ protest; and when I fairly catch the look in the great eye of a dying elk
+ or black-tail, it knocks me out for that day's hunt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul is perfectly happy!&rdquo; Christine broke in. &ldquo;He has got one of his
+ beloved People to grovel to. They can sleep in the same tent and eat from
+ the same plate, if you like. Why, it's better than the East Side! He'll be
+ blood brother to Packer John before they leave the woods.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya blushed with anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have said enough on that subject, Christine.&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus bent her
+ dark, keen gaze upon her daughter's face. &ldquo;Come&rdquo;&mdash;she rose. &ldquo;Come
+ with me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine sat still. &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; her mother repeated sternly. &ldquo;Moya,&rdquo;&mdash;in
+ a different voice,&mdash;&ldquo;your letter was lovely. Shall you read it to
+ your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hardly,&rdquo; said Moya, flushing. &ldquo;Father does not care for descriptions, and
+ the woods are an old story to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus placed her hands on the girl's shoulders and gave her one of
+ her infrequent, ceremonious kisses, which, like her finest smile, she kept
+ for occasions too nice for words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. &mdash; THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Christine followed her mother to their room, and the two faced each other
+ a moment in pale silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus spoke first. &ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo;&mdash;her breath came
+ short, perhaps from climbing the stairs. She was a large woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does what mean? I don't understand you, mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, child, don't repulse me! Twice you and Moya have nearly quarreled
+ about those men. Why were you so rude to her? Why did you behave so about
+ her letter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul is so intolerant! And the airs he puts on! If he is my own brother I
+ must say he's an awful prig about other men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not discussing Paul. That is not the question now. Have you
+ anything to tell me, Christine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To tell you?&mdash;about what, mother?&rdquo; Christine spoke lower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know what I mean. Which of them is it? Is it Banks?&mdash;don't say
+ it is Banks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, how can I say anything when you begin like that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you any idea what sort of a man Banks Bowen really is? His father
+ supports him entirely&mdash;six years now, ever since he left the law
+ school. He does nothing, never will do anything. He has no will or purpose
+ in life, except about trifles like this hunting-trip. As far as I can see
+ he is without common sense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine stood by the dressing-table pleating the cover-frilling with her
+ small fingers that were loaded with rings. She pinched the folds hard and
+ let them go. &ldquo;Why did no one ever say these things before?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We don't say things about the sons of our friends, unless we are
+ compelled to. They were implied in every way possible. When have I asked
+ Banks Bowen to the house except when everybody was asked! I would never in
+ the world have come out in Mr. Borland's car if I had known the Bowens
+ were to be of the party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That made no difference,&rdquo; said Christine loftily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was all settled before then, was it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I said it was settled, mother? He asked me if I could ever care for
+ him; and I said that I did&mdash;a little. Why shouldn't I? He does what I
+ like a man to do. I don't enjoy people who have wills and purposes. It may
+ be very horrid of me, but I wouldn't be in Moya's place for worlds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You poor child! You poor, unhappy child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why am I unhappy? Has Paul added so much to our income since he left
+ college?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul does not make money; neither does he selfishly waste it. He has a
+ conscience in his use of what he has.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see what conscience has to do with it. When it is gone it's
+ gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will learn what conscience has to do with a man's spending if ever
+ you try to make both ends meet with Banks Bowen. I suppose he will go
+ through the form of speaking to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother dear! He has only just spoken to me. How fast you go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not fast enough to keep up with my children, it seems. Was it you,
+ Christine, who asked them to come here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where did you learn such ways?&mdash;such want of frankness, of delicacy,
+ of the commonest consideration for others? To be looking out for your own
+ little schemes at a time like this!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus saw now what must have
+ been Paul's reason for doing what, with all her forced explanations of the
+ hunting-trip, she had never until now understood. He had taken the alarm
+ before she had, and done what he could to postpone this family
+ catastrophe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine retreated to a deep-cushioned chair, and threw herself into it,
+ her slender hands, palm upwards, extended upon its arms. Total surrender
+ under pressure of cruel odds was the expression of her pointed eyebrows
+ and drooping mouth. She looked exasperatingly pretty and irresponsibly
+ fragile. Her blue-veined eyelids quivered, her breath came in distinct
+ pants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you will not be troubled with my 'ways' for very many years,
+ mother. If you could feel my heart now! It jumps like something trying to
+ get out. It will get out some day. Have patience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a poor way to retaliate upon your mother, Christine. Your health
+ is too serious a matter to trifle with. If you choose to make it a shield
+ against everything I say that doesn't please you, you can cut yourself off
+ from me entirely. I cannot beat down such a defense as that. Anger me you
+ never can, but you can make me helpless to help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare say it's better that I should never marry at all,&rdquo; said Christine,
+ her eyes closed in resignation. &ldquo;You never would like anybody I like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall say no more. You are a woman. I have protected you as far as I
+ was able on account of your weakness. I cannot protect you from the
+ weakness itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus rose. She did not offer to comfort her child with caresses,
+ but in her eyes as she looked at her there was a profound, inalienable,
+ sorrowing tenderness, a depth of understanding beyond words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know so well,&rdquo; the dark eyes seemed to say, &ldquo;how you came to be the
+ poor thing that you are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The constraint which she felt towards her mother threw Chrissy back upon
+ Moya. Being a lesser power, she was always seeking alliances. Moya had put
+ aside their foolish tiff as unworthy of another thought; she was
+ embarrassed when at bedtime Christine came humbly to her door, and putting
+ her arms around her neck implored her not to be cross with her &ldquo;poor
+ pussy.&rdquo; It was always the other person who was &ldquo;cross&rdquo; with Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody is cross with anybody, so far as I know,&rdquo; said Moya briskly. A
+ certain sort of sentimentality always made her feel like whistling or
+ singing or asserting the commonplace side of life in some way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. &mdash; THE WHITE PERIL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus received many letters, chiefly on business, and these she
+ answered with manlike brevity, in a strong, provincial hand. They took up
+ much of her time, and mercifully, for it was now the last week in November
+ and the young men did not return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The range cattle had been driven down into the valleys, deer-tracks
+ multiplied by lonely mountain fords; War Eagle and his brethren of the
+ Owyhees were taking council under their winter blankets. The nights were
+ still, the mornings rimy with hoarfrost. Fogs arose from the river and cut
+ off the bases of the mountains, converting the valley before sunrise into
+ the likeness of a polar sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have let your fire go out,&rdquo; said the colonel briskly. He had invaded
+ the sitting-room at an unaccustomed hour, finding the lady at her letters
+ as usual. She turned and held her pen poised above her paper as she looked
+ at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You did not come to see about the fire?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I have had letters from the north. Would you step into my study a
+ moment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya was in her father's room when they entered. She had been weeping, but
+ at sight of Paul's mother she rose and stood picking at the handkerchief
+ she held, without raising her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be alarmed at Moya's face,&rdquo; said the colonel stoutly. &ldquo;Paul was all
+ right at last accounts. We will have a merry Christmas yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is not from Paul!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus fixed her eyes upon a letter which
+ she held at arm's length, feeling for her glasses. &ldquo;It's not for me&mdash;'<i>Miss</i>
+ Bogardus.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well. I saw it was postmarked Lemhi&mdash;Fort Lemhi, you know. Sit
+ down, madam. Suppose I give you Mr. Winslow's report first&mdash;Lieutenant
+ Winslow. You heard of his going to Lemhi?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She doesn't know,&rdquo; whispered Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True. Well, two weeks ago I gave Mr. Winslow a hunter's leave, as we call
+ it in the army, to beat up the trail of those boys. I thought it was time
+ we heard from them, but it wasn't worth while to raise a hue and cry. He
+ started out with a few picked men from Lemhi, the Indian Reservation, you
+ know. I couldn't have sent a better man; the thing hasn't got into the
+ local papers even. My object, of course, has been to save unnecessary
+ alarm. Mr. Winslow has just got back to Challis. He rounded up the Bowen
+ youths and the cook and the helper, in bad shape, all of them, but able to
+ tell a story. The details we shall get later, but I have Mr. Winslow's
+ report to me. It is short and probably correct.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was Paul not with them?&rdquo; his mother questioned in a hard, dry voice.
+ &ldquo;Where is he then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is in camp, madam, in charge of the wounded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear father! if you would speak plain!&rdquo; Moya whispered nervously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly. There is nothing whatever to hide. We know now that on their
+ last day's hunt they met with an accident which resulted in a division of
+ the party. A fall of snow had covered the ice on the trails, and the
+ guide's horse fell and rolled on him&mdash;nature of his injuries not
+ described. This happened a day's journey from their camp at Ten-Mile
+ cabin, and the retreat with the wounded man was slow and of course
+ difficult over such a trail. They put together a sort of horse-litter made
+ of pine poles and carried him on that, slung between two mules tandem. A
+ beastly business, winding and twisting over fallen timber, hugging the
+ cañon wall, near a thousand feet down&mdash;'Impassable' the trail is
+ marked, on the government military maps. This first day's march was so
+ discouraging that at Ten Mile they called a council, and the packer spoke
+ up like a man. He disposed of his own case in this way. If he were to
+ live, they could send back help to fetch him out. If not, no help would be
+ needed. The snows were upon them; there was danger in every hour's delay.
+ It was insane to sacrifice four sound men for one, badly hurt, with not
+ many hours perhaps to suffer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A murmur from the mother announced her appreciation of the packer's
+ argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was no more than a man should do; but as to taking him at his word,
+ why, that's another question.&rdquo; The colonel paused and gustily cleared his
+ throat. &ldquo;They were up against it right then and there, and the party split
+ upon it. Three of them went on,&mdash;for help, as they put it,&mdash;and
+ Paul stayed behind with the wounded man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul stayed&mdash;alone?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus uttered with hoarse emphasis.
+ &ldquo;Was not that a very strange way to divide? Among them all, I should think
+ they might have brought the man out with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Their story is that his injuries were such that he could not have borne
+ the pain of the journey. Rather an unusual case,&rdquo; the colonel added dryly.
+ &ldquo;In my experience, a wounded man will stand anything sooner than be left
+ on the field.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot understand it,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus repeated, in a voice of indignant
+ pain. &ldquo;Such a strange division! One man left alone&mdash;to nurse, and
+ hunt, and cook, and keep up fires! Suppose the guide should die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul was not <i>left</i>, you know,&rdquo; the colonel said emphatically. &ldquo;He
+ <i>stayed</i>. And I should be thankful in your place, madam, that my son
+ was the man who made that choice. But setting conduct aside, for we are
+ not prepared to judge, it is merely a matter of time our getting in there,
+ now that we know where he is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much time?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus opened her ashen lips to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel's face fell. &ldquo;Mr. Winslow reports heavy snows for the past
+ week,&mdash;soft, clogging snow,&mdash;too deep to wade through and too
+ soft to bear. A little later, when the cold has formed a crust, our men
+ can get in on snowshoes. There is nothing for it but patience, Mrs.
+ Bogardus, and faith in the boy's endurance. The pluck that made him stay
+ behind will help him to hold out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya gave a hurt sob; the colonel stepped to the desk and stood there a
+ moment turning over his papers. Behind his back the mother sent a glance
+ to Moya expressive of despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know what happened to his father? Did he ever tell you?&rdquo; she
+ whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya assented; she could not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twice, twice in a lifetime!&rdquo; said the older woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a gesture, Moya protested against this wild prophecy; but as Paul's
+ mother left the room she rushed upon her father, crying: &ldquo;Tell <i>me</i>
+ the truth! What do you think of it? Did you ever hear of such a dastardly
+ thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a rout,&rdquo; said the colonel coolly. &ldquo;They were in full flight before
+ the enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What enemy? They deserted a wounded comrade, and a servant at that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The enemy was panic,&mdash;panic, my dear. In these woods I've seen
+ strong men go half beside themselves with fear of something&mdash;the Lord
+ knows what! Then, add the winter and what they had seen and heard of that.
+ Anyway, you can afford to be easy on the other boys. The honors of the day
+ are with Paul&mdash;and the old packer, though it's all in the day's work
+ to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are satisfied with Paul, father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't desert his command to save his own skin.&rdquo; The colonel smiled
+ grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the men of the Fourth discovered those other fellows they had
+ literally sat down in the snow to die. Not a man of them knew how to pack
+ a mule. Their meat pack slipped, going along one of those high trails, and
+ scared the mule, and in trying to kick himself free the beast fell off the
+ trail&mdash;mule and meat both gone. They got tired of carrying their
+ stuff and made a raft to float it down the river, and lost that! Paul has
+ been much better off in camp than he would have been with them. So cheer
+ up, my girl, and think how you'd like to have your bridegroom out on an
+ Indian campaign!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but that would be orders! It's the uselessness that hurts. There was
+ nothing to do or to gain. He didn't want to go. Oh, daddy dear, I made fun
+ of his shooting,&mdash;I did! I laughed at his way with firearms. Wretched
+ fool and snob that I was! As if I cared! I thought of what other people
+ would say. You remember,&mdash;he went shooting up the gulch with Mr.
+ Lane, and when he hit but didn't kill he wouldn't&mdash;couldn't put the
+ birds out of pain. Jephson had to do it for him, and he told it in
+ barracks and the men laughed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you know that! And what does it all amount to! Blame yourself all
+ you like, dear, if it does you any good, but don't make him out a fool!
+ There's not much that comes to us straight in this world&mdash;not even
+ orders, you'll find. But we have to take it straight and leave the muddles
+ and the blunders as they are. That's the brave man's courage and the brave
+ woman's. Orders are mixed, but duty is clear. And the boy out there in the
+ woods has found his duty and done it like a man. That should be enough for
+ any soldier's daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour passed in suspense. Moya was disappointed in her expectation of
+ sharing in whatever the letter from Fort Lemhi might contain. Christine
+ was in bed with a headache, her mother dully gave out, with no apparent
+ expectation that any one would accept this excuse for the girl's complete
+ withdrawal. The letter, she told Moya, was from Banks Bowen. &ldquo;There was
+ nothing in it of consequence&mdash;to us,&rdquo; she added, and Moya took the
+ words to mean &ldquo;you and me&rdquo; to the unhappy exclusion of Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus's face had settled into lines of anxiety printed years
+ before, as the creases in an old garment, smoothed and laid away, will
+ reappear with fresh wear. Her plan was to go back to New York with
+ Christine, who was plainly unfit to bear a long siege of suspense. There
+ she could leave the girl with friends and learn what particulars could be
+ gathered from the Bowens, who would have arrived. She would then return
+ alone and wait for news at the garrison. That night, with Moya's help, she
+ completed her packing, and on the following day the wedding party broke
+ up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. &mdash; A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Fine, dry snowflakes were drifting past the upper square of a window set
+ in a wall of logs. The lower half was obscured by a white bulk that
+ shouldered up against the sash in the likeness of a muffled figure
+ stooping to peer in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lying in his bunk against the wall, the packer watched this sentinel
+ snowdrift grow and become human and bold and familiar. His deep-lined
+ visage was reduced to its bony structure. The hand was a claw with which
+ he plucked at the ancient fever-crust shredding from his lips: an
+ occupation at once so absorbing and so exhausting that often the hand
+ would drop and the blankets rise upon the arch of the chest in a sigh of
+ retarded respiration. The sigh would be followed by a cough, controlled,
+ as in dread of the shock to a sore and shattered frame. The snow came
+ faster and faster until the dim, wintry pane was a blur. Millions of atoms
+ crossed the watcher's weary vision, whirling, wavering, driven with an
+ aimless persistence, unable to pause or to stop. And the blind white
+ snowdrift climbed, fed, like human circumstance, from disconnected atoms
+ impelled by a common law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were sounds in the cabin: wet wood sweating on hot coals; a step
+ that went to and fro. Outside, a snow-weighted bough let go its load and
+ sprang up, scraping against the logs. Some heavy soft thing slid off the
+ roof and dropped with a <i>chug</i>. Then the door, that hung awry like a
+ drooping eyelid, gave a disreputable wink, and the whole front gable of
+ the cabin loomed a giant countenance with a silly forehead and an evil
+ leer. Now it seemed that a hand was hurling snow against the door, as a
+ sower scatters grain,&mdash;snow that lay like beach sand on the floor, or
+ melted into a crawling pool&mdash;red in the firelight, red as blood!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and other phantasms had now for an unmeasured time been tenants of
+ the packer's brain, sharing and often overpowering the reality of the
+ human step that went to and fro. To-day the shapes and relations of things
+ were more natural, and the step aroused a querulous curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; the sick man imagined himself to have said. A croaking
+ sound in his throat, which was all he could do by way of speech, brought
+ the step to his bedside. A young face, lightly bearded, and gaunt almost
+ as his own, bent over him. Large, black eyes rested on his; a hand with
+ womanish nails placed its fingers on his wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are better to-day. Your pulse is down. I wouldn't try to talk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's that&mdash;outside?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no one outside,&rdquo; Paul answered, following the direction of his
+ patient's eyes. &ldquo;That? That is only a snowdrift. It grows faster than I
+ can shovel it away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer had forgotten his own question. He dozed off, and presently
+ roused again as suddenly as he had slept. His utterance was clearer, but
+ not his meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&mdash;you want to fetch me back for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back?&rdquo; Paul repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was most gone, wa'n't I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back to life, you mean? You came back of yourself. I hadn't much to do
+ with it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's been the matter&mdash;gen'ly speaking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were hurt, don't you remember? Something like wound fever set in. The
+ altitude is bad for fevers. You have had a pretty close call.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Been here all the time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I been here?&mdash;yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Lone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With you. How is your chest? Does it hurt you still when you breathe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man filled his lungs experimentally. &ldquo;Something busted inside, I
+ guess,&rdquo; he panted. &ldquo;'Tain't no killing matter, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nourishment, in a tin cup, warm from the fire was offered him, refused
+ with a gesture, and firmly urged upon him. This necessitated another rest.
+ It was long before he spoke again&mdash;out of some remoter train of
+ thought apparently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Family all in New York?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My family? They were at Bisuka when I left them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't <i>live</i> West!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I was born in the West, though. Idaho is my native state.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patient fell to whimpering suddenly like a hurt child. He drew up the
+ blanket to cover his face. Paul, interpreting this as a signal for more
+ nourishment, brought the sad decoction,&mdash;rinds of dried beef cooked
+ with rice in snow water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guess that'll do, thank ye. My tongue feels like an old buckskin glove.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I was a little fellow,&rdquo; said the nurse, beguiling the patient while
+ he tucked the spoonfuls down, &ldquo;I was like you: I wouldn't take what the
+ doctor ordered, and they used to pretend I must take it for the others of
+ the family,&mdash;a kind of vicarious milk diet, or gruel, or whatever it
+ was. 'Here's a spoonful for mother, poor mother,' they would say; and of
+ course it couldn't be refused when mother needed it so much. 'And now one
+ for Chrissy'&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sister, Christine. And then I'd take one for 'uncle' and one for each
+ of the servants; and the cupful would go down to the health of the
+ household, and I the dupe of my sympathies! Now you are taking this for
+ me, because it's nicer to be shut up here with a live man than a dead one;
+ and we haven't the conveniences for a first-class funeral.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You never took a spoonful for 'father,'&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul answered the question with gravity. &ldquo;No. We never used that name in
+ common.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead was he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell you some time. Better try to sleep now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul returned the saucepan to the fire, after piecing out its contents
+ with water, and retired out of his patient's sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again came a murmur, chiefly unintelligible, from the bunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ask for anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man heaved a worried sigh. &ldquo;See what a mis'rable presumptuous
+ piece of work!&rdquo; he muttered, addressing the logs overhead. &ldquo;But that
+ Clauson&mdash;he wa'n't no more fit to guide ye than to go to heaven!
+ Couldn't 'a' done much worse than this, though!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has done worse!&rdquo; Paul came over to the bunk-side to reason on this
+ matter. &ldquo;They started back from here, four strong men with all the animals
+ and all the food they needed for a six weeks' trip. We came in in one. If
+ they got through at all, where is the help they were to send us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help!&rdquo; The packer roused. &ldquo;They helped themselves, and pretty frequent. I
+ said to them more than once&mdash;they didn't like it any too well: 'We
+ can't drink up here like they do down to the coast. The air is too light.
+ What a man would take with his dinner down there would fit him out with a
+ first-class jag up here, 'leven thousand above the sea!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a waste of breath to talk about them&mdash;breath burns up food and
+ we haven't much to spare. We rushed into this trouble and we dragged you
+ in after us. We have hurt you a good deal more than you have us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man groaned. He flung one hand back against the logs, dislodging
+ ancient dust that fell upon his corpse-like forehead. It was carefully
+ wiped away. Helpless tears stole down the rigid face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John,&rdquo; said Paul with animation, &ldquo;your general appearance just now
+ reminds me of those worked-out placer claims we passed in Ruby Gulch, the
+ first day out. The fever and my cooking have ground-sluiced you to the
+ bone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John smiled faintly. &ldquo;Don't look very fat yourself. Where'd you git all
+ that baird on your face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have been here some time, you know&mdash;or you don't know; you have
+ been living in places far away from here. I used to envy you sometimes.
+ And other times I didn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean I was off my head?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At times. But more of the time you were dreaming and talking in your
+ dreams; seeing things out loud by the flash-light of fever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talking, was I? Guess there wa'n't much sense in any of it?&rdquo; The hazard
+ was a question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A kind of sense,&mdash;out of focus, distorted. Some of it was opium.
+ Didn't you coax a little of his favorite medicine out of the cook?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Packer John apologized sheepishly, &ldquo;I cal'lated I was going to be left.
+ You put it up on me&mdash;making out you were off with the rest. <i>That</i>
+ was all right. But I wa'n't going to suffer it out; why should I? A
+ gunshot would have cured me quicker, perhaps. Then some critter might 'a'
+ found me and called it murder. A word like that set going can hang a man.
+ No, I just took a little to deaden the pain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The whole discussion was rather nasty, right before the man we were
+ talking about,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;I wanted to get them off and out of hearing.
+ Then we had a few words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At intervals during that day and the next, Paul's patient expended his
+ strength in questions, apparently trivial. His eyes, whenever they were
+ open, followed his nurse with a shrinking intelligence. Paul was on his
+ guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What day of the month do you make it out to be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The second of December.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;December!&rdquo; The packer lay still considering. &ldquo;Game all gone down?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not much of a pot-hunter,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;There may be game, but I
+ can't seem to get it. The snow is pretty deep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wouldn't bear a man on snowshoes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would go out of sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Snowing a little every day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right along, quietly, for I don't know how many days! I think the sky is
+ packed with it a mile deep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much grub have we got?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul gave a flattering estimate of their resources. The patient was not
+ deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where's it all gone to? You ain't eat anything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've eaten a good deal more than you have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was livin' on fever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can't live on fever any longer. The fever has left you, and you'll go
+ with it if you don't obey your doctor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where's all the stuff <i>gone</i> to?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There were four of them, and they allowed for some delay in getting out,&rdquo;
+ Paul explained, with a sickly smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, they was hogs! I knew how they'd pan out! That was why&rdquo;&mdash;He
+ wearied of speech and left the point unfinished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening following, when the two could no longer see each other's
+ faces in the dusk, Paul spoke, controlling his voice:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I need not ask you, John, what you think of our chances?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess they ain't much worth thinking about.&rdquo; The fire hissed and
+ crackled; the soft subsidence of the snow could be heard outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are 'free among the dead,' how does it go? 'Like unto them that are
+ wounded and lie in the grave.' What we say to each other here will stop
+ here with our breath. Let us put our memories in order for the last
+ reckoning. I think, John, you must, at some time in your life, have known
+ my father, Adam Bogardus? He was lost on the Snake River plains,
+ twenty-one years ago this autumn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Receiving no answer, the pale young inquisitor went on, choosing his words
+ with intense deliberation as one feeling his way in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most of us believe in some form of communication that we can't explain,
+ between those who are separated in body, in this world, but closely united
+ in thought. Do I make myself clear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sound of deep breathing from the bunk; it produced a similar
+ conscious excitement in the speaker. He halted, recovered himself, and
+ continued:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After my father's disappearance, my mother had a distinct presentiment&mdash;it
+ haunted her for years&mdash;that something had happened to him at a place
+ called One Man Station. Did you ever know the place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might have.&rdquo; The words came huskily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father had left her at this place, and to her knowledge he never came
+ back. But she had this intimation&mdash;and suffered from it&mdash;that he
+ did come back and was foully dealt with there&mdash;wronged in body or
+ mind. The place had most evil associations for her; it was not strange she
+ should have connected it with the great disaster of her life. As you lay
+ talking to yourself in your fever, you took me back on that lost trail
+ that ended, as we thought, in the grave. But we might have been mistaken.
+ Is there anything it would not be safe for you and me to speak of now? Do
+ you know any tie between men that should be closer than the tie between
+ us? Any safer place where a man could lay off the secret burdens of his
+ life and be himself for a little while&mdash;before the end answers all? I
+ know you have a secret. I believe that a share of it belongs to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are better off sometimes if we don't get all that belongs to us,&rdquo; said
+ John gratingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn't seem to be a matter of choice, does it? If you were not meant
+ to tell me&mdash;what you have partly told me already&mdash;where is there
+ any meaning in our being here at all? Let us have some excuse for this
+ senseless accident. Do you believe much in accidents? How foolish&rdquo;&mdash;Paul
+ sighed&mdash;&ldquo;for you and me to be afraid of each other! Two men who have
+ parted with everything but the privilege of speaking the truth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer raised himself in his bunk slowly, like one in pain. He looked
+ long at the listless figure crouching by the fire; then he sank back again
+ with a low groan. &ldquo;What was it you heared me say? Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't give you the exact words. The words were nothing. Haven't you
+ watched the sparks blow up, at night, when the wind goes searching over
+ the ashes of an old camp-fire? It was the fever made you talk, and your
+ words were the sparks that showed where there had been fire once. Perhaps
+ I had no right to track you by your own words when you lay helpless, but I
+ couldn't always leave you. Now I'd like to have my share of that&mdash;whatever
+ it was&mdash;that hurt you so, at One Man Station.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ought to been a lawyer,&rdquo; said the packer, releasing his breath. There
+ was less strain in his voice. It broke with feeling. &ldquo;You put up a mighty
+ strong case for your way of looking at it. I don't say it's best. There,
+ if you will have it! Sonny&mdash;my son! It&mdash;it's like startin' a
+ snow-slide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man broke down and sobbed childishly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take it quietly! Oh, take it quietly!&rdquo; Paul shivered. &ldquo;I have known it a
+ long time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hours later they were still awake, the packer in his bunk, Paul in his
+ blankets by the winking brands. The pines were moving, and in pauses of
+ the wind they could hear the incessant soft crowding of the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When they find us here in the spring,&rdquo; said the packer humbly, &ldquo;it won't
+ matter much which on us was 'Mister' and which was 'John.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you thinking of that!&rdquo; Paul answered with nervous irritation. &ldquo;I
+ thought you had lived in the woods long enough to have got rid of all that
+ nonsense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess there was some of it where you've been living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are done with all that now. Go to sleep,&mdash;Father.&rdquo; He pronounced
+ the word conscientiously to punish himself for dreading it. The darkness
+ seemed to ring with it and give it back to him ironically. &ldquo;Father!&rdquo;
+ muttered the pines outside, and the snow, listening, let fall the word in
+ elfin whispers. Paul turned over desperately in his blankets. &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; he
+ repeated out loud. &ldquo;Do <i>you</i> believe it? Does it do you any good?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn't distress myself, one way or t' other, if it don't come
+ natural,&rdquo; the packer spoke, out of his corner in the darkness. &ldquo;Wait till
+ you can feel to say it. The word ain't nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do you feel it? Is it any comfort to you at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain't in any hurry to feel it. We'll get there. Don't worry. And s'pose
+ we don't! We're men. Man to man is good enough for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul spent some wakeful hours after that, trying not to think of Moya, of
+ his mother and Christine. They were of another world,&mdash;a world that
+ dies hard at twenty-four. Towards morning he slept, but not without
+ dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in the pent-road at Stone Ridge. It was sunset and long shadows
+ striped the lane. A man stood, back towards him, leaning both arms on the
+ stone fence that bounds the lane to the eastward,&mdash;a plain farmer
+ figure, gazing down across the misty fields as he might have stood a
+ hundred times in that place at that hour. Paul could not see his face, but
+ something told him who it must be. His heart stood still, for he saw his
+ mother coming up the lane. She carried something in her hand covered with
+ a napkin, and she smiled, walking carefully as if carrying a treat to a
+ sick child. She passed the man at the fence, not appearing to have seen
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you speak to him, mother? Won't you speak to&rdquo;&mdash;He could not
+ utter the name. She looked at him bewildered. &ldquo;Speak? who shall I speak
+ to?&rdquo; The man at the fence had turned and he watched her, or so Paul
+ imagined. He felt himself choking, faint, with the effort to speak that
+ one word. Too late! The moment passed. The man whom he knew was his
+ father, the solemn, quiet figure, moved away up the road unquestioned. He
+ never looked back. Paul grew dizzy with the lines of shadow; they
+ stretched on and on, they became the ties of a railroad&mdash;interminable.
+ He awoke, very faint and tired, with a lost feeling and the sense upon him
+ of some great catastrophe. The old man was sleeping deeply in his bunk, a
+ ray of white sunlight falling on his yellow features. He looked like one
+ who would never wake again. But as Paul gazed at him he smiled, and sighed
+ heavily. His lips formed a name; and all the blood in Paul's body dyed his
+ face crimson. The name was his mother's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. &mdash; THE BLOOD-WITE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A few hours seemed days, after the great disclosure. Both men had recoiled
+ from it and were feeling the strain of the new relation. Three times since
+ their first meeting the elder had adjusted himself quietly to a change in
+ the younger's manner to him. First there had been respectful curiosity in
+ the presence of a new type, combined with the deference due a leader and
+ an expert in strange fields. Then indignant partisanship, pity, and the
+ slight condescension of the nurse. This had hurt the packer, but he took
+ it as he accepted his physical downfall. The last change was hardest to
+ bear; for now the time was short, and, as Paul himself had said, they were
+ in the presence of the final unveiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when Paul made artificial remarks to break the pauses, avoiding his
+ father's eye and giving him neither name nor title, the latter became
+ silent and lay staring at the logs and picking at his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I was hunting up a father,&rdquo; he said to himself aloud one day, &ldquo;I'd try
+ to find a better lookin' one. I wouldn't pa'm off on myself no such old
+ warped stick as I be.&rdquo; The remark seemed a tentative one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had the choice, to take or leave you,&rdquo; Paul responded. &ldquo;You were an
+ unconscious witness. Why should I have opened the subject at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both knew that this answer was an evasion. By forcing the tie they had
+ merely marked the want of ease and confidence between them. As &ldquo;Packer
+ John&rdquo; Paul could have enjoyed, nay, loved this man; as his father, the sum
+ and finality of his filial dreams, the supplanter of that imaginary
+ husband of his mother's youth, the thing was impossible. And the father
+ knew it and did not resent it in the least, only pitied the boy for his
+ needless struggle. He was curious about him, too. He wanted to understand
+ him and the life he had come out of: his roundabout way of reaching the
+ simplest conclusions; his courage in argument, and his personal shying
+ away from the truth when found. More than all he longed for a little plain
+ talk, the exile's hunger for news from home. It pleased him when Paul,
+ rousing at this deliberate challenge, spoke up with animation, as if he
+ had come to some conclusion in his own mind. It could not be expected he
+ would express it simply. The packer had become used to his oddly elaborate
+ way of putting things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we had food enough and time, we might afford to waste them discussing
+ each other's personal appearance. <i>I</i> propose we talk to some
+ purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talking sure burns up the food.&rdquo; The packer waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I knew what my father was doing with himself, all those years when
+ his family were giving him the honors of the dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I warned ye about this pumping out old shafts. You can't tell what you'll
+ find in the bottom. I suppose you know there are things in this world,
+ Boy, a good deal worse than death?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Desertion is worse. It is not my father's death I want explained, it is
+ his life, your life, in secret, these twenty years! Can you explain that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer doubled his bony fist and brought it down on the bunk-side.
+ &ldquo;Now you talk like a man! I been waiting to hear you say that. Yes, I can
+ answer that question, if you ain't afeard of the answer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am keeping alive to hear it!&rdquo; said Paul in a guarded voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might say you're keeping me alive to tell it. It's a good thing to
+ git off of one's mind; but it's a poor thing to hand over to a son. All
+ I've got to leave ye, though: the truth if you can stand it! Where do you
+ want I should begin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At the night when you came back to One Man Station.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How'd you know I come back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were back there in your fever, living over something that happened in
+ that place. There was a wind blowing and the door wouldn't shut. And
+ something had to be lifted,&rdquo;&mdash;the old man's eyes, fixed upon his son,
+ took a look of awful comprehensions,&mdash;&ldquo;something heavy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; great Lord, it was heavy! And I been carrying it ever since!&rdquo; His
+ chest rose as if the weight of that load lay on it still, and his breath
+ expired with a hoarse &ldquo;haugh.&rdquo; &ldquo;I got out of the way because it was <i>my</i>
+ load. I didn't want no help from them.&rdquo; He paused and sat picking at his
+ hands. &ldquo;It's a dreadful ugly story. I'd most as soon live it over again as
+ have to tell it in cold blood. I feel sometimes it <i>can't be!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not go back beyond that night. I know how my mother was left,
+ and what sort of a man you were forced to leave her with. Was it&mdash;the
+ keeper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's what it was. That was the hard knot in my thread. Nothing wouldn't
+ go past that. Some, when they git things in a tangle, they just reach for
+ the shears an' cut the thread. I wa'n't brought up that way. I was taught
+ to leave the shears alone. So I went on stringin' one year after another.
+ But they wouldn't join on to them that went before. There was the knot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was between you and him&mdash;and the law?&rdquo; said Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've got it! I was there alone with it,&mdash;witness an' judge an'
+ jury; I worked up my own case. Manslaughter with extenuatin'
+ circumstances, I made it&mdash;though he was more beast than man. I give
+ myself the outside penalty,&mdash;imprisonment for life. And I been
+ working out my sentence ever since. The Western country wa'n't home to me
+ then&mdash;more like a big prison. It's been my prison these twenty-odd
+ years, while your mother was enjoying what belonged to her, and making a
+ splendid job of your education. If I had let things alone I might have
+ finished my time out: but I didn't, and now the rest of it's commuted&mdash;for
+ the life of my son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't put it that way! I am no lamb of sacrifice. Why, how can we let
+ things alone in this world! Should I have stood off from this secret and
+ never asked my father for his defense?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say a boy like you can take hold of this thing and
+ understand it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;I could almost tell the story myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put it up then!&rdquo; said the packer. The fascination of confession was
+ strong upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had been out in the mountains&mdash;how long?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two days and three nights, just as I left camp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were crazed with anxiety for us. You came back to find your camp
+ empty, the wife and baby gone. You had reason to distrust the keeper. Not
+ for what he did&mdash;for what you knew he meant to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For what he meant and tried to do. I seen it in his eye. The devil that
+ wanted him incited him to play with me and tell me lies about my wife. She
+ scorned the brute and he took his mean revenge. He kep' back her letter,
+ and he says to me, leerin' at me out of his wicked eyes, 'Your livestock
+ seems to be the strayin' kind. The man she went off with give me that,'&mdash;he
+ lugged a gold piece out of his clothes and showed me,&mdash;'give me
+ that,' he says, 'to keep it quiet.' He kep' it quiet! Half starved and
+ sick's I was, the strength was in me. But vengeance in the hand of a man,
+ it cuts both ways, my son! His bunk had a sharp edge to it like this. He
+ fell acrost it with my weight on top of him and he never raised up again.
+ There wasn't a mark on him. His back was broke. He died slow, his eyes
+ mocking me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'You fool,' he says. 'Go look in that coat hangin' on the wall.' I found
+ her letter there inside of one from Granger. He watched me read it and he
+ laughed. 'Now, go tell her you've killed a man!' He knew I didn't come of
+ a killin' breed. There was four hours to think it over. Four hours! I
+ thought hard, I tell you! 'T was six of one and half a dozen of t' other
+ 'twixt him and me, but I worked it back 'n' forth a good long while about
+ her. First, taking her away from her father, an old man whose bread I'd
+ eat. She was like a child of my own raising. I always had felt mean about
+ that. We'd had bad luck from the start,&mdash;my luck,&mdash;and now
+ disgrace to cap it all. Whether I hid it or told her and stood my trial,
+ I'd never be a free man again. There he lay! And a sin done in secret,
+ it's like a drop of nitric acid: it's going to eat its way out&mdash;and
+ in!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew she'd have friends enough, once she was quit of me. That was the
+ case between us. The thing that hurt me most was to put her letter back
+ where I found it, and leave it, there with him. Her little cry to me&mdash;and
+ I couldn't come! I read the words over and over, I've said 'em to myself
+ ever since. I've lived on them. But I had to leave the letter there to
+ show I'd never come back. I put it back after he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The sins of the parents shall be visited,&mdash;when it's in the blood!
+ But I declare to the Almighty, murder wa'n't in my blood! It come on me
+ like a stroke of lightning hits a tree, and I had a clear show to fall
+ alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's the answer. Maybe I didn't see all sides of it, but there never
+ was no opening to do different, after that night. Now, you've had an
+ education. I should be glad to hear your way of looking at it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think you might stand your trial, now, before any judge or jury,
+ in this world or the next,&rdquo; Paul answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is only one Judge.&rdquo; The packer smiled a beautiful quiet smile that
+ covered a world of meanings. &ldquo;What a man re'ly wants, if he'd own up it,
+ is a leetle shade of partiality. Maybe that's what we're all going to
+ need, before we git through.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was glad to be saved the necessity of speech, and he felt the swift
+ discernment with which the packer resumed his usual manner. &ldquo;Got any more
+ of that stuff you call soup? Divide even! I won't be made no baby of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We might as well finish it up. It's hardly worth making two bites of a
+ cherry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call this 'cherry'! It's been a good while on the bough. What's it mostly
+ made of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rind of bacon, snow water,&mdash;plenty of water,&mdash;and a
+ tablespoonful of rice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good work! Hungry folks can live on what the full bellies throw away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I can save. But there comes a time when you can't live by saving what
+ you haven't got.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's right! Well, let's talk, then, before the bacon-rind fades out of
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer's face and voice, his whole manner, showed the joy of a soul
+ that has found relief. Paul was not trying now to behave dutifully; they
+ were man to man once more. The quaint, subdued humor asserted itself, and
+ the narrator's speech flowed on in the homely dialect which expressed the
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I stayed out all that winter, workin' towards the coast. One day, along
+ in March, I fetched a charcoal burner's camp, and the critter took me in
+ and nursed my frost-bites and didn't ask no questions, nor I of him. We
+ struck up a trade, my drivin' stock, mostly skin and bone, for a show in
+ his business. He wa'n't gettin' rich at it, that was as plain as the hip
+ bones on my mules. I kep' in the woods, cuttin' timber and tendin' kiln,
+ and he hauled and did the sellin'. Next year he went below to Portland and
+ brought home smallpox with him. It broke out on him on the road. He was a
+ terrible sick man. I buried him, and waited for my turn. It didn't come. I
+ seemed kind o' insured. I've been in lots of trouble since then, but
+ nothing ever touched me till now. I banked on it too strong, though. I
+ sure did! My pardner was just such another lone bird like me. If he had
+ any folks of his own he kep' still about them. So I took his name&mdash;whether
+ it was his name there's no knowing. Guess I've took full as good care of
+ it as he would. 'Hagar?' folk would say, sort o' lookin' me over. 'You
+ ain't Jim Hagar.' No, but I was John, and they let it go at that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I heard of your mother that summer, from a prospector who came up past my
+ camp. He'd wintered in Mountain Home. He told me my own story, the way
+ they had it down there, and what straits your mother was in. I had scraped
+ up quite a few dollars by then, and was thinking how I'd shove it into a
+ bank like an old debt coming to Adam Bogardus. I was studying how I was
+ going to rig it. There wasn't any one who knew me down there, so I felt
+ safe to ventur' a few inquiries. What I heard was that she'd gone home to
+ her folks and was as well off as anybody need be. That broke me all up at
+ first. I must have had a sneakin' notion that maybe some day I could see
+ my way to go back to her, but that let me out completely. I quit then, and
+ I've stayed quit. The only break I made was showin' up here at the
+ 'leventh hour, thinking I could be some use to my son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was to be,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;For years our lives have been shaping towards
+ this meeting. There were a thousand chances against it. Yet here we are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here we are!&rdquo; the packer repeated soberly. &ldquo;But don't think that I lay
+ any of my foolishness on the Almighty! Maybe it was meant my son should
+ close my eyes, but it's too dear at the price. Anybody would say so, I
+ don't care who.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But aside from the 'price,' is it something to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More&mdash;more than I've got words to say. And yet it grinds me, every
+ breath I take! Not that I wish you'd done different&mdash;you couldn't and
+ be a man. I knew it even when I was kickin' against it. Oh, well! It ain't
+ no use to kick. I thought I'd learned something, but I ain't&mdash;learned&mdash;a
+ thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. &mdash; CURTAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A greater freedom followed this confession, as was natural. It became the
+ basis for lighter confidences and bits of autobiography that came to the
+ surface easily after this tremendous effort at sincerity. Paul found that
+ he could speak even of the family past, into which by degrees he began to
+ fit the real man in place of that bucolic abstraction which had walked the
+ fields of fancy. He had never dared to actuate the &ldquo;hired man,&rdquo; his
+ father, on a basis of fact. He knew the speech and manners of the class
+ from which he came,&mdash;knew men of that class, and talked with them
+ every summer at Stone Ridge; but he had brooded so deeply over the tragic
+ and sentimental side of his father's fate as to have lost sight of the
+ fact that he was a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reality has its own convincing charm, not inconsistent with plainness or
+ even with commonness. To know it is to lose one's taste for toys of the
+ imagination. Paul, at last, could look back almost with, a sense of humor
+ at the doll-like progenitor he had played with so long. But when it came
+ to placing the real man, Adam Bogardus, beside that real woman, once his
+ wife, their son could but own with awe that there is mercy in extinction,
+ after all; in the chance, however it may come to us, for slipping off
+ those cruel disguises that life weaves around us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the strange, wakeful nights, full of starvation dreams, he saw his
+ mother as she would look on state occasions in the hostess's place at her
+ luxurious table; the odor of flowers, the smell of meats and wines,
+ tantalized and sickened him. Christine would come in her dancing frocks,
+ always laughing, greedy in her mirth; but Moya, face to face, he could
+ never see. It was torture to feel her near him, a disembodied embrace.
+ Passionate panegyrics and hopeless adjurations he would pour out to that
+ hovering loveliness just beyond his reach. The agony of frustration would
+ waken him, if indeed it were sleep that dissolved his consciousness, and
+ he would be irritable if spoken to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer broke in, one morning, on these unnerving dreams. &ldquo;You wouldn't
+ happen to have a picture of her along with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul stared at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, of course you wouldn't! And I'd be 'most afeard to look at it, if you
+ had. She must have changed considerable. Time hasn't stood still with her
+ any more than the rest of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no picture of my mother,&rdquo; Paul replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer saw that his question had jarred; he had waited weeks to ask
+ it. He passed it off now with one of his homely similes. &ldquo;If you was to
+ break a cup clean in two, and put the halves together again while the
+ break was fresh, they'd knit so you wouldn't hardly see a crack. But you
+ take one half and set it in the chainy closet and chuck the other half out
+ on the ash-heap,&mdash;them halves won't look much like pieces of the same
+ cup, come a year or two. The edges won't jine no more than the lips of an
+ old cut that's healed without stitches. No; married folks they grow
+ together or they grow apart, and they're a-doing of the one or the other
+ every minute of the time, breaks or no breaks. Does she go up to the old
+ place summers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not lately, except on business,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;A company was formed to open
+ slate quarries on the upper farm, a good many years ago. They are worth
+ more than all the land forty times over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always said so; always told the old man he had a gold mine in that
+ ridge. Was this before he died?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long after. It was my mother's scheme mainly. She controls it now. She is
+ a very strong business woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She got her training, likely, from that uncle in New York. He had the
+ business head. The old man had no more contrivance than one of the bulls
+ in his pastures. He could lock horns and stay there, but it wa'nt no
+ trouble to outflank him. More than once his brother Jacob got to the
+ windward of him in a bargain. He was made a good deal like his own land.
+ Winters of frost it took to break up that ground, and sun and rain to
+ meller it, and then't was a hatful of soil to a cartful of stone. The
+ plough would jump the furrows if you drew it deep. My arms used to ache as
+ if they'd been pounded, with the jar of them stones. They used to tell us
+ children a story how Satan, he flew over the earth a-sowing it with rocks
+ and stones, and as he was passing over our county a hole bu'st through his
+ leather apron and he lost his whole load right slam there. I could 'a'
+ p'inted out the very spot where the heft on it fell. Ten Stone meadow,
+ so-called. Ten million stone! I was pickin' stone in that field all of one
+ summer when I was fifteen year old. We built a mile of fence with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Them quarries must have brought a mint of money into the country.
+ Different sort of labor, too. Well, the world grows richer and poorer
+ every year. More difference every year between the way rich folks and poor
+ folks live. I wouldn't know where I belonged, 't ain't likely, if I was to
+ go back there. I'd be way off! One while I used to think a good deal about
+ going back, just to take a look around. It comes over me lately like
+ hunger and thirst. I think about the most curious things when I'm asleep&mdash;foolish,
+ like a child! I can smell all the good home smells of a frosty morning:
+ apple pomace, steaming in the barnyard; sausage frying; Becky scouring the
+ brass furnace-kittle with salt and vinegar. Killin' time, you know&mdash;makes
+ you think of boiling souse and head-cheese. You ever eat souse?&rdquo; The
+ packer sucked in his breath with a lean smile. &ldquo;It ain't best to dwell on
+ it. But you can't help yourself, at night. I can smell Becky's fresh
+ bread, in my dreams, just out of the brick oven. Never eat bread cooked in
+ a stove till I came out here. I never drunk any water like that spring on
+ the ridge. Last night I was back there, and the maples were all yellow
+ like sunshine. Once it was spring, and apple-blooms up in the hill
+ orchard. And little Emmy, a-setting on the fence, with her bunnit throwed
+ back on her neck. 'Addy!' she called, way across the lot; 'Addy, come,
+ help me down!' She was a master hand for venturin' up on places, but she
+ didn't like the gettin' down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she 'a learned the ups and downs by this time. She don't need Addy
+ to help her. I'd have helped a big sight more if I had kep' my distance.
+ It's a thing so con-demned foolish and unnecessary&mdash;I can't be
+ reconciled to it noway!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see only one side of it,&rdquo; said Paul. Unspeakable thoughts had kept
+ pace with his father's words. &ldquo;Nothing that happens, happens through us&mdash;or
+ to us&mdash;alone. There was a girl I knew, outside. She was as happy,
+ when I knew her first, as you say my mother used to be. Then she met some
+ one&mdash;a man&mdash;and the shadow of his life crossed hers. He would
+ have wrapped her up in it and put out her sunshine if he had stayed in the
+ same world. Now she can be herself again, after a while. It cannot take
+ long to forget a person you have known only a little over a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer rose on one elbow. He reached across and shook his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is that girl? Answer me! Take your face out of your hands!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At Bisuka Barracks. She is the commandant's daughter. I came out to marry
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What possessed ye not to tell me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why should I tell you? We buried the wedding-day months back, in the
+ snow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boy, boy!&rdquo; the packer groaned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What difference can it make now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>All</i> the difference&mdash;all the difference there is! I thought
+ you were out here touring it with them fool boys and they were all the
+ chance you had for help outside. You suppose her father is going to see
+ her git left? <i>They</i>'ll get in here, if they have to crawl on their
+ bellies or climb through the tree-limbs. They know how! And we've wasted
+ the grub and talked like a couple of women!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don't&mdash;don't torment me!&rdquo; Paul groaned. &ldquo;It was all over. Can't
+ you leave the dead in peace!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not the dead! I 'most wish we were. Boy, I've got a big word to
+ say to you about that. Come closer!&rdquo; The packer's speech hoarsened and
+ failed. They could only hear each other breathe. Then it seemed to the
+ packer that his was the only breath in the darkness. He listened. A faint
+ cheer arose in the forest and a crashing of the dead underlimbs of the
+ pines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned frantically upon his son, but no pledge could be extorted now.
+ Paul's lips were closed. He had lost consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. &mdash; KIND INQUIRIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The colonel's drawing-room was as hot as usual the first hour after
+ dinner, and as usual it was full of kindly participant neighbors who had
+ dropped in to repeat their congratulations on the good news, now almost a
+ week old. Mrs. Bogardus had not come down, and, though asked after by all,
+ the talk was noticeably freer for her absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Creve, in response to a telegram from her brother, had arrived from
+ Fort Sherman on the day before, prepared for anything, from frozen feet to
+ a wedding. She had spent the afternoon in town doing errands for Moya, and
+ being late for dinner had not changed her dress. There never was such a
+ &ldquo;natural&rdquo; person as aunt Annie. At present she was addressing the company
+ at large, as if they were all her promising children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody talks about their star in these days. I used to have a star. I
+ forget which it was. I know it was a pretty lucky one. Now I trust in
+ Providence and the major and wear thick shoes.&rdquo; She exhibited the shoes, a
+ particularly large and sensible kind which she imported from the East.
+ Everybody laughed and longed to embrace her. &ldquo;Has Moya got a star?&rdquo; she
+ asked seriously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The whole galaxy!&rdquo; a male voice replied. &ldquo;Doesn't the luck prove it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya has got a 'temperament,'&rdquo; said Doctor Fleming, the Post surgeon.
+ &ldquo;That's as good as having a star. You know there are persons who attract
+ misfortune just as sickly children catch all the diseases that are going.
+ I knew that boy was sure to be found. Anything of Moya's would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you think it was Moya's 'temperament' that pulled him out of the
+ snow?&rdquo; said the colonel, wheeling his chair into the discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How about Mr. Winslow's temperament? I prefer to leave a little of the
+ credit to him,&rdquo; said Moya sweetly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young officer, who had been suffering in the corner by the fire, jumped
+ to his feet and bowed, then blushed and sat down again, regretting his
+ rashness. Moya continued to look at him with steadfast friendliness.
+ Winslow had led the rescue that brought her lover home. A glow of sympathy
+ united these friends and neighbors; the air was electrical and full of
+ emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose no date has been fixed for the wedding?&rdquo; Mrs. Dawson, on the
+ divan, murmured to Mrs. Creve. The latter smiled a non-committal assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think they would just put the doctor aside and be married
+ anyhow. My husband says he ought to go to a warmer climate at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear, a young man can't be married in his dressing-gown and slippers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! It's not as bad as that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, not quite. He's up and dressed and walks about, but he doesn't come
+ down to his meals,&mdash;he can eat so very little at a time, and it tires
+ him to sit through a dinner. It isn't one of those ravenous recoveries. It
+ went too far with him for that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His mother was perfectly magnificent through it all, they say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you seen much of Mrs. Bogardus?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; we left them alone, poor things, when the pinch came. But I used to
+ see her walking the porch, up and down, up and down. Moya would go off on
+ the hills. They couldn't walk together! That was after Miss Chrissy went
+ home. Her mother took her back, you know, and then returned alone.
+ Perfectly heroic! They say she dressed every evening for dinner as
+ carefully as if she were in New York, and led the conversation. She used
+ to make Moya read aloud to her&mdash;history, novels&mdash;anything to
+ pretend they were not thinking. The strain must have begun before any of
+ us knew. The colonel kept it so quiet. What is the dear man doing with
+ your bonnet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel had plucked his sister's walking-hat, a pert piece of
+ millinery froward in feathers, from the trunk of the headless Victory,
+ where she had reposed it in her haste before dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mustn't be disrespectful to the household Lar,&rdquo; he kindly reminded her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where am I to put my hats, then? I shall wear them on my head and come
+ down to breakfast in them. Moya, dear, will you please rescue my hat? Put
+ it anywhere, dear,&mdash;under your chair. There is not really a place in
+ this house to put a thing. A wedding that goes off on time is bad enough,
+ but one that hangs on from month to month&mdash;and doesn't even take care
+ of its clothes! Forgive me, dear! The clothes are very pretty. I open a
+ bureau-drawer to put away my middle-aged bonnet&mdash;a puff of violets! A
+ pile of something white, and, behold, a wedding veil! There isn't a hook
+ in the closet that doesn't say, 'Standing-room only,' and the
+ standing-room is all stood on by a regiment of new shoes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear woman, go light on our sore spots. We are only just out of the
+ woods.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it bad to coddle your sore spots, Doctor? Like a saddle-gall, ride
+ them down!&rdquo; Mrs. Creve and Dr. Fleming exchanged a friendly smile on the
+ strength of this nonsense. On the doctor's side it covered a suspicion:
+ &ldquo;'The lady, methinks, protests too much'!&rdquo; The colonel, too, was restless,
+ and Moya's sweet color came and went. She appeared to be listening for
+ steps or sounds from some other part of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men all rose now as Mrs. Bogardus entered; one or two of the ladies
+ rose also, compelled by something in her look certainly not intended. She
+ was careful to greet everybody; she even crossed the room and gave her
+ hand to Lieutenant Winslow, whom she had not seen since the night of his
+ return. The doctor she casually passed over with a bow; they had met
+ before that day. It was in the mind of each person present not of the
+ family, and excepting the doctor, to ask her: 'How is your son this
+ evening?' But for some reason the inquiry did not come off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The company began suddenly to feel itself <i>de trop</i>. Mrs. Dawson, who
+ had come under the doctor's escort, glanced at him, awaiting the moment
+ when it would do to make the first move.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hear you lost a patient from the hospital yesterday?&rdquo; said Lieutenant
+ Winslow, at the doctor's side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>From</i>, did you say? That's right! He was to have been operated on
+ to-day.&rdquo; The doctor shrugged his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two broken ribs. One grown fast to the lung.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wh-ew!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He just walked out. Said I had ordered him to have fresh air. There was a
+ new hall-boy, a greenhorn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can't go far in that shape, can he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, there's no telling. The constitution of those men is beyond anything.
+ You can't kill him. He'll suffer of course, suffer like an animal, and die
+ like one&mdash;away from the herd. Maybe not this time, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was he afraid of the operation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't say. He did not seem to be either afraid or anxious for help. Not
+ used to being helped. He would be taken to the Sisters' Hospital. Wouldn't
+ come up here as the guest of the Post, not a bit! I believe from the first
+ he meant to give us the slip, and take his chance in his own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you hear,&rdquo;&mdash;Mrs. Creve spoke up from the opposite side of the
+ room under that hypnotic influence by which a dangerous topic spreads,&mdash;&ldquo;did
+ you hear about the poor guide who ran away from the hospital to escape
+ from our wicked doctor here? What a reputation you must have, Doctor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All talk, my dear; town gossip,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;You gave him his
+ discharge, didn't you, Doctor?&rdquo; The colonel looked hard at the medical
+ officer; he had prepared the way for a statement suited to a mixed
+ company, including ladies. But Doctor Fleming stated things usually to
+ suit himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was a man who left the Sisters' Hospital rather informally
+ yesterday. I won't say he is not just as well off to-day as if he had
+ stayed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was it? Was it our man, father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The doctor has more than one patient at the hospital.&rdquo; Colonel Middleton
+ looked reproachfully at the doctor, who continued to put aside as childish
+ these clumsy subterfuges. &ldquo;I think you ladies frightened him away with
+ your attentions. He knew he was under heavy liabilities for all your
+ flowers and fancy cookery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Attentions! Are we going to let him die on the road somewhere?&rdquo; cried
+ Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Moya?&rdquo; Lieutenant Winslow spoke up with a mixture of embarrassment
+ and resolution to be heard, though every voice in the room conspired
+ against him. &ldquo;Those men are a big fraternity. They have their outfitting
+ places where they put in for repairs. Packer John had his blankets sent to
+ the Green Meadow corral. They know him there. They say he had money at one
+ of the stores. They all have a little money cached here and there. And
+ they <i>can't</i> get lost, you know!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya's eyes shone with a suspicious brightness.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'When the forest shall mislead me;
+ When the night and morning lie.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She turned her swimming eyes upon Paul's mother, who would be sure to
+ remember the quotation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus remained perfectly still, her lips slightly parted. She grew
+ very pale. Then she rose and walked quickly to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just a breath of cold air!&rdquo; she panted. The doctor, Moya, and Mrs. Creve
+ had followed her into the hall. Moya placed herself on the settle beside
+ her and leaned to support her, but she sat back rigidly with her eyes
+ closed. Mrs. Creve looked on in quiet concern. &ldquo;Let me take you into the
+ study, Mrs. Bogardus!&rdquo; the doctor commanded. &ldquo;A glass of water, Moya,
+ please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is she? What is it? Can we do anything?&rdquo; The company crowded around
+ Mrs. Creve on her return to the drawing-room. She glanced at her brother.
+ There was no clue there. He stood looking embarrassed and mystified. &ldquo;It
+ is only the warm welcome we give our friends,&rdquo; she said aloud, smiling
+ calmly. &ldquo;Mrs. Bogardus found the room too hot. I think I should have
+ succumbed myself but for that little recess in the hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel attacked his fire. He thought he was being played with. Things
+ were not right in the house, and no one, not the doctor, or even Annie,
+ was frank with him. His kind face flushed as he straightened up to bid his
+ guests good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if it's not anything serious, you think. But you'll be sure to let
+ us know?&rdquo; said Mrs. Dawson. &ldquo;Well, good-night, Mrs. Creve. <i>Good</i>-night,
+ Colonel! You'll say good-night to Moya? Do let us know if there is
+ anything we can do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Fleming was in the hall looking for his cape. The colonel touched him
+ on the shoulder. &ldquo;Don't be in a hurry, Doctor. Mrs. Dawson will excuse
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think you need me any more to-night. Moya is with Mrs. Bogardus.
+ She is not ill. The room was a little close.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind the <i>room</i>! Come in here. I want a word with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor laughed oddly, and obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Annie, you needn't leave us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, thank you, dear boy! It's awfully good of you,&rdquo; Annie mocked him.
+ &ldquo;But I must go and relieve Moya.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't believe you are wanted in there,&rdquo; said Doctor Fleming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's more than obvious that I'm not in here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, do sit down,&rdquo; said the teased colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fire sulked and smoked a trifle with its brands apart. Doctor Fleming
+ leaned forward upon his knees and regarded it thoughtfully. The colonel
+ sat fondling the tongs. In a deep chair Mrs. Creve lay back and shaded her
+ face with the end of her lace scarf. By her manner she might have been
+ alone in the room, yet she was keenly observant of the men, for she felt
+ that developments were taking place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with your patient upstairs, Doctor?&rdquo; the colonel began
+ his cross-examination. Doctor Fleming raised his eyebrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's had nothing to eat to speak of for six weeks, at an altitude&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; we know all that. But he's twenty-four years old. They made an easy
+ trip back, and he has been here a week, nearly. He's not as strong as he
+ was when they brought him in, is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was excitement. You have to allow for the reaction. He has had a
+ shock to the entire system,&mdash;nerves, digestion,&mdash;must give him
+ time. Very nervous temperament too much controlled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make it as you like. But I'm disappointed in his rallying powers, unless
+ you are keeping something back. A boy with the grit to do what he did, and
+ stand it as he did&mdash;why isn't he standing it better now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are all suffering from reaction, I think,&rdquo; said Mrs. Creve
+ diplomatically; &ldquo;and we show it by making too much of little things. Tom,
+ we oughtn't to keep the doctor up here talking nonsense. He wants to go to
+ bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i>'m not talking nonsense,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;I should be if I
+ pretended there was anything mysterious about that boy's case upstairs. He
+ has had a tremendous experience, say what you will; and it's pulled him
+ down nervously, and every other way. He isn't ready or able to talk of it
+ yet. And he knows as soon as he comes down there'll be forty people
+ waiting to congratulate him and ask him how it was. I don't wonder he
+ fights shy. If he could take his bride by the hand and walk out of the
+ house with her I believe he could start to-morrow; but if there must be a
+ wedding and a lot of fuss&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Creve nodded her head approvingly. The three had risen and stood
+ around the hearth, while the colonel put the brands delicately together
+ with the skill of an old campaigner. The flames breathed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't offer this as a professional opinion,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;But a
+ case like his is not a disease, it's a condition&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of the mind, perhaps?&rdquo; the colonel added significantly. He glanced at
+ Mrs. Creve. &ldquo;You've thought about that, Doctor? The letter his mother
+ consulted you about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you been worrying about that, Colonel? Why didn't you say so? There
+ is nothing in it whatever. Why, it's so plain a case the other way&mdash;any
+ one can see where the animus comes from!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you <i>are</i> getting mysterious, and I'm going to bed!&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Creve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; we're coming to the point now,&rdquo; said the colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it you want Bogardus to do?&rdquo; asked Doctor Fleming. &ldquo;Want him to
+ get up and walk out of the house as my patient did at the hospital? Dare
+ say he could do it, but what then? Will you let me speak out, Colonel? No
+ regard to anybody's feelings? Now, this may be gossip, but I think it has
+ a bearing on the case upstairs. I'm going to have it off my mind anyhow!
+ When Mrs. Bogardus came to see the guide,&mdash;Packer John,&mdash;day
+ before yesterday, was it?&mdash;he asked to see her alone. Said he had
+ something particular to say to her about her son. We thought it a queer
+ start, but she was willing to humor him. Well, she wasn't in there above
+ ten minutes, but in that time something passed between them that hit her
+ very hard, no doubt of that! Now, Bogardus holds his tongue like a
+ gentleman as to what happened in the woods. He doesn't mention his
+ comrades' names. And the packer has disappeared; so he can't be
+ questioned. Seems to me a little bird told me there was an attachment
+ between one of those Bowen boys and Miss Christine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we, who know what brutes brute fear will make of men, are not going
+ to deny that those boys behaved badly. There are some things that can't be
+ acknowledged among men, you know, if there is a hole to crawl out of.
+ Cowardice is one of them. Well then, they lied, that's the whole of it.
+ The little boys lied. They wrote Mrs. Bogardus a long letter from Lemhi,&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ doctor was reviewing now for Mrs. Creve's benefit,&mdash;&ldquo;when they first
+ got out. They probably judged, by the time they had had, that Paul and the
+ packer would never tell their own story. Very well: it couldn't hurt Paul,
+ it might be the saving of them, if they could show that something had
+ queered him in the woods. They asked his mother if she had heard of the
+ effects of altitude upon highly sensitive organizations. They recounted
+ some instances&mdash;I will mention them later. One of the boys is a
+ lawyer, isn't he? They are a pair of ingenious youths. Bogardus, they
+ claim, avoided them almost from the time they entered the woods,&mdash;almost
+ lived with the packer, behaved like a crank about the shooting. Whereas
+ they had gone there to kill things, he made it a personal matter whenever
+ they pursued this intention in a natural and undisguised manner. He had
+ pangs, like a girl, when the creatures expired. He hated the carcases, the
+ blood&mdash;forgive me, Mrs. Creve. In short, he called the whole business
+ butchery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you make <i>that</i> a sign of lunacy?&rdquo; Mrs. Creve flung in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am quoting, you know.&rdquo; The doctor smiled indulgently. &ldquo;They declare
+ that they offered&mdash;even begged&mdash;to stay behind with him, one of
+ them, at least, but he rejected their company in a manner so unpleasant
+ that they saw it would only be courting a quarrel to remain. And so,
+ treating him perforce like a child <i>or</i> a lunatic <i>pro tem.</i>,
+ and having but little time to decide in, they cut loose and hurried back
+ for help. This is the tale, composed on reflection. They said nothing of
+ this to Winslow&mdash;to save publicity, of course! Mrs. Bogardus's lips
+ are doubly sealed, for her son's sake and for the sake of the young scamp
+ who is to be her son, by and by! I saw she winced at my opinion, which I
+ gave her plainly&mdash;brutally, perhaps. And she asked me particularly to
+ say nothing, which I am particularly not doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, I think, you will find is the bitter drop in the cup of rejoicing
+ upstairs. And they are swallowing it in silence, those two, for the sake
+ of the little girl and the old friends in New York. Of course she has kept
+ from Paul that last shot in the back from those sweet boys! The packer had
+ some unruly testimony he was bursting with, which he had sense enough to
+ keep for her alone, and she doesn't want the case to spread. It is
+ singular how a man in his condition could get out of the way as suddenly
+ as he did. You might think he'd been taken up in a cloud.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doctor, what do you mean by such an insinuation as that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, have I insinuated anything? Did I say she had oiled the wheels
+ of his departure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come! You go too far!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all. That's your own construction. I merely say that I am not
+ concerned about that man's disappearance. I think he'll be looked after,
+ as a valuable witness should be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; the colonel grumbled uneasily, &ldquo;I don't like mysteries myself, and
+ I don't like family quarrels nor skeletons at the feasts of old friends.
+ But I suppose there must be a drop in every cup. What were your altitude
+ cases, Doctor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same old ones; poor Addison, you know. All those stories they tell an
+ Easterner. As I pointed out to Mrs. Bogardus, in every case there was some
+ predisposing cause. Addison had been too long in the mountains, and he was
+ frightfully overworked; short of company officers. He came to me about an
+ insect he said had got into his ear; buzzed, and bothered him day and
+ night. The story got to the men's quarters. They joked about the colonel's
+ 'bug.' I knew it was no joke. I condemned him for duty, but the Sioux were
+ out. They thought at Washington no one but Addison could handle an Indian
+ campaign. He was on the ground, too. So they sent him up higher where it
+ was dry, with a thousand men in his hands. I knew he'd be a madman or a
+ dead man in a month! There were a good many of the dead! By Jove! The boys
+ who took his orders and loved the old fellow and knew he was sending them
+ to their death! Well for him that he'll never know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The 'altitude of heartbreak,'&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Creve. The phrase was her own,
+ for many a reason deeply known unto herself, but she gave it the effect of
+ a quotation before the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you think there is no 'altitude' in ours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; nor 'heartbreak' either,&rdquo; said the doctor, helping himself to one of
+ the colonel's cigars. &ldquo;But I don't say there isn't enough to keep a woman
+ awake nights, and to make those young men avoid the sight of each other
+ for a time. Thanks, I won't smoke now. I'm going to take a look at Mrs.
+ Bogardus as I go out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. &mdash; A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The doctor had taken his look, feeling a trifle guilty under his patient's
+ counter gaze, yet glad to have relieved the good colonel's anxiety. If he
+ loved to gossip, at least he was particular as to whom he gossiped with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya closed the door after him and silently resumed her seat. Mrs.
+ Bogardus helped herself to a sip of water. She was struggling with a dry
+ constriction of the throat, and Moya protested a little, seeing the effort
+ that it cost her to speak, even in the hoarse, unnatural tone which was
+ all the voice she had left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to finish now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and never speak of this again. It was I
+ who accused them first&mdash;and then I asked him:&mdash;if there was
+ anything he could say in their defense, to say it, for Chrissy's sake! 'I
+ will never break bread with them again,' said he,&mdash;'either Banks or
+ Horace. I will not eat with them, or drink with them, or speak with them
+ again!' Think of it! How are we to live? How are they to inhabit the same
+ city? He thinks I have been weak. I am weak! The only power I have is
+ through&mdash;the property. Banks will never marry a poor girl. But that
+ would be a dear-bought victory. Let her keep what faith in him she can.
+ No; in families, the ones who can control themselves have to give in&mdash;to
+ those who can't. If you argue with Christine she simply gives way, and
+ then she gets hysterical, and then she is ill. It's a disease. Mothers
+ know how their children&mdash;Christine was marked&mdash;marked with
+ trouble! I am thankful she has any mind at all. She needs me more than
+ Paul does. I cannot be parted from my power to help her&mdash;such as it
+ is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When she is Banks Bowen's wife she will need you more than ever!&rdquo; said
+ Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will. I could prevent the marriage, but I am afraid to. I am afraid!
+ So, as the family is cut in two&mdash;in three, for I&mdash;&rdquo; Mrs.
+ Bogardus stopped and moistened her lips again. &ldquo;So&mdash;I think you and
+ Paul had better make your arrangements and go as soon as you can wherever
+ it suits you, without minding about the rest of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya gave a little sobbing laugh. &ldquo;You don't expect me to make the first
+ move!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doesn't he say anything to you&mdash;anything at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is too ill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not ill!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus denied it fiercely. &ldquo;Who says he is ill? He
+ is starved and frozen. He is just out of the grave. You must be good to
+ him, Moya. Warm him, comfort him! You can give him the life he needs. Your
+ hands are as soft as little birds. They comfort even me. Oh, don't you
+ understand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I understand!&rdquo; Moya answered, her face aflame. &ldquo;But I cannot
+ marry Paul. He has got to marry me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What nonsense that is! People say to a girl: 'You can't be too cold
+ before you are married or too kind after!' That does not mean you and
+ Paul. If you are not kind to him <i>now</i>, you will make a great
+ mistake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not thinking of marriage,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;Something weighs on him all
+ the time. I cannot ask him questions. If he wanted to tell me he would.
+ That is why I come downstairs and leave him. But he won't come down! Is it
+ not strange? If we could believe such things I would say a Presence came
+ with, him out of that place. It is with him when I find him alone. It is
+ in his eyes when he looks at me. It is not something past and done with,
+ it is here&mdash;now&mdash;in this house! <i>What</i> is it? What do <i>you</i>
+ believe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eyes she sought to question hardened under her gaze. Here, too, was a
+ veil. Mrs. Bogardus sat with her hands clasped in her lap. She was
+ motionless, but the creaking of her silks could be heard as her bosom rose
+ and fell. After a moment she said: &ldquo;Paul's tray is on the table in the
+ dining-room. Will you take it when you go up?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya altered her own manner instantly. &ldquo;But you?&rdquo; she hesitated. &ldquo;I must
+ not crowd you out of all your mother privileges. You have handed over
+ everything to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mother's privilege is to see herself no longer needed. I can do nothing
+ more for my son&rdquo;&mdash;her smile was hard&mdash;&ldquo;except take care of his
+ money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul's mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear, do you suppose we mind? It is a very great privilege to be
+ allowed to step aside when your work is done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul's <i>mother!</i>&rdquo; Moya insisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus rose. &ldquo;You don't remember your own mother, my dear. You have
+ an exaggerated idea of the&mdash;the importance of mothers. They are only
+ a temporary arrangement.&rdquo; She put out her hands and the girl's cheek
+ touched hers for an instant; then she straightened herself and walked
+ calmly out of the room. Moya remained a little longer, afraid to follow
+ her. &ldquo;If she would not smile! If she would do anything but smile!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was walking about his room, half an hour later, when Moya stopped
+ outside his door. She placed the tray on a table in the hall. The door was
+ opened from within. Paul had heard his mother go up before, heard her
+ pause at the stairs, and, after a silence, enter her own room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She knows that I know,&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;That knowledge will be
+ always between us; we can never look each other in the face again.&rdquo; To
+ Moya he endeavored to speak lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It sounded very gay downstairs to-night. You must have had a houseful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been with your mother the last hour,&rdquo; answered Moya, vaguely on
+ the defensive. Since Paul's return there had been little of the old free
+ intercourse in words between them, and without this outlet their mutual
+ consciousness became acute. Often as they saw each other during the day,
+ the keenest emotion attached to the first meeting of their eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was unnerved by his sudden recall from death to life. Its contrasts
+ were overwhelming to his starved senses: from the dirt and dearth and
+ grimy despair of his burial hutch in the snow to this softly lighted,
+ close-curtained room, warm and sweet with flowers; from the gaunt,
+ unshaven spectre of the packer and his ghostly revelations, to Moya,
+ meekly beautiful, her bright eyes lowered as she trailed her soft skirts
+ across the carpet; Moya seated opposite, silent, conscious of him in every
+ look and movement. Her lovely hands lay in her lap, and the thought of
+ holding them in his made him tremble; and when he recalled the last time
+ he had kissed her he grew faint. He longed to throw off this exhausting
+ self-restraint, but feared to betray his helpless passion which he deemed
+ an insult to his soul's worship of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she was thinking: &ldquo;Is this all it is going to mean&mdash;his coming
+ home&mdash;our being together? And I was almost his wife!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it was my mother you were talking to in the study? I thought I heard a
+ man's voice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the doctor. Your mother was not quite herself this evening. He
+ came in to see her, but he does not think she is ill. 'Rest and change,'
+ he says she needs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul gave the words a certain depth of consideration. &ldquo;Are you as well as
+ usual, Moya?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I am always well,&rdquo; she answered cheerlessly. &ldquo;I seem to thrive on
+ anything&mdash;everything,&rdquo; she corrected herself, and blushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blush made him gasp. &ldquo;You are more beautiful than ever. I had
+ forgotten that beauty is a physical fact. The sight of you confuses me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always told you you were morbid.&rdquo; Moya's happy audacity returned. &ldquo;Now,
+ how long are you going to sit and think about that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I sit and think about things?&rdquo; His reluctant, boyish smile, which all
+ women loved, captured his features for a moment. &ldquo;It is very rude of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose I should ask you what you are thinking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I am afraid you would say 'morbid' again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Try me! You ought to let me know at once if you are going to break out in
+ any new form of morbidness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish it might amuse you, but it wouldn't. Let me put you a case&mdash;seriously.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya smiled. &ldquo;Once we were serious&mdash;ages ago. Do you remember?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I remember!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well? You are you, and I am I, still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; and as full of fateful surprises for each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I bar 'fateful'! That word has the true taint of morbidness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you can't 'bar' fate. Listen: this is a supposing, you know. Suppose
+ that an accident had happened to our leader on the way home&mdash;to your
+ Lieutenant Winslow, we'll say&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>My</i> lieutenant!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father's&mdash;the regiment's&mdash;Lieutenant Winslow 'of ours.'
+ Suppose we had brought him back in a state to need a surgeon's help; and
+ without a word to any one he should get up and walk out of the hospital
+ with his hurts not healed, and no one knew why, or where he had gone?
+ There would be a stir about it, would there not? And if such a poor
+ spectre of a bridegroom as I were allowed to join the search, no one would
+ think it strange, or call it a slight to his bride if the fellow went?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take your case,&rdquo; said Moya with a beaming look. &ldquo;You want to go after
+ that poor man who suffered with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who went with us to save us from our own headstrong folly, and would have
+ died there alone&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; oh, yes!&mdash;before you begin to think about yourself, or me.
+ Because he is nobody 'of ours,' and no one seems to feel responsible, and
+ we go on talking and laughing just the same!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do they talk of this downstairs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-night they were talking&mdash;oh, with such philosophy! But how came
+ you to know it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul did not answer this question. &ldquo;Then&rdquo;&mdash;he drew a long breath,&mdash;&ldquo;then
+ you could bear it, dear?&mdash;the comment, even if they called it a
+ slight to you and a piece of quixotic lunacy? Others will not take my
+ case, remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What others?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They will say: 'Why doesn't he send a better man? He is no trailer.' It
+ is true. Money might find him and bring him back, but all the money in the
+ world could not teach him to trust his friends. There is a
+ misunderstanding here which is too bitter to be borne. It is hard to
+ explain,&mdash;the intimacy that grows up between men placed as we were.
+ But as soon as help reached us, the old lines were drawn. I belonged with
+ the officers, he with the men. We could starve together, but we could not
+ eat together. He accepted it&mdash;put himself on that basis at once. He
+ would not come up here as the guest of the Post. He is done with us
+ because he thinks we are done with him. And he knows that I must know his
+ occupation is gone. He will never guide nor pack a mule again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother and my father, they will understand. What do the others
+ matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must tell you, dear, that I do not propose to tell them&mdash;especially
+ them&mdash;why I go. For I am going. I must go! There are reasons I cannot
+ explain.&rdquo; He sighed, and looked wildly at Moya, whose smile was becoming
+ mechanical. &ldquo;I hate the excuse, but it will have to be said that I go for
+ a change&mdash;for my health. My health! Great God! But it's 'orders,'
+ dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your orders are my orders. You are never going anywhere again without
+ me,&rdquo; said Moya slowly. Her smile was gone. She stood up and faced him,
+ pale and beautiful. He rose, too, and stooped above her, taking her hands
+ and gazing into her full blue eyes arched like the eyes of angels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought she was a girl! But she is a woman,&rdquo; he said in a voice of
+ caressing wonder. &ldquo;A woman, and not afraid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid. I will not be left&mdash;I will not be left again! Oh, you
+ won't take me, even when I offer myself to you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't&mdash;don't tempt me!&rdquo; Paul caught her to him with a groan. &ldquo;You
+ don't know me well enough to be afraid of <i>me!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You! You will not let me know you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, hush, dear&mdash;hush, my darling! This isn't thinking. We must think
+ for our lives. I must take care of you, precious. We don't know where this
+ search may take us, or where it will end, or what the end will be.&rdquo; He
+ kissed the sleeve of her dress, and put her gently from him, so that he
+ could look her in the eyes. She gave him her full pure gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the poor man again. You said he would spoil our lives.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is <i>our</i> poor man. You didn't go out of your way to find him. And
+ your way is mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so heavenly to be convinced! Who taught you to see things at a
+ glance,&mdash;things I have toiled and bungled over and don't know now if
+ I am right! <i>Who</i> taught you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think I stood still while you were away! Oh, my heart was sifted
+ out by little pieces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall sift mine. You shall tell me what to do. For I know nothing!
+ Not even if I may dare to take this angel at her word!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew you would not take me!&rdquo; the girl whispered wildly. &ldquo;But I shall
+ go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI. &mdash; THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your tray! It is after ten o'clock. Your 'angel' is a bad nurse.&rdquo; Moya
+ brought the tray and set it on a little stand beside Paul's chair. He
+ watched her shy, excited preparations as she moved about, conscious of his
+ eyes. The saucepan staggered upon the coals and they both sprang to save
+ the broth, and pouring it she burnt her thumb a little, and he behaved
+ quite like any ordinary young man. They were ecstatic to find themselves
+ at ease with each other once more. Moya became disrespectful to her
+ charge; such sweet daring looked from her eyes into his as made him
+ riotous with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you take some with me?&rdquo; He turned the cup towards her and watched
+ her as she sipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'It was roast with fire,'&rdquo; he pronounced softly and dreamily, 'because of
+ the dreadful pains. It was to be eaten with bitter herbs'&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What <i>are</i> you saying?&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'To remind them of their bondage.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I object to your talking about bondage and bitter herbs when you are
+ eating aunt Annie's delicious consommé.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gravely sipped in turn, still with his eyes in hers. &ldquo;Can you remember
+ what you were doing on the second of November?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I remember!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; tell me. I have a reason for asking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell <i>me</i> the reason first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May we have a little more fire, darling? It gives me chills to think of
+ that day. It was the last of my wretched pot-hunting. There was nothing to
+ hunt for&mdash;the game had all gone down, but I did not know that.
+ Somewhere in the woods, a long way from the cabin, it began to occur to me
+ that I should not make shelter that night. A fool and his strength are
+ soon parted. It was a little hollow with trees all around so deep that in
+ the distance their trunks closed in like a wall. Snow can make a wonderful
+ silence in the woods. I seemed to hear the thoughts of everybody I loved
+ in the world outside. There had been a dullness over me for weeks. I could
+ not make it true that I had ever been happy&mdash;that you really loved
+ me. All that part of my life was a dream. Now, in that silence suddenly I
+ felt you! I knew that you cared. It was cruel to die so if you did love
+ me! It brought the 'pang and spur'! I fought the drowsiness that was
+ taking away my pain. I had begun to lean on it as a comfortable breast. I
+ woke up and tore myself away from that siren sleep. It was my darling,&mdash;her
+ love that saved me. Without that thought of you, I never would have
+ stirred again. Where were you, what were you thinking that brought you so
+ close to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Moya in a whisper. &ldquo;I was in that room across the hall, alone.
+ They were good to me that day; they made excuses and left me to myself. In
+ the afternoon a box came,&mdash;from poor father,&mdash;white roses, oh,
+ sweet and cold as snow! I took them up to that room and forced myself to
+ go in. It was where my things were kept, the trunks half packed, all the
+ drawers and closets full. And my wedding dress laid out on the bed. We
+ girls used to go up there at first and look at the things, and there was
+ laughing and joking. Sometimes I went up alone and tried on my hats before
+ the glass, and thought where I should be when I wore them, and&mdash;Well!
+ all that stopped. I dreaded to pass the door. Everything was left just as
+ it was; the shutters open, the poor dress covered with a sheet on the bed.
+ The room was a death-chamber. I went in. I carried the roses to my dead. I
+ drew down the sheet and put my face in that empty dress. It was my selfish
+ self laid out there&mdash;the girl who knew just what she wanted and was
+ going to get it if she could. Happiness I dared not even pray for&mdash;only
+ remembrance&mdash;everlasting remembrance. That we might know each other
+ again when no more life was left to part us&mdash;<i>my</i> life. It
+ seemed long to wait, but that was my&mdash;marriage vow. I gave you all I
+ could, remembrance, faith till death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you are my own!&rdquo; said Paul, his face transformed. &ldquo;God was our
+ witness. Life of my life&mdash;for life and death!&rdquo; Solemnly he took a
+ bridegroom's kiss from her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do <i>you</i> know that it is life that parts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak so I can understand you!&rdquo; Moya cried. &ldquo;Ah, if I might! A man must
+ not have secrets from his wife. Secrets are destruction, don't you think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya waited in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we come to this bondage!&rdquo; He let the words fall like a load from his
+ breast. &ldquo;This is a hideous thing to tell you, but it will cut us apart
+ unless you know it. It compels me to do things.&rdquo; He paused, and they heard
+ a door down the passage open,&mdash;the door of his mother's room. A step
+ came forward a few paces. Silence; it retreated, and the door closed again
+ stealthily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has not slept,&rdquo; Paul murmured. &ldquo;Poor soul, poor soul! Now, in what I
+ am going to say, please listen to the facts, Moya dear. Try not to infer
+ anything from my way of putting things. I shall contradict myself, but the
+ facts do that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The&mdash;the guide&mdash;John, we will call him, had a long fever in the
+ woods. It would come on worse at night, and then&mdash;he talked&mdash;words,
+ of a shocking intimacy. They say that nothing the mind has come in contact
+ with under strong emotion is ever lost, no matter how long in the past. It
+ will return under similar excitement. This man had kept stored away in his
+ mind, under some such pressure, the words of a woman's message, a woman in
+ great distress. Over and over, as his pulse rose, countless times he would
+ repeat that message. I went out of the hut at night and stood outside in
+ the snow not to hear it, but I knew it as well as he did before we got
+ through. Now, this was what he said, word for word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Do not blame me, my dear husband. I have held out in this place as long
+ as I can. Don't wait for anything. Don't worry about anything. Come back
+ to me with your bare hands. Come!&mdash;to your loving Emmy!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Come, come!' he would shout out loud. Then in another voice he would
+ whisper, 'Come back to me with your bare hands!' And he would stare at his
+ hands and his face would grow awful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya drew a long sigh of scared attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those words were all over the cabin walls. I heard them and saw them
+ everywhere. There was no rest from them. I could have torn the roof down
+ to stop his talking, but the words it was not possible to forget. And
+ where was the horror of it? Was not this what we had asked, for years, to
+ know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not explain to me,&rdquo; said Moya, shuddering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but all one's meanest motives were unearthed in a place like that.
+ Would I have felt so with a different man? Some one less uncouth? Was it
+ the man himself, or his&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul, if anything could make you a snob, it would be your deadly fear of
+ being one!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if they had found us then, God knows how that fight would have
+ ended. But I won it&mdash;when there was nothing left to fight for. I
+ owned him&mdash;in the grave. We owned each other and took a bashful sort
+ of comfort in it, after we had shuffled off the 'Mister' and 'John.' I
+ grew quite fond of him, when we were so near death that his English didn't
+ matter, or his way of eating. I thought him a very remarkable man, you
+ remember, when he was just material for description. He was, he is
+ remarkable. Most remarkable in this, he was not ashamed of his son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do please let that part alone. I want to know what he was doing, hiding
+ away by himself all these years? I believe he is an impostor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We came to that, of course; though somehow I forgave him before he could
+ answer the question. In the long watch beside him I got very close to him.
+ It was not possible to believe him a deserter, a sneak. Can you take my
+ word for his answer? It was given as a death-bed confession and he is
+ living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would take your word for anything except yourself!&rdquo; Moya did not smile,
+ or think what she was saying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That answer cleared him, in my mind, with something over to the credit of
+ blind, stupid heroism. He is not a clever man. But, speaking as one who
+ has teen face to face with the end of things, I can say that I know of no
+ act of his that should prevent his returning to his family&mdash;if he had
+ a family&mdash;not even his deserting them for twenty years. <i>If</i>, I
+ say!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the soldiers found us we were too far gone to realize the issue that
+ was upon us. He was the first to take it in. It was on the march home, at
+ night, he touched me and began speaking low in our corner of the tent. 'As
+ we came in here, so we go out again, and so we stay,' he said. I told him
+ it could not be. To suppress what I had learned would make the whole of
+ life a lie, a coward's lie. That knowledge belonged to my mother. I must
+ render it up to her. To do otherwise would be to treat her like a child
+ and to meddle with the purposes of God. 'No honest man robs another of his
+ secrets,' he said. He was very much excited. She was the only one now to
+ be considered&mdash;and what did I know about God's purposes? He refused
+ to take my scruples into consideration, except such as concerned her. But,
+ after a long argument, very painful, weak as we were and whispering in the
+ dark, he yielded this much. If I were bent on digging up the dead, as he
+ called it, it must be done in such a way as to leave her free. Free she
+ was in law, and she must be given a chance to claim her freedom without
+ talk or publicity. Absolute secrecy he demanded of me in the mean time. I
+ begged him to see how unfair it was to her to bring her face to face with
+ such a discovery without one word of preparation, of excuse for him. She
+ would condemn him on the very fact of his being alive. So she would, he
+ said, if she were going to judge him; not if she felt towards him as&mdash;as
+ a wife feels to her husband. It was that he wanted to know. It was that or
+ nothing he would have from her. 'Bring me face to face with her alone, and
+ as sudden as you like. If she knows me, I am the man. And if she wants me
+ back, she will know me&mdash;and that way I'll come and no other way.' Was
+ not that wonderful? A gentleman could hardly have improved on that.
+ Whatever feeling he might be supposed to have towards her in the matter we
+ could never touch upon. But I think he had his hopes. That decision was
+ hanging over us&mdash;and I trembled for her. Day before yesterday, was
+ it, I persuaded her to see the sick guide. She wondered why I was faint as
+ she kissed me good-by. I ought to have prepared her. It was a horrible
+ snare. And yet he meant it all in delicacy, a passionate consideration for
+ her. Poor fool. How could I prepare <i>him!</i> How could he keep pace
+ with the changes in her! After all, it is externals that make us,&mdash;habits,
+ clothes. Great God! Things you could not speak of to a naked soul like
+ him. But he would have it 'straight,' he said&mdash;and straight he got
+ it. And he is gone; broke away like an animal out of a trap. And I am
+ going to find him, to see at least that he has a roof over his head. God
+ knows, he may not die for years!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has got years before her too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She!&mdash;What am I saying! We have plunged into those damnable
+ inferences and I haven't given you the facts. Wait. I shall contradict all
+ this in a moment. I thought, she must have done this for her children. She
+ must be given another chance. And I approached the thing on my very knees&mdash;not
+ to let her know that I knew, only to hint that I was not unprepared, had
+ guessed&mdash;could meet it, and help her to meet the problems it would
+ bring into our lives. Help her! She stood and faced me as if I had
+ insulted her. 'I have been your father's widow for twenty-two years. If
+ that fact is not sacred to you, it is to me. Never dare to speak of this
+ to me again!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Moya in a long-drawn sigh, &ldquo;then she did not&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, she did, explicitly! For I went on to speak of it. It was my last
+ chance. I asked her how she&mdash;we&mdash;could possibly go through with
+ it; how with this knowledge between us we could look each other in the
+ face&mdash;and go on living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Put this hallucination out of your mind,' she said. 'That man and I are
+ strangers.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was that&mdash;would you call that a lie?&rdquo; asked Moya fearfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can see your answer in her face. I do not say that hers was the first
+ lie. It must always be foolish, I think, to evade the facts of life as we
+ make them for ourselves. He refused to meet his facts, from the noblest
+ motives;&mdash;but now I'm tangling you all up again! Rest your head here,
+ darling. This is such a business! It is a pity I cannot tell you his whole
+ story. Half the meaning of all this is lost. But&mdash;here is a solemn
+ declaration in writing, signed John Hagar, in which this man we are
+ speaking of says that Adam Bogardus was his partner, who died in the woods
+ and was buried by his hand; that he knew his story, all the scenes and
+ circumstances of his life in many a long talk they had together, as well
+ as he knew his own. In his delirium he must have confused himself with his
+ old partner, and half in dreams, he said, half in the crazy satisfaction
+ of pretending to himself he had a son, he allowed the delusion to go on;
+ saw it work upon me, and half feared it, half encouraged it. Afterwards he
+ was frightened at the thought of meeting my mother, who would know him for
+ an impostor. His seeming scruples were fear of exposure, not consideration
+ for her. This was why he guarded their interview so carefully. 'No harm's
+ been done,' he says, 'if you'll act now like a sensible man. I'll be
+ disappointed in you if you make your mother any trouble about this. You've
+ treated me as square as any man could treat another. Remember, I say so,
+ and think as kindly as you can of a harmless, loony old impostor'&mdash;and
+ he signs himself 'John Hagar,'&mdash;which shows again how one lie leads
+ to another. We go to find 'John Hagar.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you shown your mother this letter? You have not? Paul, you will not
+ rob her of her just defense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not heap coals of fire on her head! This letter simply completes
+ his renunciation, and he meant it for her defense. But when a man signs
+ himself 'John Hagar' in the handwriting of my father, it shows that
+ somebody is not telling the truth. I used to pore over the old farm
+ records in my father's hand at Stone Ridge in the old account books stowed
+ away in places where a boy loves to poke and pry. I know it as well as I
+ know yours. Do you suppose she would not know it? When a man writes as few
+ letters as he does, the handwriting does not change.&rdquo; Paul laid the letter
+ upon the coals. &ldquo;It is the only witness against her, but it loses the
+ case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She never could have loved him. I never believed she did!&rdquo; said Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She thinks she can live out this deep-down, deliberate&mdash;But it will
+ kill her, Moya. Her life is ended from this on. How could I have driven
+ her to that excruciating choice! I ought to have listened to him
+ altogether or not at all. There is a hell for meddlers, and the ones who
+ meddle for conscience' sake are the deepest damned, I think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya came and wreathed her arm in his, and they paced the room in silence.
+ At length she said, &ldquo;If we go to find John Hagar, shall we not be meddling
+ again? A man who respects a woman's freedom must love his own. It is the
+ last thing left him. Don't hunt him down. I believe nothing could hurt him
+ now like seeing you again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He shall not see me unless he wants to, but he shall know where I stand
+ on this question of the Impostor. It shall be managed so that even he can
+ see I am protecting her. No, call himself what he will, the tie between
+ him and me is another of those facts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do you love him, Paul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh&mdash;I cannot forget him! He is&mdash;just as he used to be&mdash;'poor
+ father out there in the cold.' We must find him and comfort him somehow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For our own peace of mind? Forgive me for arguing when everything is so
+ difficult. But he is a man&mdash;a brave man who would rather be forever
+ out in the cold than be a burden. Do not rob him of his right to <i>be</i>
+ John Hagar if he wants to, for the sake of those he loves. You do not tell
+ me it was love, but I am sure it was, in some mistaken way, that drove him
+ into exile. Only love as pure as his can be our excuse for dragging him
+ back. He did not want shelter and comfort from her. Only one thing. Have
+ we got that to give him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well then, I go for my own sake&mdash;it is a physical necessity; and I
+ go for hers. She has put it out of her own power to help him. It will ease
+ her a little to know I am trying to reach him in his forlorn disguise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you were not going to tell her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In words, no. But she will understand. There is a strange clairvoyance
+ between us, as if we were accomplices in a crime!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya reflected silently. This search which Paul had set his heart upon
+ would equally work his own cure, she saw. Nor could she now imagine for
+ themselves any lover's paradise inseparable from this moral tragedy, which
+ she saw would be fibre of their fibre, life of their life. A family is an
+ organism; one part may think to deny or defy another, but with strange
+ pains the subtle union exerts itself; distance cannot break the thread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They kissed each other solemnly like little children on the eve of a long
+ journey full of awed expectancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus stood holding her door ajar as Moya passed on her way
+ downstairs. &ldquo;You are very late,&rdquo; she uttered hoarsely. &ldquo;Is nothing settled
+ yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything!&rdquo; Moya hesitated and forced a smile, &ldquo;everything but where we
+ shall go. We will start&mdash;and decide afterwards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You go together? That is right. Moya, you have a genius for happiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I had a genius for making people sleep who lie awake hours in the
+ night thinking about other people!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you mean me, people of my age need very little sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I kiss you good-night, Paul's mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may kiss me because I am Paul's mother, not because I do not sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya's lips touched a cheek as white and almost as cold as the frosted
+ window-panes through which the moon was glimmering. She thought of the icy
+ roses on her wedding dress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Downstairs her father was smoking his bedtime cigar. Mrs. Creve, very
+ sleepy and cosy and flushed, leaned over the smouldering bed of coals. She
+ held out her plump, soft hand to Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come here and be scolded! We have been scolding you steadily for the last
+ hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you want that young man to get his strength back, you'd better not
+ keep him up talking half the night,&rdquo; the colonel growled softly. &ldquo;Do you
+ see what time it is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya knelt and leaned her head against her father. She reached one hand to
+ Mrs. Creve. They did not speak again till her weak moment had passed. &ldquo;It
+ will be very soon,&rdquo; she said, pressing the warm hand that stroked her own.
+ &ldquo;You will help me pack, aunt Annie; and then you'll stay&mdash;with
+ father? I know you are glad to have me out of the way at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII. &mdash; THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Because they had set forth on a grim and sorrowful quest, it need not be
+ supposed that Paul and Moya were a pair of sorrowful pilgrims. It was
+ their wedding journey. At the outset Moya had said: &ldquo;We are doing the best
+ we know. For what we don't know, let us leave it and not brood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did not enter at once upon the more eccentric stages of the search.
+ They went by way of the Great Northern to Portland, descending from snow
+ to roses and drenching rains. At Pendleton, which is at the junction of
+ three great roads, Paul sent tracers out through express agents and train
+ officials along the remotest slender feeders of these lines. Through the
+ same agents it was made known that for any service rendered or expense
+ incurred on behalf of the person described, his friends would hold
+ themselves gratefully responsible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Portland, Paul searched the steamer lists and left confidential orders
+ in the different transportation offices; and Moya wrote to his mother&mdash;a
+ woman's letter, every page shining with happiness and as free from
+ apparent forethought as a running brook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They returned by the Great Northern and Lake Coeur d'Alene, stopping over
+ at Fort Sherman to visit Mrs. Creve, who was giddy with joy over the
+ wholesome change in Paul. She, too, wrote a woman's letter concerning that
+ visit, to the colonel, which cleared a crowd of shadows from his lonely
+ hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thence again to Pendleton came the seekers, and Paul gathered in his
+ lines, but found nothing; so cast them forth again. But through all these
+ distant elaborations of the search, in his own mind he saw the old man
+ creeping away by some near, familiar trail and lying hid in some warm
+ valley in the hills, his prison and his home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now the last week in March. The travelers' bags were in the office,
+ the carriage at the door, when a letter&mdash;pigeon-holed and forgotten
+ since received some three weeks before&mdash;was put into Paul's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I run up against your ad. in the Silver City Times [the communication
+ began]. If you haven't found your man yet, maybe I can put you onto the
+ right lead. I'm driving a jerky on the road from Mountain Home to Oriana,
+ but me and the old man we don't jibe any too well. I've got a sort of
+ disgust on me. Think I'll quit soon and go to mining. Jimmy Breen he runs
+ the Ferry, he can tell you all I know. Fifty miles from Mountain Home good
+ road can make it in one day. Yours Respecfully,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ J. STRATTON.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It was in following up this belated clue that the pilgrims had come to the
+ Ferry inn, crossing by team from valley to valley, cutting off a great
+ bend of the Oregon Short Line as it traverses the Snake River desert;
+ those bare high plains escarped with basalt bluffs that open every fifty
+ miles or so to let a road crawl down to some little rope-ferry supported
+ by sheep-herders, ditch contractors, miners, emigrants, ranchmen, all the
+ wild industries of a country in the dawn of enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Business at the Ferry had shrunk since the railroad went through. The
+ house-staff consisted of Jimmy Breen, a Chinese cook of the bony, tartar
+ breed, sundry dogs, and a large bachelor cat that mooned about the empty
+ piazzas. In a young farming country, hungry for capital, Jimmy could not
+ do a cash business, but everything was grist that came to his mill; and he
+ was quick to distinguish the perennial dead beat from a genuine case of
+ hard luck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's a good axe ye have there,&rdquo; pointing suggestively to a new one
+ sticking out of the rear baggage of an emigrant outfit. &ldquo;Ye better l'ave
+ that with me for the dollar that's owing me. If ye have money to buy new
+ axes ye can't be broke entirely.&rdquo; Or: &ldquo;Slip the halter on that calf behind
+ there. The mother hasn't enough to keep it alive. There's har'ly a
+ dollar's wort' of hide on its bones, but I'll take it to save it droppin'
+ on the road.&rdquo; Or, he would try sarcasm: &ldquo;Well, we'll be shuttin' her down
+ in the spring. Then ye can go round be Walter's Ferry and see if they'll
+ trust ye there.&rdquo; Or: &ldquo;Why wasn't ye workin' on the Ditch last winter?
+ Settin' smokin' your poipe in the tules, the wife and young ones packin'
+ sagebrush to kape ye warm!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning after their distinguished arrival, Jimmy's guests came down
+ late to a devastated breakfast-table. Little heaps of crumbs here and
+ there showed where earlier appetites had had their destined hour and gone
+ their way. At an impartial distance from the top and the foot of the table
+ stood the familiar group of sauce and pickle bottles, every brand dear to
+ the cowboy, including the &ldquo;surrup-jug&rdquo; adhering to its saucer. There was a
+ fresh-gathered bunch of wild phlox by Moya's plate in a tumbler printed
+ round the edge with impressions of a large moist male thumb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Catchee plenty,&rdquo; the Chinaman grinned, pointing to the plain outside
+ where the pale sage-brush quivered stiffly in the wind. &ldquo;Bymbye plenty
+ come. Pretty col' now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll be getting a large hump on yourself, Han, me boy. 'T is a cash
+ crowd we have here&mdash;and a lady, by me sowl!&rdquo; Thus Jimmy exhorted his
+ household. Times were looking up. They would be a summer resort before the
+ Ditch went through; it should be mentioned in the Ditch company's
+ prospectus. Jimmy had put his savings into land-office fees and had a
+ hopeful interest in the Ditch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A spur in the head is worth two in the heel. Without a word from &ldquo;the
+ boss&rdquo; Han had found time to shave and powder and polish his brown forehead
+ and put on his whitest raiment over his baggiest trousers. There was loud
+ panic among the fowls in the corral. The cat had disappeared; the jealous
+ dogs hung about the doors and were pushed out of the way by friends of
+ other days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seated by the office fire, Paul was conferring with Jimmy, who was happy
+ with a fresh pipe and a long story to tell to a patient and paying
+ listener. He rubbed the red curls back from his shining forehead, took the
+ pipe from his teeth, and guided a puff of smoke away from his auditor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I seen him settin' over there on his blankets,&rdquo;&mdash;he pointed with his
+ pipe to the opposite shore plainly visible through the office windows,&mdash;&ldquo;but
+ he niver hailed me, so I knowed he was broke. Some, whin they're broke,
+ they holler all the louder. Ye would think they had an appointment wit'
+ the Governor and he sint his car'iage to meet them. But he was as humble,
+ he was, as a yaller dog.&mdash;Out! Git out from here&mdash;the pack of
+ yez! Han, shut the dure an' drive thim bloody curs off the piazzy. They're
+ trackin' up the whole place.&mdash;As I was sayin', sor, there he stayed
+ hunched up in the wind, waitin' on the chanst of a team comin', and I seen
+ he was an ould daddy. I stud the sight of him as long as I cud, me comin'
+ and goin'. He fair wore me out. So I tuk the boat over for 'im. One of his
+ arrums he couldn't lift from the shoulder, and I give him a h'ist wit' his
+ bundle. Faith, it was light! 'Twinty years a-getherin',' he cackles,
+ slappin' it. 'Ye've had harrud luck,' I says. ''T is not much of a sheaf
+ ye are packin' home.' 'That's as ye look at it,' he says.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I axed him what way was he goin'. He was thinking to get a lift as far as
+ Oriana, if the stages was runnin' on that road. 'Then ye 'll have to bide
+ here till morning,' I says, 'for ye must have met the stage goin' the
+ other way.' 'I met nothing,' says he; 'I come be way of the bluffs,'&mdash;which
+ is a strange way for one man travelin' afoot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The grub was on the table, and I says, 'Sit by and fill yourself up.' His
+ cheeks was fallin' in wit' the hunger. With that his poor ould eye begun
+ to water. 'Twas one weak eye he had that was weepin' all the time. 'I've
+ got out of the habit of reg'lar aitin',' he says. 'It don't take much to
+ kape me goin'.' 'Niver desave yourself, sor! 'T is betther feed three
+ hungry men than wan &ldquo;no occasion.&rdquo;' His appetite it grew on him wit' every
+ mouthful. There was a boundless emptiness to him. He lay there on the
+ bench and slep' the rest of the evening, and I left him there wit' a big
+ fire at night. And the next day at noon we h'isted him up beside of Joe
+ Stratton. A rip-snorter of a wind was blowin' off the Silver City peaks.
+ His face was drawed like a winter apple, but he wint off happy. I think he
+ was warm inside of himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ask him his name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure. Why not? John Treagar he called himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treagar? Hagar, you mean!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was Treagar he said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John Hagar is the man I am looking for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treagar&mdash;Hagar? 'T is comin' pretty close to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About what height and build was he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was not to say a tall man; and he wasn't so turrible short neither.
+ His back was as round as a Bible. A kind of pepper and saltish beard he
+ had, and his hair was blacker than his beard but white in streaks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A <i>dark</i> man, was he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would be a <i>dark</i> man if he was younger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man I want is blue-eyed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His eyes was blue&mdash;a kind of washed-out gray that maybe was blue
+ wanst; and one of them always weepin' wit' the cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And light brown hair mixed with gray, like sand and ashes&mdash;mostly
+ ashes; and a thin straggling beard, thinner on the cheeks? A high head and
+ a tall stooping figure&mdash;six feet at least; hands with large joints
+ and a habit of picking at them when&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are goin' too fast for me now, sor. He was not that description of a
+ man, nayther the height nor the hair of him. Sure't is a pity for ye
+ comin' this far, and him not the man at all. Faith, I wish I was the man
+ meself! I wonder at Joe Stratton anyhow! He's a very hasty man, is Joe. He
+ jumps in wit' both feet, so he does. I could have told ye that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya, always helplessly natural, and now very tired as well, when Paul
+ described with his usual gravity this anti-climax, fell below all the
+ dignities at once in a burst of childish giggling. Paul looked on with an
+ embarrassed smile, like a puzzled affectionate dog at the incomprehensible
+ mirth of humans. Paul was certainly deficient in humor and therefore in
+ breadth. But what woman ever loved her lover the less for having
+ discovered his limitations? Humor runs in families of the intenser
+ cultivation. The son of the soil remains serious in the face of life's and
+ nature's ironies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII. &mdash; THE STAR IN THE EAST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So the search paused, while the searchers rested and revised their plans.
+ Spring opened in the valley as if for them alone. There were mornings
+ &ldquo;proud and sweet,&rdquo; when the humblest imagination could have pictured
+ Aurora and her train in the jocund clouds that trooped along the sky,&mdash;wind-built
+ processions which the wind dispersed. Wild flowers spread so fast they
+ might have been spilled from the rainbow scarf of Iris fleeting overhead.
+ The river was in flood, digging its elbows into its muddy banks. The
+ willow and wild-rose thickets stooped and washed their spring garments in
+ its tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primeval life and love were all around them. Meadow larks flung their
+ brief jets of song into the sunlight; the copses rustled with wings;
+ wood-doves cooed from the warm sunny hollows, and the soft booming of
+ their throaty call was like a beating in the air,&mdash;the pulse of
+ spring. They had found their Garden. Humanity in the valley passed before
+ them in forms as interesting and as alien as the brother beasts to Adam:
+ the handsome driver of the jerky, Joe Stratton's successor, who sat at
+ dinner opposite and combed his flowing mustache with his fork in a lazy,
+ dandified way; the darkened faces of sheep-herders enameled by sun and
+ wind, their hair like the winter coats of animals; the slow-eyed farmers
+ with the appetites of horses; the spring recruits for the ranks of labor
+ footing it to distant ranches, each with his back-load of bedding, and the
+ dust of three counties on his garments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweet forces of Nature shut out, for a season, Paul's <i>cri du coeur</i>.
+ One may keep a chamber sacred to one's sadder obligations and yet the
+ house be filled with joy. Further ramifications of the search were mapped
+ out with Jimmy's indifferent assistance. For good reasons of his own,
+ Jimmy did little to encourage an early start. He would explain that his
+ maps were of ancient date and full of misinformation as to stage routes.
+ &ldquo;See that now! The stages was pulled off that line five year ago, on
+ account of the railroad cuttin' in on them. Ye couldn't make it wid'out ye
+ took a camp outfit. There's ne'er a station left, and when ye come to it,
+ it's ruins ye'll find. A chimbly and a few rails, if the mule-skinners
+ hasn't burned them. 'Tis a country very devoid of fuel; sagebrush and
+ grease-wood, and a wind, bedad! that blows the grass-seeds into the next
+ county.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When these camping-trips were proposed to Moya, she hesitated and
+ responded languidly; but when Paul suggested leaving her even for a day,
+ her fears fluttered across his path and wiled him another way. Vaguely he
+ felt that she was unlike herself&mdash;less buoyant, though often
+ restless; and sometimes he fancied she was pale underneath her sun-burned
+ color like that of rose-hips in October. Various causes kept him inert,
+ while strength mounted in his veins, and life seemed made for the pure joy
+ of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon of May in that valley is the moon of roses, for the heats once
+ due come on apace. The young people gave up their all-day horseback rides
+ and took morning walks instead, following the shore-paths lazily to shaded
+ coverts dedicated to those happy silences which it takes two to make. Or,
+ they climbed the bluffs and gazed at the impenetrable vast horizon, and
+ thought perhaps of their errand with that pang of self-reproach which,
+ when shared, becomes a subtler form of self-indulgence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at night, all the teeming life of the plain rushed up into the sky and
+ blazed there in a million friendly stars. After the languor of the sleepy
+ afternoons, it was like a fresh awakening&mdash;the dawn of those white
+ May nights. The wide plain stirred softly through all its miles of sage.
+ The river's cadenced roar paused beyond the bend and outbroke again. All
+ that was eerie and furtive in the wild dark found a curdling voice in the
+ coyote's hunting-call.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a hollow concealed by sage, not ten minutes' walk from the Ferry inn,
+ unknown to the map-maker and innocent of all use, lay a perfect floor for
+ evening pacing with one's eyes upon the stars. It was the death mask of an
+ ancient lake, done in purest alkali silt, and needing only the shadows
+ cast by a low moon to make the illusion almost unbelievable. Slow
+ precipitation, season after season, as the water dried, had left the lake
+ bed smooth as a cast in plaster. Subsequent warpings had lifted the alkali
+ crust into thin-lipped wavelets. But once upon the floor itself the
+ resemblance to water vanished. The warpings and Grumblings took the shape
+ of earth as made by water and baked by fire. Moya compared it to a bit of
+ the dead moon fallen to show us what we are coming to. They paced it
+ soft-footed in tennis shoes lest they should crumble its talc-like
+ whiteness. But they read no horoscopes, for they were shy of the future in
+ speaking to each other,&mdash;and they made no plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening Moya had said to Paul: &ldquo;I can understand your mother so much
+ better now that I am a wife. I think most women have a tendency towards
+ the state of being <i>un</i>married. And if one had&mdash;children, it
+ would increase upon one very fast. A widow and a mother&mdash;for twenty
+ years. How could she be a wife again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul made no reply to this speech which long continued to haunt him;
+ especially as Moya wrote more frequently to his mother and did not offer
+ to show him her letters. In their evening walks she seemed distrait, and
+ during the day more restless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night of their nightly pacings she stopped and stood long, her head
+ thrown back, her eyes fixed upon the dizzy star-deeps. Paul waited a step
+ behind her, touching her shoulders with his hands. Suddenly she reeled and
+ sank backwards into his arms. He held her, watching her lovely face grow
+ whiter; her eyelids closed. She breathed slowly, leaning her whole weight
+ upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coming to herself, she smiled and said it was nothing. She had been that
+ way before. &ldquo;But&mdash;we must go home. We must have a home&mdash;somewhere.
+ I want to see your mother. Paul, be good to her&mdash;forgive her&mdash;for
+ my sake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX. &mdash; PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly Lewis was disappointed in the latest of her beneficiaries. It
+ was nine years since her husband had locked up his savings in the Mud
+ Springs ranch, a neglected little health-plant at the mouth of the
+ Bruneau. If you were troubled with rheumatism, or a crick in the back, or
+ your &ldquo;pancrees&rdquo; didn't act or your blood was &ldquo;out o' fix, why, you'd
+ better go up to Looanders' for a spell and soak yourself in that blue mud
+ and let aunt Polly diet ye and dost ye with yerb tea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Leander courted aunt Polly in the interests of his sanitarium, she
+ was reputed the best nurse in Ada County. The widow&mdash;by desertion&mdash;of
+ a notorious quack doctor of those parts: it was an open question whether
+ his medicine had killed or her nursing had cured the greater number of
+ confiding sick folk. Leander drove fifty miles to catechise this notable
+ woman, and finding her sound on the theory of packs hot and cold, and
+ skilled in the practice of rubbing,&mdash;and having made the incidental
+ discovery that she was a person not without magnetism,&mdash;he decided on
+ the spot to add her to the other attractions of Mud Springs ranch; and she
+ drove home with him next day, her trunk in the back of his wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place was no sinecure. Bricks without straw were a child's pastime to
+ the cures aunt Polly and the Springs effected without a pretense to the
+ comforts of life in health, to say nothing of sickness. Modern
+ conveniences are costly, and how are you to get the facilities for &ldquo;pay
+ patients&rdquo; when you have no patients that pay! Prosperity had overlooked
+ the Bruneau, or had made false starts there, through detrimental schemes
+ that gave the valley a bad name with investors. The railroad was still
+ fifty miles away, and the invalid public would not seek life itself, in
+ these days of luxurious travel, at the cost of a twelve hours' stage-ride.
+ However, as long as the couple had a roof over their heads and the Springs
+ continued to plop and vomit their strange, chameleon-colored slime,
+ Leander would continue to bring home the sick and the suffering for Polly
+ and the Springs to practice on. Health became his hobby, and in time, with
+ isolation thrown in, it began to invade his common sense. He tried in
+ succession all the diet fads of the day and wound up a convert to the
+ &ldquo;Ralston&rdquo; school of eating. Aunt Polly had clung a little longer to the
+ flesh-pots, but the charms of a system that abolished half the labor of
+ cooking prevailed with her at last, and in the end she kept a sharper eye
+ upon Leander at mealtime than ever he had upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ignorant gorgings of their neighbors were a head-shaking and a warning
+ to them, and more than once Leander's person was in jeopardy through his
+ zealous but unappreciated concern for the brother who eats in darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had started out one winter morning from Bisuka, a virtuous man. His
+ team had breakfasted, but not he. A Ralstonite does not load up his
+ stomach at dawn after the manner of cattle, and such pious substitutes for
+ a cup of coffee as are permitted the faithful cannot always be had for a
+ price. At Indian Creek he hauled up to water his team, and to make for
+ himself a cinnamon-colored decoction by boiling in hot water a preparation
+ of parched grains which he carried with him. This he accomplished in an
+ angle of the old corral fence out of the wind. There is no comfort nor
+ even virtue in eating cold dust with one's sandwiches. Leander sunk his
+ great white tushes through the thick slices of whole-wheat bread and
+ tasted the paste of peanut meal with which they were spread. He ate
+ standing and slapped his leg to warm his driving hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A flutter of something colored, as a garment, caught his eye, directing it
+ to the shape of a man, rolled in an old blue blanket, lying motionless in
+ a corner of the tumble-down wall. &ldquo;Drunk, drunk as a hog!&rdquo; pronounced
+ Leander. For no man in command of himself would lie down to sleep in such
+ a place. As if to refute this accusation, the wind turned a corner of the
+ blanket quietly off a white face with closed eyelids,&mdash;an old, worn,
+ gentle face, appealing in its homeliness, though stamped now with the
+ dignity of death. Leander knelt and handled the body tenderly. It was long
+ before he satisfied himself that life was still there. Another case for
+ Polly and the Springs. A man worth saving, if Leander knew a man; one of
+ the trustful, trustworthy sort. His heart went out to him on the instant
+ as to a friend from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was closing in for dusk when he reached the Ferry. Jimmy was away, and
+ Han, in high dudgeon, brought the boat over in answer to Leander's hail.
+ He had grouse to dress for supper, inconsiderately flung in upon him at
+ the last moment by the stage, four hours late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Huh! Why you no come one hour ago? All time 'Hullo, hullo'! Je' Cli'! me
+ no dam felly-man&mdash;me dam cook! Too much man say 'Hullo'!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prospect was not good for help at the Ferry inn, so, putting his trust
+ in Polly and the Springs, Leander pushed on up the valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Aunt Polly's patients were of the right sort, they stayed on after
+ their recovery and helped Leander with the ranch work. But for the most
+ part they &ldquo;hit the trail&rdquo; again as soon as their ills were healed, not
+ forgetting to advertise the Springs to other patients of their own class.
+ The only limit to this unenviable popularity was the size of the house.
+ Leander saw no present advantage in building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in case they ever did build&mdash;and the time was surely coming!&mdash;here
+ was the very person they had been looking for. Cast your bread upon the
+ waters. The winter's bread and care and shelter so ungrudgingly bestowed
+ had returned to them many-fold in the comfortable sense of dependence and
+ unity they felt in this last beneficiary, the old man of Indian Creek whom
+ they called &ldquo;Uncle John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The kindest old creetur' ever lived! Some forgitful, but everybody's
+ liable to forgit. Only tell him one thing at once, and don't confuse him,
+ and he'll git through an amazin' sight of chores in a day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just the very one we'll want to wait on the men patients,&rdquo; Aunt Polly
+ chimed in. &ldquo;He can carry up meals and keep the bathrooms clean, and wash
+ out the towels, and he's the best hand with poultry. He takes such good
+ care of the old hens they're re'lly ashamed not to lay!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was spring again; old hopes were putting forth new leaves. Leander had
+ heard of a capitalist in the valley; a young one, too, more prone to
+ enthusiasm if shown the right thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm going down to Jimmy's to fetch them up here!&rdquo; Leander announced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are there two of them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has brought his wife out with him. They are a young couple. He's the
+ only son of a rich widow in New York, and Jimmy says they've got money to
+ burn. Jimmy don't take much stock in this 'ere 'wounded guide' story&mdash;thinks
+ it's more or less of a blind. He's feeling around for a good investment&mdash;desert
+ land or mining claims. Jimmy thinks he represents big interests back
+ East.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly considered, and the corners of her mouth moistened as she
+ thought of the dinner she would snatch from the jaws of the system on the
+ day these young strangers should visit the ranch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Gum!&rdquo; Leander shouted. &ldquo;I wonder if Uncle John wouldn't know something
+ about the party they're advertising for. That'd be the way to find out if
+ they're really on the scent. I'll take him down with me&mdash;that's what
+ I'll <i>do</i>&mdash;and let him have a talk with the young man himself.
+ It'll make a good opening. Are you listening, Polly?&rdquo; She was not. &ldquo;I wish
+ you'd git him to fix himself up a little. Layout one o' my clean shirts
+ for him, and I'll take him down with me day after to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll have a fresh churning to-morrow,&rdquo; Aunt Polly mused. &ldquo;You can take a
+ little pat of it with you. I won't put no salt in it, and I'll send along
+ a glass or two of my wild strawberry jam. It takes an awful time to pick
+ the berries, but I guess it'll be appreciated after the table Jimmy sets.
+ I don't believe Jimmy'll be offended?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bogardus is their name,&rdquo; continued Leander. &ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Bogardus, from
+ New York. Jimmy's got it down in his hotel book and he's showing it to
+ everybody. Jimmy's reel childish about it. I tell him one swallow don't
+ make a summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John had come into the room and sat listening, while a yellow pallor
+ crept over his forehead and cheeks. He moved to get up once, and then sat
+ down again weakly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter, Uncle?&rdquo; Aunt Polly eyed him sharply. &ldquo;You been out
+ there chopping wood too long in this hot sun. What did I tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She cleared the decks for action. Paler and paler the old man grew. He was
+ not able to withstand her vigorous sympathies. She had him tucked up on
+ the calico lounge and his shoes off and a hot iron at his feet; but while
+ she was hurrying up the kettle to make him a drink of something hot, he
+ rose and slipped up the outside stairs to his bedroom in the attic. There
+ he seated himself on the side of his neat bed which he always made himself
+ camp fashion,&mdash;the blankets folded lengthwise with just room for one
+ quiet sleeper to crawl inside; and there he sat, opening and clinching his
+ hands, a deep perplexity upon his features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly called to him and began to read the riot act, but Leander said:
+ &ldquo;Let him be! He gits tired o' being fussed over. You're at him about
+ something or other the whole blessed time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I have to! My gracious! He'd forgit to come in to his meals if I
+ didn't keep him on my mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It just strikes me&mdash;what am I going to call him when I introduce him
+ to those folks? Did he ever tell you what his last name is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn't be surprised,&rdquo; Aunt Polly lowered her voice, &ldquo;if he couldn't
+ remember it himself! I've heard of such cases. Whenever I try to draw him
+ out to talk about himself and what happened to him before you found him,
+ it breaks him all up; seemingly gives him a back-set every time. He sort
+ of slinks into himself in that queer, lost way&mdash;just like he was when
+ he first come to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's had a powerful jar to his constitution, and his mind is taking a
+ rest.&rdquo; Leander was fond of a diagnosis. &ldquo;There wasn't enough life left in
+ him to keep his faculties and his bod'ly organs all a-going at once. The
+ upper story's to let.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you'd go upstairs, and see what he is doing up there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aw, no! Let him be. He likes to go off by himself and do his thinking. I
+ notice it rattles him to be talked to much. He sets out there on the
+ choppin'-block, looking at the bluffs&mdash;ever notice? He looks and
+ don't see nothin', and his lips keep moving like he was learning a
+ spellin'-lesson. If I speak to him sharp, he hauls himself together and
+ smiles uneasy, but he don't know what I said. I tell you he's waking up;
+ coming to his memories, and trying to sort 'em out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's just what <i>I</i> say,&rdquo; Aunt Polly retorted, &ldquo;but he's got to eat
+ his meals. He can't live on memories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John was restless that evening, and appeared to be excited. He
+ waited upon Aunt Polly after supper with a feverish eagerness to be of
+ use. When all was in order for bedtime, and Leander rose to wind the
+ clock, he spoke. It was getting about time to roll up his blankets and
+ pull out, he said. Leander felt for the ledge where the clock-key
+ belonged, and made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was saying&mdash;I guess it's about time for me to be moving on. The
+ grass is starting&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you cal'latin' to live on grass?&rdquo; Leander drawled with cutting irony.
+ &ldquo;Gettin' tired of the old woman's cooking? Well, she ain't much of a
+ cook!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John remained silent, working at his hands. His mouth, trembled
+ under his thin straggling beard. &ldquo;I never was better treated in my life,
+ and you know it. It ain't handsome of you, Lewis, to talk that way!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He don't mean nothing, Uncle John! What makes you so foolish, Looander!
+ He just wants you to know there's no begrudgers around here. You're
+ welcome, and more than welcome, to settle down and camp right along with
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Winter and summer!&rdquo; Leander put in, &ldquo;if you're satisfied. There's nobody
+ in a hurry to see the last of ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John's mild but determined resistance was a keen disappointment to
+ his friends. Leander thought himself offended. &ldquo;What fly's stung you,
+ anyhow! Heard from any of your folks lately?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got any money salted down that needs turning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looander! Quit teasing of him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let him have his fun, ma'am. It's all he's likely to get out of me. I
+ have got a little money,&rdquo; he pursued. &ldquo;'T would be an insult to name it in
+ the same breath with what you've done for me. I'd like to leave it here,
+ though. You could pass it on. You'll have chances enough. 'T ain't likely
+ I'll be the last one you'll take in and do for, and never git nothing out
+ of it in return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a mild sensation, as the speaker, fumbling in his loose
+ trousers, appeared to be seeking for that money. Aunt Polly's eyes flamed
+ indignation behind her tears. She was a foolish, warm-hearted creature,
+ and her eyes watered on the least excuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looander, you shouldn't have taunted him,&rdquo; she admonished her husband,
+ who felt he had been a little rough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here, Uncle John, d'you ever know anybody who wasn't by way of
+ needing help some time in their lives? We don't ask any one who comes
+ here&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't come!&rdquo; Aunt Polly corrected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, who was brought, then! We don't ask for their character, nor their
+ private history, nor their bank account. I don't know but you're the first
+ one for years I've ever took a real personal shine to, and we've h'isted a
+ good many up them stairs that wasn't able to walk much further. I'd like
+ you to stay as a favor to us, dang it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leander delivered this invitation as if it were a threat. His straight-cut
+ mustache stiffened and projected itself by the pressure of his big lips;
+ his dark red throat showed as many obstinate creases as an old
+ snapping-turtle's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm much obliged to you both. I want you to remember that. We&mdash;I&mdash;I'll
+ talk with ye in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That means he's going all the same,&rdquo; said Leander, after Uncle John had
+ closed the outside door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough, next morning he had made up his little pack, oiled his boots,
+ and by breakfast-time was ready for the road. They argued the point long
+ and fiercely with him whether he should set out on foot or wait a day and
+ ride with Leander to the Ferry. It was not supposed he could be thinking
+ of any other road. By to-morrow, if he would but wait, Aunt Polly would
+ have comfortably outfitted him after the custom of the house; given his
+ clothes a final &ldquo;going over&rdquo; to see everything taut for the journey,
+ shoved a week's rations into a corn-sack, choosing such condensed forms of
+ nourishment as the system allowed&mdash;nay, straining a point and
+ smuggling in a nefarious pound or two of real miner's coffee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly's distress so weighed with her patient that he consented to
+ remain overnight and ride with Leander as far as the dam across the
+ Bruneau, at its junction with the Snake. There he would cross and take the
+ trail down the river, cutting off several miles of the road to the Ferry.
+ As for going on to see Jimmy or Jimmy's &ldquo;folks,&rdquo; the nervous resistance
+ which this plan excited warned the good couple not to press the old man
+ too far, or he might give them the slip altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strangeness in his manner which this last discussion had brought out,
+ lay heavy on aunt Polly's mind all day after the departure of the team for
+ the Ferry. She watched the two men drive off in silence, Leander's bush
+ beard reddening in the sun, his big body filling more than his half of the
+ seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, by Gum! If he ain't the blamedest, most per-sistent old fool!&rdquo; he
+ complained to his wife that night. Their first words were of the old man,
+ already missed like one of the family from the humble place he had made
+ for himself. Leander was still irritable over his loss. &ldquo;I set him down
+ with his grub and blankets, and I watched him footing it acrost the dam.
+ He done it real handsome, steady on his pins. Then he set down and waited,
+ kind o' dreaming, like he used to, settin' on the choppin'-block. I hailed
+ him. 'What's the matter?' I says. 'Left anything?' No: every time I hailed
+ he took off his hat and waved to me real pleasant. Nothing the matter.
+ There he set. Well, thinks I, I can't stay here all day watching ye take
+ root. So I drove on a piece. And, by Gum! when I looked back going around
+ the bend, there he went a-pikin' off up the bluffs&mdash;just a-humping
+ himself for all he was worth. I wouldn't like to think he was cunning, but
+ it looked that way for sure,&mdash;turning me off the scent and then
+ taking to the bluffs like he was sent for! Where in thunder is he making
+ for? He knows just as well as I do&mdash;you have heard me tell him a
+ dozen times&mdash;the stages were hauled off that Wood River road five
+ year and more ago. He won't git nowhere! And he won't meet up with a team
+ in a week's walking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His food will last him a week if he's careful; he's no great eater. I
+ ain't afraid his feet will get lost; he's to home out of doors almost
+ anywhere;&mdash;it's his head I'm afraid of. He's got some sort of a skew
+ on him. I used to notice if he went out for a little walk anywhere, he'd
+ always slope for the East.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX. &mdash; A STATION IN THE DESERT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That forsworn identity which Adam Bogardus had submitted to be clothed in
+ as a burial garment was now become a thing for the living to flee from. He
+ had seen a woman in full health whiten and cower before it;&mdash;she who
+ stood beside his bed and looked at him with dreadful eyes, eyes of his
+ girl-wife growing old in the likeness of her father. Hard, reluctant eyes
+ forced to own the truth which the ashen lips denied. Are we responsible
+ for our silences? He had not spoken to her. Nay, the living must speak
+ first, or the ghostly dead depart unquestioned. He asked only that he
+ might forget her and be himself forgotten. If it were that woman's right
+ to call herself Emily Bogardus, then was there no Adam her husband. Better
+ the old disguise which left him free to work out his own sentence and pay
+ his forfeit to the law. He had never desired that one breath of it should
+ be commuted, or wished to accept an enslaving pardon from those for whose
+ sake he had put himself out of the way. If he could have taken his own
+ comparative spiritual measurement, he might have smiled at the humor of
+ that forgiveness promised him in the name of the Highest by his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many peaceful years solitude had been the habit of his soul. Gently as
+ he bore with human obligations, he escaped from them with a sense of
+ relief which shamed him somewhat when he thought of the good friends to
+ whom he owed this very blessed power to flee. It was quite as Leander had
+ surmised. He could not command his faculties&mdash;memory especially&mdash;when
+ a noise of many words and questions bruised his brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stillness of the desert closed about him with delicious healing. He
+ was a world-weary child returned to the womb of Nature. His old camp-craft
+ came back; his eye for distance, his sense of the trail, his little pet
+ economies with food and fire. There was no one to tell him what to eat and
+ when to eat it. He was invisible to men. Each day's march built up his
+ muscle, and every night's deep sleep under the great high stars steadied
+ his nerves and tightened his resolve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thought of the young man&mdash;his son&mdash;with a mixture of pain and
+ tenderness. But Paul was not the baby-boy he had put out of his arms with
+ a father's smile at One Man station. Paul was himself a man now; he had
+ coerced him at the last, neither did he understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blind instinct of flight began after a while to shape its own
+ direction. It was no new leaning with the packer. As many times as he had
+ crossed this trail he never had failed to experience the same pull. He
+ resisted no longer. He gave way to strange fancies and made them his
+ guides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At some time during his flight from the hospital, in one of those blanks
+ that overtook him, he knew not how, he had met with a great loss. The
+ words had slipped from his memory&mdash;of that message which had kept him
+ in fancied touch with his wife all these many deluding years. Without them
+ he was like a drunkard deprived of his habitual stimulant. The craving to
+ connect and hold them&mdash;for they came to him sometimes in tantalizing
+ freaks of memory, and slipped away again like beads rolling off a broken
+ thread&mdash;was almost the only form of mental suffering he was now
+ conscious of. What had become of the message itself? Had they left it
+ exposed to every heartless desecration in that abandoned spot?&mdash;a
+ scrap of paper driven like a bit of tumble-weed before the wind, snatched
+ at by spikes of sage, trampled into the mire of cattle, nuzzled by wild
+ beasts? Or, had they put it away with that other beast where he lay with
+ the scoff on his dead face? Out of dreams and visions of the night that
+ place of the parting ways called to him, and the time was now come when he
+ must go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He approached it by one of those desert trails that circle for miles on
+ the track of water and pounce as a bird drops upon its prey into the
+ trampled hollow at One Man station&mdash;a place for the gathering of
+ hoofs in the midst of the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could trace what might have been the foundation of a house, a few
+ blackened stones, a hearthstone showing where a chimney perhaps had stood,
+ but these evidences of habitation would never have been marked except by
+ one who knew where to look. He searched the ground over for signs of the
+ tragedy that bound him to that spot&mdash;a smiling desolation, a sunny
+ nothingness. The effect of this careless obliteration was quieting. Nature
+ had played here once with two men and a woman. One of the toy men was
+ lost, the other broken. She had forgotten where she put the broken one.
+ There were mounds which looked like graves, but the seeker knew that
+ artificial mounds in a place like this soon sink into hollows; and there
+ were hollows like open graves, filled with unsightly human rubbish, washed
+ in by the yearly rains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spent three days in the hollow, doing nothing, steeped in sunshine,
+ lying down to rest broad awake in the tender twilight, making his peace
+ with this place of bitter memory before bidding it good-by. His thoughts
+ turned eastward as the planets rose. Time he was working back towards
+ home. He would hardly get there if he started now, before his day was
+ done. He saw his mother's grave beside his father's, in the southeast
+ corner of the burying-ground, where the trees were thin. All who drove in
+ through the big gate of funerals could see the tall white shafts of the
+ Beviers and Brodericks and Van Eltens, but only those who came on foot
+ could approach his people in the gravelly side-hill plots. &ldquo;I'd like to be
+ put there alongside the old folks in that warm south corner.&rdquo; He could see
+ their names on the plain gray slate stones, rain-stained and green with
+ moss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the third May evening of his stay the horizon became a dust-cloud, the
+ setting sun a ball of fire. Loomed the figure of a rider topping the
+ heaving backs of his herd. All together they came lumbering down the
+ slopes, all heading fiercely for the water. The rider plunged down a
+ side-draw out of the main cloud. Clanking bells, shuffling hoofs, the
+ &ldquo;Whoop-ee-youp!&rdquo; came fainter up the gulch. The cowboy was not pleased as
+ he dashed by to see an earlier camp-fire smoking in the hollow. But he was
+ less displeased, being half French, than if he had been pure-bred
+ American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man, squatting by his cooking-fire, gave him a civil nod, and he
+ responded with a flourish of his quirt. The reek of sage smoke, the smell
+ of dust and cattle rose rank on the cooling air. It was good to Boniface,
+ son of the desert; it meant supper and bed, or supper and talk, for
+ &ldquo;Bonny&rdquo; Maupin (&ldquo;Bonny Moppin,&rdquo; it went in the vernacular) would talk
+ every other man to sleep, full or empty, with songs thrown in. To-night,
+ however, he must talk on an empty stomach, for his chuck wagon was not in
+ sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;W'ich way you travelin'?&rdquo; he began, lighting up after a long pull at his
+ flask. The old man had declined, though he looked as if he needed a drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;East about,&rdquo; was the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goin' far?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; summer's before us. I cal'late to keep moving till snow falls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shucks! You ain' pressed for time. Maybe you got some friend back there.
+ Goin' back to git married?&rdquo; He winked genially to point the jest and the
+ old man smiled indulgently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you set up and take a bite with me? You don't look to have much of
+ a show for supper along.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks, very much! I had bully breakfast at Rock Spring middlin' late
+ this morning. They butcherin' at that place. Five fat hog. My chuck wagon
+ he stay behin' for chunk of fresh pig. I won' spoil my appetide for that
+ tenderloin. Hol' on yourself an' take supper wis me. No?&mdash;That fellah
+ be 'long 'bout Chris'mas if he don' git los'! He always behin', pig or no
+ pig!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bonny strolled away collecting fire-wood. Presently he called back,
+ pointing dramatically with his small-toed boot. &ldquo;Who's been coyotin' round
+ here?&rdquo; The hard ground was freshly disturbed in spots as by the paws of
+ some small inquisitive animal. There was no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you say? Whose surface diggin's is these? I never know anybody do
+ some mining here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was me&rdquo;&mdash;Bonny backed a little nearer to catch the old man's
+ words. &ldquo;I was looking round here for something I lost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What luck you have? You fin' him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, now, doos it reely matter to you, sonny?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardner, it don' matter to me a d&mdash;n, if you say so! I was jus'
+ askin' myself what a man <i>would</i> look for if he los' it here. Since I
+ strike this 'ell of a place the very groun' been chewed up and spit out
+ reg'lar, one hundred times a year. 'T'is a gris' mill!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't gretly expect to find what I was lookin' for. I was just foolin'
+ around to satisfy myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That satisfy me!&rdquo; said Bonny pleasantly; and yet he was a trifle
+ discomfited. He strolled away again and began to sing with a boyish show
+ of indifference to having been called &ldquo;sonny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sally is the gal for me! Oh, Sally's the gal for me! On moonlight
+ night when the star is bright&mdash;Oh&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halloa! This some more your work, oncle? You ain' got no chicken wing for
+ arm if you lif' this.&mdash;Ah, be dam! I see what you lif' him with. All
+ same stove-lid.&rdquo; Talking and swearing to himself cheerfully, Bonny applied
+ the end of a broken whiffletree to the blunt lip of the old hearthstone
+ which marked the stage-house chimney. He had tried a step-dance on it and
+ found it hollow. More fresh digging, and marks upon the stone where some
+ prying tool had taken hold and slipped, showed he was not the first who
+ had been curious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There you go, over on you' back, like snap' turtle; I see where you lay
+ there before. What the dev'! I say!&rdquo; Bonny, much excited with his find,
+ extracted a rusty tin tobacco-box from the hole, pried open the spring lid
+ and drew forth its contents: a discolored canvas bag bulging with coin and
+ whipped around the neck with a leather whang. The canvas was rotten; Bonny
+ supported its contents tenderly as he brought it over to the old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oncle, I ask you' pardon for tappin' that safe. Pretty good lil'
+ nest-egg, eh? But now you got to find her some other place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That don't belong to me,&rdquo; said the old man indifferently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aw&mdash;don't be bashful! I onderstan' now what you los'. You dig here&mdash;there&mdash;migs
+ up the scent. I just happen to step on that stone&mdash;ring him, so, with
+ my boot-heel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That ain't my pile,&rdquo; the other persisted. &ldquo;I started to build a fire on
+ that stone two nights ago. It rung hollow like you say. I looked and found
+ what you found&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And put her back! My soul to God! An' you here all by you'self!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not? The stuff ain't mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who <i>is</i> she? How long since anybody live here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&mdash;good while, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sar! Look here! I open that bag. I count two hondre' thirteen
+ dolla'&mdash;make it twelve for luck, an' call it you' divvee! You strike
+ her first. What you say: we go snac'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't got any use for that money. You needn't talk to me about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got no h'use!&mdash;are you a reech man? Got you' private car waitin' for
+ you out in d' sagebrush? Sol' a mine lately?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know why it strikes you so funny. It's no concern of mine if a
+ man puts his money in the ground and goes off and leaves it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goes off and die! There was one man live here by himself&mdash;he die,
+ they say, 'with his boots on.' He, I think, mus' be that man belong to
+ this money. What an old stiff want with two hondre' thirteen dolla'? That
+ money goin' into a live man's clothes.&rdquo; Bonny slapped his chappereros, and
+ the dust flew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've no objection to its going into <i>your</i> clothes,&rdquo; said the old
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You thing I ain' particular, me? Well, eef the party underground was my
+ frien', and I knew his fam'ly, and was sure the money was belong to him&mdash;I'd
+ do differend&mdash;perhaps. Mais,&mdash;it is going&mdash;going&mdash;gone!
+ You won' go snac'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man smiled and looked steadily away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blas' me to h&mdash;l! but you aire the firs' man ever I strike that jib
+ at the sight of col' coin. She don' frighten me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bonny always swore when he felt embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sar! Look here! You fin' you'self so blame indifferend&mdash;s'pose
+ you <i>so</i> indifferend not to say nothing 'bout this, when my swamper
+ fellah git in. I don' wish to go snac' wis him. I don' feel oblige'. See?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you want to pester me about this money for!&rdquo; The old man was weary.
+ &ldquo;I didn't come here, lookin' for money, and I don't expect to take none
+ away with me. So I'll say good-night to ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hol' on, hol' on! Don' git mad. What time you goin' off in the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before you do, I shouldn't wonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But hol'! One fine idea&mdash;blazin' good idea&mdash;just hit me now in
+ the head! Wan' to come on to Chicago wis me? I drop this fellah at Felton.
+ He take the team back, and I get some one to help me on the treep. Why not
+ you? Ever tek' care of stock?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some consid'able years ago I used to look after stock. Guess I'd know an
+ ox from a heifer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ever handle 'em on cattle-car?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all there is, you feed 'em, and water 'em, and keep 'em on their
+ feets. If one fall down, all the others they have too much play. They
+ rock&rdquo;&mdash;Bonny exhibited&mdash;&ldquo;and fall over and pile up in heap. I
+ like to do one turn for you. We goin' the same way&mdash;you bring me the
+ good luck, like a bird in the han'. This is my clean-up, you understand.
+ You bring me the beautiful luck. You turn me up right bower first slap.
+ Now it's goin' be my deal. I like to do by you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer turned over and looked up at the cool sky, pricked through with
+ early stars. He was silent a long time. His pale old face was like a fine
+ bit of carving in the dusk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you think?&rdquo; asked Moppin, almost tenderly. &ldquo;I thing you better come
+ wis me. You too hold a man to go like so&mdash;alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll have to think about it first;&mdash;let you know in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI. &mdash; INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A Rush of wheels and a spatter of hoofs coming up the drive sent Mrs.
+ Dunlop to the sitting-room window. She tried to see out through streaming
+ showers that darkened the panes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't that Mrs. Bogardus? Why, it is! Put on your shoes, Chauncey, quick!
+ Help her in 'n' take her horse to the shed. Take an umbrella with you.&rdquo;
+ Chauncey the younger, meekly drying his shoes by the kitchen fire, put
+ them on, not stopping to lace them, and slumped down the porch steps,
+ pursued by his mother's orders. She watched him a moment struggling with a
+ cranky umbrella, and then turned her attention to herself and the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus made her calls in the morning, and always plainly on
+ business. She had not seen the inside of Cerissa's parlor for ten years.
+ This was a grievance which Cerissa referred to spasmodically, being seized
+ with it when she was otherwise low in her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sakes! Can't I remember my mother telling how <i>her</i> mother used
+ to drive over and spend the afternoon, and bring her sewing and the baby&mdash;whichever
+ one was the baby. They called each other Chrissy and Angevine, and now she
+ don't even speak of her own children to us by their first names. It's
+ 'Mrs. Bowen' and 'Mr. Paul;' just as if she was talking to her servants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's that to us? We've got a good home here for as long as we want to
+ stay. She's easy to work for, if you do what she says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey respected Mrs. Bogardus's judgment and her straightforward
+ business habits. Other matters he left alone. But Cerissa was ambitious
+ and emotional, and she stayed indoors, doing little things and thinking
+ small thoughts. She resented her commanding neighbor's casual manners.
+ There was something puzzling and difficult to meet in her plainness of
+ speech, which excluded the personal relation. It was like the cut and
+ finish of her clothes&mdash;mysterious in their simplicity, and not to be
+ imitated cheaply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the two met, Cerissa was immediately reduced to a state of flimsy
+ apology which she made up for by being particularly hot and self-assertive
+ in speaking of the lady afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is the parlor, in perfect order,&rdquo; she fretted, as she stood waiting
+ to open the front door; &ldquo;but of course she wouldn't let me take her in
+ there&mdash;that would be too much like visiting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next moment she had corrected her facial expression, and was offering
+ smiling condolences to Mrs. Bogardus on the state of her attire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is only my jacket. You might put that somewhere to dry,&rdquo; said the lady
+ curtly. Raindrops sparkled on the wave of thick iron-gray hair that lifted
+ itself, with a slight turn to one side, from her square low brow. Her eyes
+ shone dark against the fresh wind color in her cheeks. She had the
+ straight, hard, ophidian line concealing the eyelid, which gives such a
+ peculiar strength to the direct gaze of a pair of dark eyes. If one
+ suspects the least touch of tenderness, possibly of pain, behind that iron
+ fold, it lends a fascination equal to the strength. There was some
+ excitement in Mrs. Bogardus's manner, but Cerissa did not know her well
+ enough to perceive it. She merely thought her looking handsomer, and, if
+ possible, more formidable than usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sat by the fire, folding her skirts across her knees, and showing the
+ edges of the most discouragingly beautiful petticoats,&mdash;a taste
+ perhaps inherited from her wide-hipped Dutch progenitresses. Mrs. Bogardus
+ reveled in costly petticoats, and had an unnecessary number of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How nice it is in here!&rdquo; she said, looking about her. Cerissa, with the
+ usual apologies, had taken her into the kitchen to dry her skirts. There
+ was a slight taint of steaming shoe leather, left by Chauncey when driven
+ forth. Otherwise the kitchen was perfection,&mdash;the family room of an
+ old Dutch farmhouse, built when stone and hardwood lumber were cheap,&mdash;thick
+ walls; deep, low window-seats; beams showing on the ceiling; a modern
+ cooking-stove, where Emily Bogardus could remember the wrought brass
+ andirons and iron backlog, for this room had been her father's
+ dining-room. The brick tiled hearth remained, and the color of those
+ century and a half old bricks made a pitiful thing of Cerissa's new
+ oil-cloth. The woodwork had been painted&mdash;by Mrs. Bogardus's orders,
+ and much to Cerissa's disgust&mdash;a dark kitchen green,&mdash;not that
+ she liked the color herself, but it was the artistic demand of the moment,&mdash;and
+ the place was filled with a green golden light from the cherry-trees close
+ to the window, which a break in the clouds had suddenly illumined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You keep it beautifully,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus, her eyes shedding
+ compliments as she looked around. &ldquo;I should not dare go in my own kitchen
+ at this time of day. There are no women nowadays who know how to work in
+ the way ladies used to work. If I could have such a housekeeper as you,
+ Cerissa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa flushed and bridled. &ldquo;What would Chauncey do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't expect you to be my housekeeper,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus smiled. &ldquo;But I
+ envy Chauncey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has come to ask a favor,&rdquo; thought Cerissa. &ldquo;I never knew her so
+ pleasant, for nothing. She wants me to do up her fruit, I guess.&rdquo; Cerissa
+ was mistaken. Mrs. Bogardus simply was happy&mdash;or almost happy&mdash;and
+ deeply stirred over a piece of news which had come to her in that
+ morning's mail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have telephoned Bradley not to send his men over on Monday. My son is
+ bringing his wife home. They may be here all summer. The place belongs to
+ them now. Did Chauncey tell you? Mr. Paul writes that he has some building
+ plans of his own, and he wishes everything left as it is for the present,
+ especially this house. He wants his wife to see it first just as it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, to be sure! They've been traveling a long time, haven't they? And
+ how is his health now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he is very well indeed. You will be glad not to have the trouble of
+ those carpenters, Cerissa? Pulling down old houses is dirty work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, dear! I wouldn't mind the dirt. Anything to get rid of that old rat's
+ nest on top of the kitchen chamber. I hate to have such out of the way
+ places on my mind. I can't get around to do every single thing, and it's
+ years&mdash;years, Mrs. Bogardus, since I could get a woman to do a
+ half-day's cleaning up there in broad daylight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus stared. What was the woman talking about!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I call it a regular eyesore on the looks of the house besides. And it
+ keeps all the old stories alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What stories?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, of course your father wasn't out of his head&mdash;we all know that&mdash;when
+ he built that upstairs room and slep' there and locked himself in every
+ night of his life. It was only on one point he was a little warped: the
+ fear of bein' robbed. A natural fear, too,&mdash;an old man over eighty
+ livin' in such a lonesome place and known to be well off. But&mdash;you'll
+ excuse my repeating the talk&mdash;but the story goes now that he re'ly
+ went insane and was confined up there all the last years of his life. And
+ that's why the windows have got bars acrost them. Everybody notices it,
+ and they ask questions. It's real embarrassin', for of course I don't want
+ to discuss the family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who asks questions?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus's eyes were hard to meet when her
+ voice took that tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the city folks out driving. They often drive in the big gate and
+ make the circle through the grounds, and they're always struck when they
+ see that tower bedroom with windows like a prison. They say, 'What's the
+ story about that room, up there?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When people ask you questions about the house, you can say you did not
+ live here in the owner's time and you don't know. That's perfectly simple,
+ isn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I do know! Everybody knows,&rdquo; said Cerissa hotly. &ldquo;It was the talk of
+ the whole neighborhood when that room was put up; and I remember how
+ scared I used to be when mother sent me over here of an errand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus rose and shook out her skirts. &ldquo;Will Chauncey bring my horse
+ when it stops raining? By the way, did you get the furniture down that was
+ in that room, Cerissa?&mdash;the old secretary? I am going to have it put
+ in order for Mr. Paul's room. Old furniture is the fashion now, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa caught her breath nervously. &ldquo;Mrs. Bogardus&mdash;I couldn't do a
+ thing about it! I wanted Chauncey to tell you. All last week I tried to
+ get a woman, or a man, to come and help me clear out that place, but just
+ as soon as they find out what's wanted&mdash;'You'll have to get somebody
+ else for that job,' they say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's the room, Mrs. Bogardus; if I was you&mdash;I'm doing now just as
+ I'd be done by&mdash;I would not take Mrs. Paul Bogardus up into that room&mdash;not
+ even in broad daylight; not if it was my son's wife, in the third month of
+ her being a wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, upon my word!&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus, smiling coldly. &ldquo;Do you mean to
+ say these women are afraid to go up there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was old Mary Hornbeck who started the talk. She got what she called
+ her 'warning' up there. And the fact is, she was a corpse within six
+ months from that day. Chauncey and me, we used to hear noises, but old
+ houses are full of noises. We never thought much about it; only, I must
+ say I never had any use for that part of the house. Chauncey keeps his
+ seeds and tools in the lower room, and some of the winter vegetables, and
+ we store the parlor stove in there in summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, about this 'warning'?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes! It was three years ago in May, and I remember it was some such a day
+ as this&mdash;showery and broken overhead, and Mary disappointed me; but
+ she came about noon, and said she'd put in half a day anyhow. She got her
+ pail and house-cloths; but she wasn't gone not half an hour when down she
+ come white as a sheet, and her mouth as dry as chalk. She set down all of
+ a shake, and I give her a drink of tea, and she said: 'I wouldn't go up
+ there again, not for a thousand dollars.' She unlocked the door, she said,
+ and stepped inside without thinkin'. Your father's old rocker with the
+ green moreen cushions stood over by the east window, where he used to sit.
+ She heard a creak like a heavy step on the floor, and that empty chair
+ across the room, as far as from here to the window, begun to rock as if
+ somebody had just rose up from them cushions. She watched it till it
+ stopped. Then she took another step, and the step she couldn't see
+ answered her, and the chair begun to rock again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was that all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma'am; that wasn't all. I don't know if you remember an old wall
+ clock with a brass ball on top and brass scrolls down the sides and a
+ painted glass door in front of the pendulum with a picture of a castle and
+ a lake? The paint's been wore off the glass with cleaning, so the pendulum
+ shows plain. That clock has not been wound since we come to live here. I
+ don't believe a hand has touched it since the night he was carried feet
+ foremost out of that room. But Mary said she could count the strokes go
+ tick, tick, tick! She listened till she could have counted fifty, for she
+ was struck dumb, and just as plain as the clock before her face she could
+ see the minute-hand and the pendulum, both of 'em dead still. Now, how do
+ you account for that!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told Chauncey about it, and he said it was all foolishness. Do all I
+ could he would go up there himself, that same evening. But he come down
+ again after a while, and he was almost as white as Mary. 'Did you see
+ anything?' I says. 'I saw what Mary said she saw,' says he, 'and I heard
+ what she heard.' But no one can make Chauncey own up that he believes it
+ was anything supernatural. 'There is a reason for everything,' he says.
+ 'The miracles and ghosts of one generation are just school-book learning
+ to the next; and more of a miracle than the miracles themselves.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chauncey shows his sense,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was real disturbed, though, I could see; and he told me particular not
+ to make any talk about it. I never have opened the subject to a living
+ soul. But when Mary died, within six months, folks repeated what she had
+ been saying about her 'warning.' The 'death watch' she called it. We can't
+ all of us control our feelings about such things, and she was a lonely
+ widow woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, do you believe that ticking is going on up there now?&rdquo; asked Mrs.
+ Bogardus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa looked uneasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is the door locked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I re'ly couldn't say,&rdquo; she confessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say that all you sensible people in this house have
+ avoided that room for three years? And you don't even know if the door is
+ locked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;I don't use that part for anything, and cleaning is wasted on a
+ place that's never used, and I can't <i>get</i> anybody&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not criticising your housekeeping. Will you go up there with me now,
+ Cerissa? I want to understand about this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, just now, do you mean? I'm afraid I haven't got the time this
+ morning, Mrs. Bogardus. Dinner's at half-past twelve. It's a quarter to
+ eleven&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well. You think the door is not locked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it is, the key must be in the door. Oh, don't go, please, Mrs.
+ Bogardus. Wait till Chauncey conies in&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you'd send Chauncey up when he does come in. Ask him to bring a
+ screw-driver.&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus rose and examined her jacket. It was still
+ damp. She asked for a cape, or some sort of wrap, as her waist was thin,
+ and the rain had chilled the morning air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of decency, Cerissa escorted her visitor across the hall
+ passage into the loom-room&mdash;a loom-room in name only for upwards of
+ three generations. Becky had devoted it to the rough work of the house,
+ and to certain special uses, such as the care of the butchering products,
+ the making of soft soap and root beer. Here the churning was done, by
+ hand, with a wooden dasher, which spread a circle of white drops, later to
+ become grease-spots. The floor of the loom-room was laid in large brick
+ tiles, more or less loose in their sockets, with an occasional earthy
+ depression marking the grave of a missing tile. Becky's method of cleaning
+ was to sluice it out and scrub it with an old broom. The seepage of
+ generations before her time had thus added their constant quota to the old
+ well's sum of iniquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus had not visited this part of the old house for many years.
+ After her father's death she had shrunk from its painful associations.
+ Later she grew indifferent; but as she passed now into the gloomy place&mdash;doubly
+ dark with the deep foliage of June on a rainy morning&mdash;she was afraid
+ of her own thoughts. Henceforth she was a woman with a diseased
+ consciousness. &ldquo;What can't be cured must be <i>seared</i>,&rdquo; flashed over
+ her as she set her face to the stairway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These stairs, leading up into the back attic or &ldquo;kitchen chamber,&rdquo; being
+ somewhat crowded for space, advanced two steps into the room below. As the
+ stair door opened outward, and the stairs were exceedingly steep and dark,
+ every child of the house, in turn, had suffered a bad fall in consequence;
+ but the arrangement remained in all its natural depravity, for &ldquo;children
+ must learn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little Emmy of the old days had loved to sit upon these steps, a trifle
+ raised above the kitchen traffic, yet cognizant of all that was going on,
+ and ready to descend promptly if she smelled fresh crullers frying, or
+ baked sweet apples steaming hot from the oven. If Becky's foot were heard
+ upon the stairs above, she would jump quick enough; but if the step had a
+ clumping, boyish precipitancy, she sat still and laughed, and planted her
+ back against the door. Often she had teased Adam in this way, keeping him
+ prisoner from his duties, helpless in his good nature either to scold her
+ or push her off. But once he circumvented her, slipping off his shoes and
+ creeping up the stairs again, and making his escape by the roof and the
+ boughs of the old maple. Then it was Emmy who was teased, who sat a
+ foolish half hour on the stairs alone and missed a beautiful ride to the
+ wood lot; but she would not speak to Adam for two days afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becky's had been the larger of the two bedrooms in the attic, Adam's the
+ smaller&mdash;tucked low under the eaves, and entered by crawling around
+ the big chimney that came bulking up to the light like a great tree caught
+ between house walls. The stairs hugged the chimney and made use of its
+ support. Adam would warm his hands upon it coming down on bitter mornings.
+ From force of habit, Emily Bogardus laid her smooth white hand upon the
+ clammy bricks. No tombstone could be colder than that heart of house
+ warmth now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The roof of the kitchen chamber had been raised a story higher, and the
+ chimney as it went up contracted to quite a modern size. This elevation
+ gave room for the incongruous tower bedroom that had hurt the symmetry of
+ the old house, spoiled its noble sweep of roof, and given rise to so much
+ unpleasant conjecture as to its use. It was this excrescence, the record
+ of those last unloved and unloving years of her father's life, which Mrs.
+ Bogardus would have removed, but was prevented by her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You go back now, Cerissa,&rdquo; she said to the panting woman behind her. &ldquo;I
+ see the key is in the lock. You may send Chauncey after a while; there is
+ no hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; gasped Cerissa. &ldquo;Do you see <i>that!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought there was something&mdash;something behind that slit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There isn't. Step this way. There, can't you see the light?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus grasped Cerissa by the shoulders and held her firmly in
+ front of a narrow loophole that pierced the partition close beside the
+ door. Light from the room within showed plainly; but it gave an
+ unpleasantly human expression to the entrance, like a furtive eye on the
+ watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would always be there,&rdquo; Cerissa whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father. If anybody wanted to see him after he shut himself in there
+ for the night, they had to stand to be questioned through that wall-slit
+ before he opened the door. Yes, ma'am! He was on the watch in there the
+ whole time like a thing in a trap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you afraid to go back alone?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus spoke with chilling
+ irony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa backed away in silence, her heart thumping. &ldquo;She's putting it on,&rdquo;
+ she said to herself. &ldquo;I never see her turn so pale. Don't tell <i>me</i>
+ she ain't afraid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a hanging shelf against the chimney on which a bundle of dry
+ herbs had been left to turn into dust. Old Becky might have put them there
+ the autumn before she died; or some successor of hers in the years that
+ were blank to the daughter of the house. As she pushed open the door a
+ sighing draught swept past her and seemed to draw her inward. It shook the
+ sere bundle. Its skeleton leaves, dissolving into motes, flickered an
+ instant athwart the light. They sifted down like ashes on the woman's dark
+ head as she passed in. Her color had faded, but not through fear of ghost
+ clocks. It was the searing process she had to face. And any room where she
+ sat alone with certain memories of her youth was to her a torture chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She's been up there an awful long time. I wouldn't wonder if she's
+ fainted away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would she faint at? I guess it's pretty cold, though. Give me some
+ more tea; put plenty of milk so I can drink it quick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey's matter of fact tone always comforted Cerissa when she was
+ nervous. She did not mind that he jeered or that his words were often
+ rude; no man of her acquaintance could say things nicely to women, or ever
+ tried. A certain amount of roughness passed for household wit. Chauncey
+ put the screw-driver in his pocket, his wife and son watching him with
+ respectful anxiety. He thought rather well of his own courage privately.
+ But the familiar details of the loom-room cheered him on his way, the
+ homely tools of his every-day work were like friendly faces nodding at
+ him. He knocked loudly on the door above, and was answered by Mrs.
+ Bogardus in her natural voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bosh&mdash;every bit of it bosh!&rdquo; he repeated courageously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was seated by the window in the chair with the green cushions. Her
+ face was turned towards the view outside. &ldquo;What a pity those cherries were
+ not picked before the rain,&rdquo; she observed. &ldquo;The fruit is bursting ripe;
+ I'm afraid you'll lose the crop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey moved forward awkwardly without answering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop there one moment, will you?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus rose and demonstrated.
+ &ldquo;You notice those two boards are loose. Now, I put this chair here,&rdquo;&mdash;she
+ laid her hand on the back to still its motion. &ldquo;Step this way. You see?
+ The chair rocks of itself. So would any chair with a spring board under
+ it. That accounts for <i>that</i>, I think. Now come over here.&rdquo; Chauncey
+ placed himself as she directed in front of the high mantel with the clock
+ above it. She stood at his side and they listened in silence to that sound
+ which Mary Hornbeck, deceased, had deemed a spiritual warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you call that a 'ticking'? Is that like any sound an insect could
+ make?&rdquo; the mistress asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should call it more like a 'ting,'&rdquo; said Chauncey. &ldquo;It comes kind o'
+ muffled like through the chimbly&mdash;a person might be mistaken if they
+ was upset in their nerves considerable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What old people call the 'death-watch' is supposed to be an insect that
+ lives in the walls of old houses, isn't it? and gives warning with a
+ ticking sound when somebody is going to be called away? Now to me that
+ sounds like a soft blow struck regularly on a piece of hollow iron&mdash;say
+ the end of a stove-pipe sticking in the chimney. When I first came up
+ here, there was only a steady murmur of wind and rain. Then the clouds
+ thinned and the sun came out and drops began to fall&mdash;distinctly.
+ Your wife says the ticking was heard on a day like this, broken and
+ showery. Now, if you will unscrew that clock, I think you will find
+ there's a stove-pipe hole behind it; and a piece of pipe shoved into the
+ chimney just far enough to catch the drops as they gather and fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey went to work. He sweated in the airless room. The powerful screws
+ blunted the lips of his tool but would not start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess I'll have to give it up for to-day. The screws are rusted in
+ solid. Want I should pry her out of the woodwork?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, don't do that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus. &ldquo;Why should we spoil the panel?
+ This seems a very comfortable room. My son is right. It would be foolish
+ to tear it down. Such a place as this might be very useful if you people
+ would get over your notions about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never had no notions,&rdquo; Chauncey asserted. &ldquo;When the women git talkin'
+ they like to make out a good story, and whichever one sees the most and
+ hears the most makes the biggest sensation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus waited till he had finished without appearing to have heard
+ what he was saying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the key to this door?&rdquo; she laid her hand over a knob to the
+ right of the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess if there is one it's on the other side. Yes, it's in the
+ key-hole.&rdquo; Chauncey turned the knob and shoved and lifted. The door
+ yielded to his full strength, and he allowed Mrs. Bogardus to precede him.
+ She stepped into a room hardly bigger than a closet with one window,
+ barred like those in the outer room. It was fitted up with toilet
+ conveniences according to the best advices of its day. Over all the neat
+ personal arrangements there was the slur of neglect, a sad squalor which
+ even a king's palace wears with time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey tested the plumbing with a noise that was plainly offensive to
+ his companion, but she bore with it&mdash;also with his reminiscences
+ gathered from neighborhood gossip. &ldquo;He wa'n't fond of spending money, but
+ he didn't spare it here: this was his ship cabin when he started on his
+ last voyage. It looked funny&mdash;a man with all his land and houses
+ cooped up in a place like this; but he wanted to be independent of the
+ women. He hated to have 'em fussin' around him. He had a woman to come and
+ cook up stuff for him to help himself to; but she wouldn't stay here
+ overnight, nor he wouldn't let her. As for a man in the house,&mdash;most
+ men were thieves, he thought, or waiting their chance to be. It was real
+ pitiful the way he made his end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open that window and shut the door when you come out,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Bogardus. &ldquo;I will send some one to help you down with that secretary.
+ Cerissa knows about it. It is to be sent up on the Hill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII. &mdash; THE CASE STRIKES IN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Christine's marriage took place while Paul and Moya were lingering in the
+ Bruneau, for Paul's health ostensibly. Banks and Horace had been left to
+ the smiling irony of justice. They never had a straight chance to define
+ their conduct in the woods; for no one accused them. No awkward questions
+ were asked in the city drawing-rooms or at the clubs. For a tough half
+ hour or so at Fort Lemhi they had realized how they stood in the eyes of
+ those unbiased military judges. The shock had a bracing effect for a time.
+ Both boys were said to be much improved by their Western trip and by the
+ hardships of that frightful homeward march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus had matched her gift of Stone Ridge to her son, which was a
+ gift of sentiment, with one of more substantial value to her daughter,&mdash;the
+ income from certain securities settled upon her and her heirs. Banks was
+ carefully unprovided for. The big house in town was full of ghosts&mdash;the
+ ghosts that haunt such homes, made desolate by a breach of hearts. The
+ city itself was crowded with opportunities for giving and receiving pain
+ between mother and daughter. Christine had developed all the latent
+ hardness of her mother's race with a sickly frivolity of her own. She made
+ a great show of faith in her marriage venture. She boomed it in her
+ occasional letters, which were full of scarce concealed bravado as
+ graceful as snapping her fingers in her mother's face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus leased her house in town, and retired before the ghosts, but
+ not escaping them; Stone Ridge must be put in order for its new master and
+ mistress, and Stone Ridge had its own ghosts. She informed her absentees
+ that, before their return, she should have left for Southern California to
+ look after some investments which she had neglected there of late. It was
+ then she spoke of her plan for restoring the old house by pulling down
+ that addition which disfigured it; and Paul had objected to this erasure.
+ It would take from the house's veracity, he said. The words carried their
+ unintentional sting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was Moya's six lines at the bottom of his page that changed and
+ softened everything. Moya&mdash;always blessed when she took the
+ initiative&mdash;contrived, as swiftly as she could set them down, to say
+ the very words that made the home-coming a coming home indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will Madam Bogardus be pleased to keep her place as the head of her son's
+ house?&rdquo; she wrote. &ldquo;This foolish person he has married wants to be
+ anything rather than the mistress of Stone Ridge. She wants to be always
+ out of doors, and she needs to be. Oh, must you go away now&mdash;now when
+ we need you so much? It cannot be said here on paper how much <i>I</i>
+ need you! Am I not your motherless daughter? Please be there when we come,
+ and please stay there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For a little while then,&rdquo; said the lonely woman, smiling at the image of
+ that sweet, foolish person in her thoughts. &ldquo;For a little while, till she
+ learns her mistake.&rdquo; Such mistakes are the cornerstone of family
+ friendship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an uneventful summer on the Hill, but one of rather wearing
+ intensity in the inner relations of the household, one with another; for
+ nothing could be quite natural with a pit of concealment to be avoided by
+ all, and an air of unconsciousness to be carefully preserved in avoiding
+ it. Moya's success in this way was so remarkable that Paul half hated it.
+ How was it possible for her to speak to his mother so lightly; never the
+ least apparent premeditation or fear of tripping; how look at her with
+ such sweet surface looks that never questioned or saw beneath? He could
+ not meet his mother's eyes at all when they were alone together, or endure
+ a silence in her company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both women were of the type called elemental. They understood each other
+ without knowing why. Moya felt the desperate truth contained in the
+ mother's falsehood, and broke forth into passionate defense of her as
+ against her husband's silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered her one day by looking up a little green book of fairy tales
+ and reading aloud this fragment of &ldquo;The Golden Key.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'I never tell lies, even in fun.' (The mysterious Grandmother speaks.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'How good of you!' (says the Child in the Wood.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'I couldn't if I tried. It would come true if I said it, and then I
+ should be punished enough.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya's eyes narrowed reflectively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How constantly you are thinking of this! I think of it only when I am
+ with you. As if a woman like your mother, who has done <i>one thing</i>,
+ should be all that thing, and nothing more to us, her children!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya was giving herself up, almost immorally, Paul sometimes thought, to
+ the fascination Mrs. Bogardus's personality had for her. In a keenly
+ susceptible state herself, at that time, there was something calming and
+ strengthening in the older woman's perfected beauty, her physical poise,
+ and the fitness of everything she did and said and wore to the given
+ occasion. As a dark woman she was particularly striking in summer
+ clothing. Her white effects were tremendous. She did not pretend to study
+ these matters herself, but in years of experience, with money to spend,
+ she had learned well in whom to confide. When women are shut up together
+ in country houses for the summer, they can irritate each other in the most
+ foolish ways. Mrs. Bogardus never got upon your nerves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, for Paul, there was a poison in his mother's beauty, a dread in her
+ influence over his impressionable young wife, thrilled with the awakening
+ forces of her consonant being. Moya would drink deep of every cup that
+ life presented. Motherhood was her lesson for the day. &ldquo;She is a queen of
+ mothers!&rdquo; she would exclaim with an abandon that was painful to Paul; he
+ saw deformity where Moya was ready to kneel. &ldquo;I love her perfect love for
+ you&mdash;for me, even! She is above all jealousy. She doesn't even ask to
+ be understood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And oh, she knows, she knows! She has been through it all&mdash;in such
+ despair and misery&mdash;all that is before me, with everything in the
+ world to make it easy and all the beautiful care she gives me. She is the
+ supreme mother. And I never had a mother to speak to before. Don't, don't,
+ please, keep putting that dreadful thing between us now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Paul took the dreadful thing away with him and was alone with it, and
+ knew that his mother saw it in his eyes when their eyes met and avoided.
+ When, after a brief household absence, he would see her again he wondered,
+ &ldquo;Has she been alone with it? Has it passed into another phase?&rdquo;&mdash;as
+ of an incurable disease that must take its time and course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus did not spare her conscience in social ways all this time.
+ It was a part of her life to remember that she had neighbors&mdash;certain
+ neighbors. She included Paul without particularly consulting him whenever
+ it was proper for him to support her in her introduction of his wife to
+ the country-house folk, many of whom they knew in town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All his mother's friends liked Paul and supposed him to be very clever,
+ but they had never taken him seriously. &ldquo;Now, at last,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;he has
+ done something like other people. He is coming out.&rdquo; Experienced matrons
+ were pleased to flatter him on his choice of a bride. The daughters
+ studied Moya, and decided that she was &ldquo;different,&rdquo; but &ldquo;all right.&rdquo; She
+ had a careless distinction of her own. Some of her &ldquo;things&rdquo; were
+ surprisingly lovely&mdash;probably heirlooms; and army women are so clever
+ about clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would they spend the winter in town?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul replied absently: they had not decided. Probably they would not go
+ down till after the holidays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What an attractive plan? What an ideal family Christmas they would have
+ all together in the country! Christine had not been up all summer, had
+ she? Here Moya came to her husband's relief, through a wife's dual
+ consciousness in company, and covered his want of spirits with a flood of
+ foolish chatter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The smiling way in which women the most sincere can posture and prance on
+ the brink of dissimulation was particularly sickening to Paul at this
+ time. Why need they put themselves in situations where it was required?
+ The situations were of his mother's creation. He imagined she must suffer,
+ but had little sympathy with that side of her martyrdom. Moya seemed a
+ trifle feverish in her acceptance of these affairs of which she was
+ naturally the life and centre. A day of entertaining often faded into an
+ evening of subtle sadness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul would take her out into the moonlight of that deep inland country.
+ The trees were dark with leaves and brooded close above them; old
+ water-fences and milldams cast inky shadows on the still, shallow ponds
+ clasped in wooded hills. No region could have offered a more striking
+ contrast to the empty plains. Moya felt shut in with old histories. The
+ very ground was but moulding sand in which generations of human lives had
+ been poured, and the sand swept over to be reshaped for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not living our own life yet,&rdquo; Paul would say; not adding, &ldquo;We are
+ protecting her.&rdquo; Here was the beginning of punishment helplessly meted out
+ to this proud woman whose sole desire was towards her children&mdash;to
+ give, and not to receive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this is our Garden?&rdquo; Moya would muse. &ldquo;We are as nearly two alone as
+ any two could be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you include the Snake. We can't leave out the Snake, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Snake or Seraph&mdash;I don't believe I know the difference. Paul, I
+ cannot have you thinking things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I?&mdash;what do I think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are thinking it is bad for me to be so much with her. You, as a man
+ and a husband, resent what she, as a woman and a wife, has dared to do.
+ And I, as another woman and wife, I say she could do nothing else and be
+ true. For, don't you see? She never loved him. The wifehood in her has
+ never been reached. She was a girl, then a mother, then a widow. How could
+ she&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think he would have claimed her as his wife? Oh, you do not know
+ him;&mdash;she has never known him. If we could be brave and face our duty
+ to the whole truth, and leave the rest to those sequences, never dreamed
+ of, that wait upon great acts. Such surprises come straight from God. Now
+ we can never know how he would have risen to meet a nobler choice in her.
+ He had not far to rise! Well, we have our share of blessings, including
+ piazza teas; but as a family we have missed one of the greatest spiritual
+ opportunities,&mdash;such as come but once in a lifetime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, if she was not ready for it, it was not <i>her</i> opportunity. God
+ is very patient with us, I believe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII. &mdash; RESTIVENESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mothers and sons are rarely very personal in their intimacy after the son
+ has taken to himself a wife. Apart from certain moments not appropriate to
+ piazza teas, Paul and his mother were perhaps as comfortable together as
+ the relation averages. It was much that they never talked emotionally.
+ Private judgments which we have refrained from putting into words may die
+ unfruitful and many a bitter crop be spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is Paul's apology for being happy in spite of himself&mdash;and of
+ us!&rdquo; Moya teased, as she admired the beautifully drawn plans for the
+ quarrymen's club-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn't need any apology; it's a very good thing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus,
+ ignoring double meanings. No caps that were flying around ever fitted her
+ head. Paul's dreams and his mother's practical experience had met once
+ more on a common ground of philanthropy. This time it was a workingmen's
+ club in which the interests of social and mental improvement were
+ conjoined with facilities for outdoor sport. Up to date philanthropy is an
+ expensive toy. Paul, though now a landowner, was far from rich in his own
+ right. His mother financed this as she had many another scheme for him.
+ She was more openhanded than heretofore, but all was done with that
+ ennuyéd air which she ever wore as of an older child who has outgrown the
+ game. It was in Moya and Moya's prospective maternity that her pride
+ reinstated itself. Her own history and generation she trod underfoot.
+ Mistakes, humiliations, whichever way she turned. Paul had never satisfied
+ her entirely in anything he did until he chose this girl for the mother of
+ his children. Now their house might come to something. Moya moved before
+ her eyes crowned in the light of the future. And that this noble and
+ innocent girl, with her perfect intuitions, should turn to <i>her</i> now
+ with such impetuous affection was perhaps the sweetest pain the blighted
+ woman had ever known. She lay awake many a night thinking mute blessings
+ on the mother and the child to be. Yet she resisted that generous
+ initiative so dear to herself, aware with a subtle agony of the pain it
+ gave her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day she said to Paul (they were driving home together through a bit of
+ woodland, the horses stepping softly on the mould of fallen leaves)&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ don't expect you to account for every dollar of mine you spend in helping
+ those who can be helped that way. You have a free hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;I have used your money freely&mdash;for a
+ purpose that I never have accounted for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you need more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; there is no need now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why is there not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was silent. &ldquo;I cannot go into particulars. It is a long story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does the purpose still exist?&rdquo; his mother asked sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does; but not as a claim&mdash;for that sort of help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me know if such a claim should ever return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will, mother,&rdquo; said Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came a day when mother and son reaped the reward of their mutual
+ forbearance. There was a night and a day when Paul became a boy again in
+ his mother's hands, and she took the place that was hers in Nature. She
+ was the priestess acquainted with mysteries. He followed her, and hung
+ upon her words. The expression of her face meant life and death to him.
+ The dreadful consciousness passed out of his eyes; tears washed it out as
+ he rose from his knees by Moya's bed, and his mother kissed him, and laid
+ his son in his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following summer saw the club-house and all its affiliations in
+ working order. The beneficiaries took to it most kindly, but were disposed
+ to manage it in their own way: not in all respects the way of the
+ founder's intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To make a gift complete, you must keep yourself out of it,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus
+ advised. &ldquo;You have done your part; now let them have it and run it
+ themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was not hungry for leadership, but he had hoped that his interest in
+ the men's amusements would bring him closer to them and equalize the
+ difference between the Hill and the quarry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have never worked with them; how can you expect to play with them?&rdquo;
+ was another of his mother's cool aphorisms. Alas! Paul, the son of the
+ poor man, had no work, and hence no play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was time to be making winter plans again. Mrs. Bogardus knew that her
+ son's young family was now complete without her presence. Moya had gained
+ confidence in the care of her child; she no longer brought every new
+ symptom to the grandmother. Yet Mrs. Bogardus put off discussing the
+ change, dreading to expose her own isolation, a point on which she was as
+ sensitive as if it were a crime. Paul was never entirely frank with her:
+ she knew he would not be frank in this. They never expressed their wills
+ or their won'ts to each other with the careless rudeness of a sound family
+ faith, and always she felt the burden of his unrelenting pity. She began
+ to take long drives alone, coming in late and excusing herself for dinner.
+ At such times she would send for her grandson in his nurse's arms to bid
+ him good-night. The mother would put off her own good-night, not to
+ intrude at these sessions. One evening, going up later to kiss her little
+ son, she found his crib empty, the nurse gone to her dinner. He was fast
+ asleep in his grandmother's arms, where she had held him for an hour in
+ front of the open fire in her bedroom. She looked up guiltily. &ldquo;He was so
+ comfortable! And his crib is cold. Will he take cold when Ellen puts him
+ back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure he won't,&rdquo; Moya whispered, gathering up the rosy sleeper. But
+ she was disturbed by the breach of bedtime rules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the drawing-room a few nights later she said energetically to Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One might as well be dead as to live with a grudge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good grudge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are no good grudges.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are some honest ones&mdash;honestly come by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't care how they are come by. Grudges 'is p'ison.'&rdquo; She laughed, but
+ her cheeks were hot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know that Christine has been at death's door? Your mother heard of
+ it&mdash;through Mrs. Bowen! Was that why you didn't show me her letter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not in my letter from Mrs. Bowen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think she has known it some time,&rdquo; said Moya, &ldquo;and kept it to herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Bowen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother. Isn't it terrible? Think how Chrissy must have needed her.
+ They need each other so! Christine was her constant thought. How can all
+ that change in one year! But she cannot go to Banks Bowen's house without
+ an invitation. We must go to New York and make her come with us&mdash;we
+ must open the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Paul, &ldquo;I have seen it was coming. In the end we always do the
+ thing we have forsworn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> was the one. I take it back. Your work is there. I know it calls
+ you. Was not Mrs. Bowen's letter an appeal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She must think you a deserter. And there is bigger work for you, too!
+ Here is a great political fight on, and my husband is not in it. Every man
+ must slay his dragon. There is a whole city of dragons!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; smiled Paul; &ldquo;I see. You want me to put my legs under the same
+ cloth with Banks and ask him about his golf score.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you want to fight him, have it out on public grounds; fight him in
+ politics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are on the same side!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya laughed, but she looked a little dashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Banks comes of gentlemen. He inherited his opinions,&rdquo; said Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He may have inherited a few other things, if we could have patience with
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sorry for Banks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be sorry for him&mdash;when he meets you. He has been spared that
+ too long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dispenser of destinies, I bow as I always do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will speak to your mother at once?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do it beautifully?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As well as I know how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you have had such practice! How good it would be if we could only
+ dare to quarrel in this family! You and I&mdash;of course!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>We</i> quarrel, of course!&rdquo; laughed Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I <i>love</i> to quarrel with you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do it beautifully. You have had such practice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am so happy! It is clear to me now that we shall live down this misery.
+ Christine will love to see me again; I know she will. A wife is a very
+ different thing from a girl&mdash;a haughty girl!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think the wife of Banks Bowen might be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And we'll part with our ancient and honorable grudge! We are getting too
+ big for it. <i>We</i> are parents!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul made the proposition to his mother and she agreed to it in every
+ particular save the one. She would remain at Stone Ridge. It was
+ impossible to move her. Moya was in despair. She had cultivated an
+ overweening conscience in her relations with Mrs. Bogardus. It turned upon
+ her now and showed her the true state of her own mind at the thought of
+ being Two once more and alone with the child God had given them. Mrs.
+ Bogardus appeared to see nothing but her own interests in the matter. She
+ had made up her mind. And in spite of the conscientious scruples on all
+ sides, the hedging and pleading and explaining, all were happier in the
+ end for her decision. She herself was softened by it, and she yielded one
+ point in return. Paul had steadily opposed his mother's plan of
+ housekeeping, alone with one maid and a man who slept at the stables. The
+ Dunlops, as it happened, were childless for the winter, young Chauncey
+ attending a &ldquo;commercial college&rdquo; in a neighboring town. After many
+ interviews and a good deal of self-importance on Cerissa's part, the pair
+ were persuaded to close the old house and occupy the servants' wing on the
+ Hill, as a distinct family, yet at hand in case of need. It was late
+ autumn before all these arrangements could be made. Paul and Moya, leaving
+ the young scion aged nineteen months in the care of his nurse and his
+ grandmother, went down the river to open the New York house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV. &mdash; INDIAN SUMMER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The upper fields of Stone Ridge, so the farmers said, were infested that
+ autumn by a shy and solitary vagrant, who never could be met with face to
+ face, but numbers of times had been seen across the width of a lot,
+ climbing the bars, or closing a gate, or vanishing up some crooked lane
+ that quickly shut him from view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would look after that old chap if I was you, Chauncey. He'll be smoking
+ in your hay barns, and burn you out some o' these cold nights.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey took these neighborly warnings with good-humored indifference. &ldquo;I
+ haven't seen no signs of his doin' any harm,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Anybody's at
+ liberty to walk in the fields if there ain't a 'No Trespass' posted. I
+ rather guess he makes his bed among the corn stouks. I see prints of
+ someone's feet, goin' and comin'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus was more herself in those days than she had been at any time
+ since the great North-western wilderness sent her its second message of
+ fear. Old memories were losing their sting. She could bear to review her
+ decision with a certain shrinking hardihood. Had the choice been given her
+ to repeat, her action had been the same. In so far as she had perjured
+ herself for the sake of peace in the family, she owned the sacrifice was
+ vain; but her own personality was the true reason for what she had done.
+ She was free in her unimpeachable widowhood&mdash;a mother who had never
+ been at heart a wife. She feared no ghosts this keen autumn weather, at
+ the summit of her conscious powers. Her dark eye unsheathed its glance of
+ authority. It was an eye that went everywhere, and everywhere was met with
+ signs that praised its oversight. Here was an out-worn inheritance which
+ one woman, in less than a third of her lifetime, had developed into a
+ competence for her son. He could afford to dream dreams of beneficence
+ with his mother to make them good. Yes, he needed her still. His child was
+ in her keeping; and, though brief the lease, that trust was no accident.
+ It was the surest proof he could have given her of his vital allegiance.
+ In the step which Paul and Moya were taking, she saw the first promise of
+ that wisdom she had despaired of in her son. In the course of years he
+ would understand her. And Christine? She rested bitterly secure in her
+ daughter's inevitable physical need of her. Christine was a born parasite.
+ She had no true pride; she was capable merely of pique which would wear
+ itself out and pass into other forms of selfishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This woman had been governed all her life by a habit of decision, and a
+ strong personality rooted in the powers of nature. Therefore she was
+ seldom mistaken in her conclusions when they dealt with material results.
+ Occasionally she left out the spirit; but the spirit leaves out no one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her long dark skirts were sweeping the autumn grass at sunset as she paced
+ back and forth under the red-gold tents of the maples. It was a row of
+ young trees she had planted to grace a certain turf walk at the top of the
+ low wall that divided, by a drop of a few feet, the west lawn at Stone
+ Ridge from the meadow where the beautiful Alderneys were pastured. The
+ maples turned purple as the light faded out of their tops and struck flat
+ across the meadow, making the grass vivid as in spring. Two spots of color
+ moved across it slowly&mdash;a young woman capped and aproned, urging
+ along a little trotting child. Down the path of their united shadows they
+ came, and the shadows had reached already the dividing wall. The waiting
+ smile was sweet upon the grandmother's features; her face was transformed
+ like the meadow into a memory of spring. The child saw her, and waved to
+ her with something scarlet which he held in his free hand. She admired the
+ stride of his brown legs above their crumpled socks, the imperishable look
+ of health on his broad, sweet glowing face. She lifted him high in her
+ embrace and bore him up the hill, his dusty shoes dangling against her
+ silk front breadths, his knees pressed tight against her waist, and over
+ her shoulder he flourished the scarlet cardinal flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where have you been with him so long?&rdquo; she asked the nursemaid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only up in the lane, as far as the three gates, ma'am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then where did he get this flower?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the pretty Irish girl, half scared by her tone, and tempted to
+ prevaricate. &ldquo;Why&mdash;he must have picked it, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in the lane. It's a swamp-flower. It doesn't grow anywhere within
+ four miles of the lane!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must have been the old man gev it him then,&rdquo; said the maid. &ldquo;Is it
+ unhealthy, ma'am? I tried to get it from him, but he screamed and fussed
+ so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What old man do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, him that was passin' up the lane. I didn't see him till he was clean
+ by&mdash;and Middy had the flower. I don't know where in the world he
+ could have got it, else, for we wasn't one step out of the lane, was we,
+ Middy! That's the very truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where were you when strangers were giving him flowers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, sure, ma'am, I was only just a step away be the fence, having a word
+ with one o' the boys. I was lookin' in the field, speakin' to him and he
+ was lookin' at me with me back to the lane. 'There's the old man again,'
+ he says, shiftin' his eye. I turned me round and there, so he was, but he
+ was by and walkin' on up the lane. And Middy had the flower. He wouldn't
+ be parted from it and squeezed it so tight I thought the juice might be
+ bad on his hands, and he promised he'd not put it to his mouth. I kep' my
+ eye on him. Ah, the nasty, na-asty flower! Give it here to Katy till I
+ throw it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's no harm in the flower. But there is harm in strangers making up
+ to him when your back is turned. Don't you know the dreadful things we
+ read in the papers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus said no more. It was Middy's supper-time. But later she
+ questioned Katy particularly concerning this old man who was spoken of
+ quite as if his appearance were taken for granted in the heart of the
+ farm. Katy recalled one other day when she had seen him asleep as she
+ thought in a corner of the fence by the big chestnut tree when she and the
+ boy were nutting. They had moved away to the other side of the tree, but
+ while she was busy hunting for nuts Middy had strayed off a bit and
+ foregathered with the old man, who was not asleep at all, but stood with
+ his back to her pouring a handful of big fat chestnuts into the child's
+ little skirt, which he held up. She called to him and the old man had
+ stepped back, and the nuts were spilled. Middy had cried and made her pick
+ them up, and when that was done the stranger was gone quite out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey, too, was questioned, and testified that the old man of the
+ fields was no myth. But he deprecated all this exaggerated alarm. The
+ stranger was some simple-minded old work-house candidate putting off the
+ evil day. In a few weeks he would have to make for shelter in one of the
+ neighboring towns. Chauncey could not see what legal hold they had upon
+ him even if they could catch him. He hardly came under the vagrancy law,
+ since he had neither begged, nor helped himself appreciably to the means
+ of subsistence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is just the point,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus insisted. &ldquo;He has the means&mdash;from
+ somewhere&mdash;to lurk around here and make friends with that child.
+ There may be a gang of kidnappers behind him. He is the harmless looking
+ decoy. I insist that you keep a sharp lookout, Chauncey. There shall be a
+ hold upon him, law or no law, if we catch him on our ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold rain set in. Paul and Moya wrote of delays in the house
+ preparations, and hoped the grandmother was not growing tired of her
+ charge. On the last of the rainy days, in a burst of dubious sunshine,
+ came a young girl on horseback to have tea with Mrs. Bogardus. She was one
+ of that lady's discoverers, so she claimed, Miss Sallie Remsen, very
+ pretty and full of fantastic little affectations founded on her intense
+ appreciation of the picturesque. She called Mrs. Bogardus &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; and
+ likened her to various female personages in history more celebrated for
+ strength of purpose than for the Christian virtues. Mrs. Bogardus, in her
+ restful ignorance of such futilities, went no deeper into these allusions
+ than their intention, which she took to be complimentary. Miss Sallie
+ hugged herself with joy when the rain came down in torrents for a clear-up
+ shower. Her groom was sent home with a note to inform her mother that Mrs.
+ Bogardus wished to keep her overnight. All the mothers were flattered when
+ Mrs. Bogardus took notice of their daughters,&mdash;even much grander
+ dames than she herself could pretend to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had a charming little dinner by themselves to the tune of the rain
+ outside, and were having their coffee by the drawing-room fire; and Miss
+ Sallie was thinking by what phrase one could do justice to the massive,
+ crass ugliness of that self-satisfied apartment, furnished in the hideous
+ sixties, when the word was sent in that Mrs. Dunlop wished to speak with
+ Mrs. Bogardus. Something of Cerissa's injured importance survived the
+ transmission of the message, causing Mrs. Bogardus to smile to herself as
+ she rose. Cerissa was waiting in the dining-room. She kept her seat as
+ Mrs. Bogardus entered. Her eyes did not rise higher than the lady's dress,
+ which she examined with a fierce intentness of comparison while she opened
+ her errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you'd like to know you've got a strange lodger down to the old
+ house. I don't seem to ever get moved!&rdquo; she enlarged. &ldquo;I'm always runnin'
+ down there after first one thing 'n' another we've forgot. This morning 't
+ was my stone batter-pot. Chauncey said he thought it was getting cold
+ enough for buckwheat cakes. I don't suppose you want to have stray tramps
+ in there in the old house, building fires in the loom-room, where, if a
+ spark got loose, it would blaze up them draughty stairs, and the whole
+ house would go in a minute.&rdquo; Cerissa stopped to gain breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Making fires? Are you sure of that? Has any smoke been seen coming out of
+ that chimney?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it's been raining so! And the trees have got so tall! But I could
+ show you the shucks an' shells he's left there. I know how we left it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had better speak&mdash;No; I will see Chauncey in the morning.&rdquo; Mrs.
+ Bogardus never, if she could avoid it, gave an order through a third
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I thought I'd just step in. Chauncey said 't was no use disturbing
+ you to-night, but he's just that way&mdash;so easy about everything! I
+ thought you wouldn't want to be harboring tramps this wet weather when
+ most anybody would be tempted to build a fire. I'm more concerned about
+ what goes on down there now we're <i>out</i> of the house! I seem to have
+ it on my mind the whole time. A house is just like a child: the more you
+ don't see it the more you worry about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm glad you have such a home feeling about the place,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Bogardus, avoiding the onset of words. &ldquo;Well, good-evening, Cerissa. Thank
+ you for your trouble. I will see about it in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus mentioned what she had just heard to Miss Sallie, who
+ remarked, with her keen sense of antithesis, what a contrast <i>that</i>
+ fireside must be to <i>this</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which fireside?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, your lodger upon the cold ground,&mdash;making his little bit of a
+ stolen blaze in that cavern of a chimney in the midst of the wet trees!
+ What a nice thing to have an unwatched place like that where a poor bird
+ of passage can creep in and make his nest, and not trouble any one. Think
+ what Jean Valjeans one might shelter&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What 'angels unawares.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be unawares, my dear,&mdash;very much unawares,&mdash;when I
+ shelter any angels of that sort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you wouldn't turn him out, such weather as this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The house is not mine, in the first place,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus explained as to
+ a child. &ldquo;I can't entertain tramps or even angels on my son's premises,
+ when he's away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he! He would build the fires himself, and make up their beds,&rdquo;
+ laughed Miss Sallie. &ldquo;If he were here, I believe he would start down there
+ now, and stock the place with everything you've got in the house to eat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope he'd leave us a little something for breakfast,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Bogardus a trifle coldly. But she did not mention the cause of her
+ uneasiness about this particular visitor. She never defended herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Sallie was delighted with her callousness to the sentimental rebuke
+ which had been rather rubbed in. It was so unmodern; one got so weary of
+ fashionable philanthropy, women who talked of their social sympathies and
+ their principles in life. She almost hoped that Mrs. Bogardus had neither.
+ Certainly she never mentioned them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did she say? Did she tell you what I said to her last night?&rdquo;
+ Cerissa questioned her husband feverishly after his interview with Mrs.
+ Bogardus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She didn't mention your name,&rdquo; Chauncey took some pleasure in stating.
+ &ldquo;If you hadn't told me yourself, I shouldn't have known you'd meddled in
+ it at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's she going to do about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How crazy you women are! 'Cause some poor old Sooner-die-than-work warms
+ his bones by a bit of fire that wouldn't scare a chimbly swaller out of
+ its nest! Don't you s'pose if there'd been any fire there to speak of, I'd
+ 'a' seen it? What am I here for? Now I've got to drop everything, and git
+ a padlock on that door, and lock it up every night, and search the whole
+ place from top to bottom for fear there's some one in there hidin' in a
+ rathole!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chauncey! If you've got to do that I don't want you to go in there alone.
+ You take one of the men with you; and you better have a pistol or one of
+ the dogs anyhow. Suppose you was to ketch some one in there, and corner
+ him! He might turn on you, and shoot you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you wouldn't work yourself up so about nothin' at all! Want me to
+ make a blame jackass of myself raisin' the whole place about a potato-peel
+ or a bacon-rind!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you might have some little regard for my feelings,&rdquo; Cerissa
+ whimpered. &ldquo;If you ain't afraid, I'm afraid for you; and I don't see
+ anything to be ashamed of either. I wish you <i>wouldn't</i> go <i>alone</i>
+ searching through that spooky old place. It just puts me beside myself to
+ think of it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well! That's enough about it anyhow. I ain't going to do anything
+ foolish, and you needn't think no more about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether it was the effect of his wife's fears, or his promise to her, or
+ the inhospitable nature of his errand founded on suspicion, certainly
+ Chauncey showed no spirit of rashness in conducting his search. He knocked
+ the mud off his boots loudly on the doorsill before proceeding to attach
+ the padlock to the outer door. He searched the loom-room, lighting a
+ candle and peering into all its cobwebbed corners. He examined the rooms
+ lately inhabited, unlocking and locking doors behind him noisily with
+ increasing confidence in the good old house's emptiness. Still, in the
+ fireplace in the loom-room there were signs of furtive cooking which a
+ housekeeper's eye would infallibly detect. He saw that the search must
+ proceed. It was not all a question of his wife's fears, as he opened the
+ stair-door cautiously and tramped slowly up towards the tower bedroom. He
+ could not remember who had gone out last, on the day the old secretary was
+ moved down. There had been four men up there, and&mdash;yes, the key was
+ still in the lock outside. He clutched it and it fell rattling on the
+ steps. He swung the door open and stared into the further darkness beyond
+ his range of vision. He waved his candle as far as his arm would reach.
+ &ldquo;Anybody <i>in</i> here?&rdquo; he shouted. The silence made his flesh prick.
+ &ldquo;I'm goin' to lock up now. Better show up. It's the last chance.&rdquo; He
+ waited while one could count ten. &ldquo;Anybody in here that wants to be let
+ free? Nobody's goin' to hurt ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his anxious relief there was no reply. But as he listened, he heard the
+ loud, measured tick, tick, of the old clock, appalling in the darkness, on
+ the silence of that empty room. Chauncey could not have told just how he
+ got the door to, nor where he found strength to lock it and drag his feet
+ downstairs, but the hand that held the key was moist with cold
+ perspiration as he reached the open air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if that's rain I'd like to know where it comes from!&rdquo; He looked up
+ at the moon breaking through drifting clouds. The night was keen and
+ clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I was to tell that to Cerissa she'd never go within a mile o' that
+ house again! Maybe I was mistaken&mdash;but I ain't goin' back to see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning on calmer reflection he changed his mind about removing the
+ lawn-mower and other hand-tools from the loom-room as he had determined
+ overnight should be done. The place continued to be used as a storeroom,
+ open by day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At night it was Chauncey's business to lock it up, and he was careful to
+ repeat his search&mdash;as far as the stair-door. Never did the silent
+ room above give forth a protest, a sound of human restraint or occupation.
+ He reported to the mistress that all was snug at the old house, and nobody
+ anywhere about the place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV. &mdash; THE FELL FROST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After the rain came milder days. The still white mornings slowly
+ brightened into hazy afternoons. The old moon like a sleep walker stood
+ exposed in the morning sky. The roads to Stone Ridge were deep in fallen
+ leaves. Soft-tired wheels rustled up the avenue and horses' feet fell
+ light, as the last of the summer neighbors came to say good-by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a party of four&mdash;Miss Sallie and a good-looking youth of the
+ football cult on horseback, her mother and an elder sister, the delicate
+ Miss Remsen, in a hired carriage. Their own traps had been sent to town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tea was served promptly, as the visitors had a long road home before their
+ dinner-hour. In the reduced state of the establishment it was Katy who
+ brought the tea while Cerissa looked after her little charge. Cerissa sat
+ on the kitchen porch sewing and expanding under the deep attention of the
+ cook; they could see Middy a little way off on the tennis-court wiping the
+ mud gravely from a truant ball he had found among the nasturtiums. All was
+ as peaceful as the time of day and the season of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Cerissa solemnly. &ldquo;Old Abraham Van Elten was too much cumbered
+ up with this world to get quit of it as easy as some. If his spirit is
+ burdened with a message to anybody it's to <i>her</i>. He died
+ unreconciled to her, and she inherited all this place in spite of him, as
+ you may say. I've come as near believin' in such things since the goings
+ on up there in that room&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She wants Middy fetched in to see the comp'ny,&rdquo; cried Katy, bursting into
+ the sentence. &ldquo;Where is he, till I clean him? And she wants some more
+ bread and butter as quick as ye can spread it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Katy!&rdquo; said Cerissa slowly, with severe emphasis. &ldquo;When I was a
+ girl, my mother used to tell me it wasn't manners to&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't got time to hear about yer mother,&rdquo; said Katy rudely. &ldquo;What
+ have ye done with me boy?&rdquo; The tennis-court lay vacant on the terrace in
+ the sun; the steep lawn sloped away and dipped into the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't call,&rdquo; said the cook warily. &ldquo;It'll only scare her. He was there
+ only a minute ago. Run, Katy, and see if he's at the stables.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not noticed, except by Mrs. Bogardus, that no Katy, and no boy, and
+ no bread and butter, had appeared. Possibly the last deficiency had
+ attracted a little playful attention from the young horseback riders, who
+ were accusing each other of eating more than their respective shares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Miss Sallie perceived there was something on her hostess's mind.
+ &ldquo;Where is John Middleton?&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Katy is dressing him all over,
+ from head to foot, isn't she? I hope she isn't curling his hair. John
+ Middleton has such wonderful hair! I refuse to go back to New York till I
+ have introduced you to John Middleton Bogardus,&rdquo; she announced to the
+ young man, who laughed at everything she said. Mrs. Bogardus smiled
+ vacantly and glanced at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me go find Katy,&rdquo; cried Miss Sally. Katy entered as she spoke, and
+ said a few words to the mistress. &ldquo;Excuse me.&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus rose hastily.
+ She asked Miss Sallie to take her place at the tea-tray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The boy&mdash;they cannot find him. Don't say anything.&rdquo; She had turned
+ ashy white, and Katy's pretty flushed face had a wild expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In five minutes the search had begun. Mrs. Bogardus was at the telephone,
+ calling up the quarry, for she was short of men. One order followed
+ another quickly. Her voice was harsh and deep. She had frankly forgotten
+ her guests. Embarrassed by their own uselessness, yet unable to take
+ leave, they lingered and discussed the mystery of this sudden, acute
+ alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the sore spot,&rdquo; said Miss Sally sentimentally. &ldquo;You know her
+ husband was missing for years before she gave him up; and then that
+ dreadful time, three years ago, when they were so frightened about Paul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having spread the alarm, Mrs. Bogardus took the field in person. Her head
+ was bare in the keen, sunset light. She moved with strong, fleet steps,
+ but a look of sudden age stamped her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go back, all of you!&rdquo; she said to the women, who crowded on her heels.
+ &ldquo;There are plenty of places to look.&rdquo; Her stern eyes resisted their
+ frightened sympathy. She was not ready to yield to the consciousness of
+ her own fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the old house she went, by some sure instinct that told her the road to
+ trouble. But her trouble stood off from her, and spared her for one moment
+ of exquisite relief; as if the child of Paul and Moya had no part in what
+ was waiting for her. The door at the foot of the stairs stood open. She
+ heard a soft, repeated thud. Panting, she climbed the stairs; and as she
+ rounded the shoulder of the chimney, there, on the top step above her,
+ stood the fair-haired child, making the only light in the place. He was
+ knocking, with his foolish ball, on the door of the chamber of fear. Three
+ generations of the living and the dead were brought together in this coil
+ of fate, and the child, in his happy innocence, had joined the knot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman crouching on the stairs could barely whisper, &ldquo;Middy!&rdquo; lest if
+ she startled him he might turn and fall. He looked down at her,
+ unsurprised, and paused in his knocking. &ldquo;Man&mdash;in there&mdash;won't
+ 'peak to Middy!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She crept towards him and sat below him, coaxing him into her lap. The
+ strange motions of her breast, as she pressed his head against her, kept
+ the boy quiet, and in that silence she heard an inner sound&mdash;the
+ awful pulse of the old clock beating steadily, calling her, demanding the
+ evidence of her senses,&mdash;she who feared no ghosts,&mdash;beating out
+ the hours of an agony she was there to witness. And she was yet in time.
+ The hapless creature entrapped within that room dragged its weight slowly
+ across the floor. The clock, sole witness and companion of its sufferings,
+ ticked on impartially. Neither is this any new thing, it seemed to say. A
+ life was starved in here before&mdash;not for lack of food, but love,&mdash;love,&mdash;love!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She carried the child out into the air, and he ran before her like a
+ breeze. The women who met them stared at her sick and desperate face. She
+ made herself quickly understood, and as each listener drained her meaning
+ the horror spread. There was but one man left on the place, within call,
+ he with the boyish face and clean brown hands, who had ridden across the
+ fields for an afternoon's idle pleasure. He stepped to her side and took
+ the key out of her hand. &ldquo;You ought not to do this,&rdquo; he said gently, as
+ their eyes met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,&rdquo; she counted mechanically. &ldquo;He has been in
+ there six days and seven nights by my orders.&rdquo; She looked straight before
+ her, seeing no one, as she gave her commands to the women: fire and hot
+ water and stimulants, in the kitchen of the old house at once, and another
+ man, if one could be found to follow her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two figures moving across the grass might have stepped out of an
+ illustration in the pages of some current magazine. In their thoughts they
+ had already unlocked the door of that living death and were face to face
+ with the insupportable facts of nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morbid, sickening, prison odor met them at the door&mdash;humanity's
+ helpless protest against bolts and bars. Again the young man begged his
+ companion not to enter. She took one deep breath of the pure outside air
+ and stepped before him. They searched the emptiness of the barely
+ furnished room. The clock ticked on to itself. Mrs. Bogardus's companion
+ stood irresolute, not knowing the place. The fetid air confused his
+ senses. But she went past him through the inner door, guided by
+ remembrance of the sounds she had heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had seen it. She approached it cautiously, stooping for a better view,
+ and closing in upon it warily, as one cuts off the retreat of a creature
+ in the last agonies of flight. Her companion heard her say: &ldquo;Show me your
+ face!&mdash;Uncover his face,&rdquo; she repeated, not moving her eyes as he
+ stepped behind her. &ldquo;He will not let me near him. Uncover it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thing in the corner had some time been a man. There was still enough
+ manhood left to feel her eyes and to shrink as an earthworm from the
+ spade. He had crawled close to the baseboard of the room. An old man's
+ ashen beard straggled through the brown claws wrapped about the face. As
+ the dust of the threshing floor to the summer grain, so was his likeness
+ to one she remembered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must see that man's face!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;He will die if I touch him.
+ Take away his hands.&rdquo; It was done, with set teeth, and the face of the
+ football hero was bathed in sweat. He breathed through tense nostrils, and
+ a sickly whiteness spread backward from his lips. Suddenly he loosed his
+ burden. It fell, doubling in a ghastly heap, and he rushed for the open
+ air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus groaned. She raised herself up slowly, stretching back her
+ head. Her face was like the terrible tortured mask of the Medusa. She had
+ but a moment in which to recover herself. Deliberately she spoke when her
+ companion returned and stood beside her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was my husband. If he lives I am still his wife. You are not to
+ forget this. It is no secret. Are you able to help me now? Get a blanket
+ from the women. I hear some one coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She waited, with head erect and eyes closed and rigid tortured lips apart,
+ till the feet were heard at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI. &mdash; PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Remsen and her delicate daughter had driven away to avoid excitement
+ and the night air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey hovered round the piazza steps, talking, with but little
+ encouragement, to Miss Sallie and the young man who had become the centre
+ of all eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see how anybody on the face of the earth could blame her, nor me
+ either!&rdquo; Chauncey protested. &ldquo;If the critter wanted to git out, why
+ couldn't he say so? I stood there holdin' the door open much as five
+ minutes. 'Who's in there?' I says. I called it loud enough to wake the
+ dead. 'Nobody wants to hurt ye,' says I. There want nothing to be afraid
+ of. He hadn't done nothing anyway. It's the strangest case ever I heard
+ tell of. And the doctor don't think he was much crazy either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can he live?&rdquo; asked Miss Sallie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's alive now, but doctor don't know how long he'll last. There he comes
+ now. I must go and git his horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor, who seemed nervous,&mdash;he was a young local practitioner,&mdash;asked
+ to speak with Miss Sallie's hero apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Mrs. Bogardus say anything when she first saw that man? Did you
+ notice what she said?&mdash;how she took it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hero, who was also a gentleman, looked at the doctor coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not a nice thing,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I saw just as little as I could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't understand me,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;I want to know if Mrs.
+ Bogardus appeared to you to have made any discovery&mdash;received any
+ shock not to be accounted for by&mdash;by what you both saw?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shouldn't attempt to answer such a question,&rdquo; said the youngster
+ bluntly. &ldquo;I never saw Mrs. Bogardus in my life before to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor colored. &ldquo;Mrs. Bogardus has given me a telegram to send, and I
+ don't know whether to send it or not. It's going to make a whole lot of
+ talk. I am not much acquainted with Mrs. Bogardus myself, except by
+ hearsay. That's partly what surprises me. It looks a little reckless to
+ send out such a message as that, by the first hand that comes along.
+ Hadn't we better give her time to think it over?&rdquo; He opened the telegram
+ for the other to read. &ldquo;The man himself can't speak. But he just pants for
+ breath every time she comes near him: he tries to hide his face. He acts
+ like a criminal afraid of being caught.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't look that way to me&mdash;what was left of him. Not in the
+ least like a criminal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no; that's a fact, too. Now they've got him laid out clean and
+ neat, he looks as if he might have been a very decent sort of man. But <i>that</i>,
+ you know&mdash;that's incredible. If she knows him, why doesn't he know
+ her? Why won't he own her? He's afraid of her. His eyes are ready to burst
+ out of his head whenever she comes near him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Mrs. Bogardus write that telegram herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what did she tell you to do with it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send it to her son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why don't you send it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the disputed message: &ldquo;Come. Your father has been found. Bring
+ Doctor Gainsworth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the local man's opinion, the writer of that dispatch was Doctor
+ Gainsworth's true patient. What could induce a woman in Mrs. Bogardus's
+ position to give such hasty publicity to this shocking disclosure,
+ allowing it were true? The more he dwelt on it the less he liked the
+ responsibility he was taking. He discussed it openly; and, with the best
+ intentions, this much-impressed young man gave out his own counter-theory
+ of the case, hoping to forestall whatever mischief might have been done.
+ He put himself in the place of Mr. Paul Bogardus, whom he liked extremely,
+ and tried to imagine that young gentleman's state of mind when he should
+ look upon this new-found parent, and learn the manner of his resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the explanation he boldly set forth in behalf of those most
+ nearly concerned. [He was getting up his diagnosis for an interesting half
+ hour with the great doctor who had been called in consultation.] The shock
+ of that awful discovery in the locked chamber, he attested, had put Mrs.
+ Bogardus temporarily beside herself. Outwardly composed, her nerves were
+ ripped and torn by the terrible sight that met her eyes. She was the prey
+ of an hallucination founded on memories of former suffering, which had
+ worn a channel for every fresh fear to seek. There was something truly
+ noble and loyal and pathetic in the nature of her possession. It threw a
+ softened light upon her past. How must she have brooded, all these years,
+ for that one thought to have ploughed so deep! It was quite commonly known
+ in the neighborhood that she had come back from the West years ago without
+ her husband, yet with no proof of his death. But who could have believed
+ she would cling for half a lifetime to this forlorn expectancy, depicting
+ her own loss in every sad hulk of humanity cast upon her prosperous
+ shores!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one believed she was deceiving herself, but great honor was hers
+ among the neighbors for the plain truth and courage of her astonishing
+ avowal. They had thought her proud, exclusive, hard in the security of
+ wealth. Here she stood by a pauper's bed in the name of simple constancy,
+ stripping herself of all earthly surplusage, exposing her deepest wound,
+ proclaiming the bond&mdash;herself its only witness&mdash;between her and
+ this speechless wreck, drifting out on the tide of death. She had but to
+ let him go. It was the wild word she had spoken in the name of truth and
+ deathless love that fired the imagination of that slow countryside. It was
+ the touch beyond nature that appeals to the higher sense of a community,
+ and there is no community without a soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The straight demands of justice are frequently hard to meet, but its
+ ironies are crushing. Mrs. Bogardus had fallen back on the line of a
+ mother's duty since that moment of personal accountability. She read the
+ unspoken reverence in the eyes of all around her, but she put in no
+ disclaimer. Her past was not her own. She could not sin alone. Only those
+ who have been honest are privileged under all conditions to remain so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his arrival with the doctor, Paul endeavored first to see his mother
+ alone. For some reason she would not have it so. She took the unspeakable
+ situation as it came. He was shown into the room where she sat, and by her
+ orders Doctor Gainsworth was with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose quietly and came to meet them. Placing her hand in her son's arm,
+ and looking towards the bed, she said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doctor&mdash;my husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam!&rdquo; said Doctor Gainsworth. He had been Mrs. Bogardus's family
+ physician for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My husband,&rdquo; she repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor appeared to accept the statement. As the three approached the
+ bed Mrs. Bogardus leaned heavily upon her son. Paul released his arm and
+ placed it firmly around her. He felt her shudder. &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; he said to her
+ with an indescribable accent that tore her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor began his examination. He addressed his patient as &ldquo;Mr.
+ Bogardus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mistake,&rdquo; said a low, husky voice from the bed. &ldquo;This ain't the man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Gainsworth pursued his investigations. &ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo; he
+ asked the patient suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hunted eyes turned with ghastly appeal upon the faces around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul, speak to him! Own your father,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus whispered
+ passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is for him to speak now,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;When he is well, Doctor,&rdquo; he
+ added aloud, &ldquo;he will know his own name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man will never be well,&rdquo; the doctor answered. &ldquo;If there is anything
+ to prove, for or against the identity you claim for him, it will have to
+ be done within a very few days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Gainsworth rose and held out his hand. He was a man of delicate
+ perceptions. His respect at that moment for Mrs. Bogardus, though founded
+ on blindest conjecture, was an emotion which the mask of his professional
+ manner could barely conceal. &ldquo;As a friend, Mrs. Bogardus, I hope you will
+ command me&mdash;but you need no doctor here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a friend I ask you to believe me,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;This man <i>is</i> my
+ husband. He came back here because this was his home. I cannot tell you
+ any more, but this we expect you and every one who knows&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dissenting voice from the bed closed her assertion with a hoarse &ldquo;No!
+ Not the man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-by, Mrs. Bogardus,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;Don't trouble to explain. You
+ and I have lived too long and seen too much of life not to recognize its
+ fatalities: the mysterious trend in the actions of men and women that
+ cannot be comprised in&mdash;in the locking of a door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is of little consequence&mdash;what was done, compared to what was not
+ done.&rdquo; This was all the room for truth she could give herself to turn in.
+ The doctor did not try to understand her: yet she had snatched a little
+ comfort from merely uttering the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul and the doctor dined together, Mrs. Bogardus excusing herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There seems to be an impression here,&rdquo; said the doctor, examining the
+ initials on his fish-fork, &ldquo;that your mother is indulging an overstrained
+ fancy in this melancholy resemblance she has traced. It does not appear to
+ have made much headway as a fact, which rather surprises me in a country
+ neighborhood. Possibly your doctor here, who seems a very good fellow, has
+ wished to spare the family any unnecessary explanations. If you'll let me
+ advise you, Paul, I would leave it as it is,&mdash;open to conjecture.
+ But, in whatever shape this impression may reach you from outside, I hope
+ you won't let it disturb you in the least, so far as it describes your
+ mother's condition. She is one of the few well-balanced women I have had
+ the honor to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul did not take advantage of the doctor's period. He went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I do know her. Possibly you may not yourself feel that you
+ altogether understand your mother? She has had many demands upon her
+ powers of adaptation. I should imagine her not one who would adapt herself
+ easily, yet, once she had recognized a necessity of that sort, I believe
+ she would fit herself to its conditions with an exacting thoroughness
+ which in time would become almost, one might say, a second, an external
+ self. The 'lendings' we must all of us wear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There will be no explanations,&rdquo; said Paul, not coldly, but helplessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much the best way,&rdquo; said the doctor relieved, and glad to be done with a
+ difficult undertaking. &ldquo;If we are ever understood in this world, it is not
+ through our own explanations, but in spite of them. My daughters hope to
+ see a good deal of your charming wife this winter. I hear great pleasure
+ expressed at your coming back to town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, Doctor. She will be up this evening. We shall stay here with
+ my mother for a time. It will be her desire to carry out this&mdash;recognition&mdash;to
+ the end. We must honor her wishes in the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The talk then fell upon the patient's condition. The doctor left certain
+ directions and took shelter in professional platitudes, but his eyes
+ rested with candid kindness upon the young man, and his farewell
+ hand-clasp was a second prolonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went away in a state of simple wonderment, deeply marveling at Paul's
+ serenity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Extraordinary poise! Where does it come from? No: the boy is happy! He
+ hides it; but it is the one change in him. He has experienced a great
+ relief. Is it possible&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way down the river the doctor continued to muse upon the dignity,
+ the amazingly beautiful behavior of this rising family in whose somewhat
+ commonplace city fortunes he had taken a friendly interest for years. He
+ owned that he had sounded them with too short a line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watching with the dying man hours when she was with him alone, Emily
+ Bogardus continued to test his resolution. He never retracted by a look&mdash;faithful
+ to the word she had spoken which made them strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the slightest shell of mortality that ever detained a soul on
+ earth. The face, small like the face of an old, old child, waxed finer and
+ more spiritual, yet ever more startlingly did it bear the stamp of that
+ individuality which the spirit had held so cheap&mdash;the earthly so
+ impenetrated with the spiritual part that the face had become a
+ sublimation. As one sees a sheet of paper covered with writing wither in
+ flame and become a quivering ash, yet to the last attenuation of its fibre
+ the human characters will stand forth, till all is blown up chimney to the
+ stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, peaceful, implacable in its peace, settling down for the silence of
+ eternity. Still no sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The younger ones came and went. The little boy stole in alone and pushed
+ against his grandmother's knee,&mdash;she seated always by the bed,&mdash;gazed,
+ puzzled, at the strange, still face, and whispered obediently,
+ &ldquo;Gran'faver.&rdquo; There was no response. Once she took the boy and drew him
+ close and placed his little tender hand within the dry, crumpled husk
+ extended on the bedclothes. The eyes unclosed and rested long and
+ earnestly on the face of the child, who yawned as if hypnotized and flung
+ his head back on the grandmother's breast. She bent suddenly and laid her
+ own hand where the child's had been. The eyes turned inward and shut
+ again, but a sigh, so deep it seemed that another breath might never come,
+ was all her answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Past midnight of the fourth night's watch Paul was awakened by a light in
+ his room. His mother stood beside him, white and worn. &ldquo;He is going,&rdquo; she
+ said. It was the final rally of the body's resistance. A few moments'
+ expenditure, and that stubborn vitality would loose its hold.&mdash;The
+ strength of the soil!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wife stood aside and gave up her place to the children. Her expression
+ was noble, like a queen rebuked before her people. There was comfort in
+ that, too. A great, solemn, mutual understanding drew this death-bed group
+ together. Within the sickle's compass so they stood: the woman God gave
+ this man to found a home; the son who inherited his father's gentleness
+ and purity of purpose; the fair flower of the generations that father's
+ sacrifice had helped him win; the bud of promise on the topmost bough.
+ Those astonished eyes shed their last earthly light on this human group,
+ turned and rested in the eyes of the woman, faded, and the light went out.
+ He died, blessing her in one whispered word. Her name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before daybreak on the morning of the funeral, Paul awoke under pressure
+ of disturbing dreams. There were sounds of hushed movements in the house.
+ He traced them to the door of the room below stairs where his father lay.
+ Some one had softly unlocked that door, and entered. He knew who that one
+ must be. His place was there alone with his mother, before they were
+ called together as a family, and the mask of decency resumed for those
+ ironic rites in the presence of the unaccusing dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The windows had been lowered behind closed curtains, and the air of the
+ death chamber, as he entered, was like the touch of chilled iron to the
+ warm pulse of sleep. Without, a still dark night of November had frosted
+ the dead grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unappeasable curiosity of the living concerning the Great Transition,
+ for the moment appeared to have swept all that was personal out of the
+ watcher's gaze, as she bent above the straightened body. And something of
+ the peace there dawning on the cold, still face was reflected in her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have never seen your father before. There he is.&rdquo; She drew a deep
+ sigh, as if she had been too intent to breathe naturally. All her
+ self-consciousness suddenly was gone. And Paul remembered his dream, that
+ had goaded him out of sleep, and vanished with the shock of waking. It
+ gave him the key to this long-expected moment of confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The old likeness has come back,&rdquo; his mother repeated, with that new
+ quietness which restored her to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed of that likeness,&rdquo; said Paul, &ldquo;only it was much stronger&mdash;startling&mdash;so
+ that the room was full of whispers and exclamations as the neighbors&mdash;there
+ were hundreds of them&mdash;filed past. And you stood there, mother,
+ flushed, and talking to each person who passed and looked at him and then
+ at you; you said&mdash;you&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus raised her head. &ldquo;I know! I have been thinking all night. Am
+ I to do that? Is that what you wish me to do? Don't hesitate&mdash;to
+ spare me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother! I could not imagine you doing such a thing. It was like insanity.
+ I wanted to tell you how horrible, how unseemly it was, because I was sure
+ you had been dwelling on some form&mdash;some outward&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I know how I should face this if it were left to me. But
+ you are my only earthly judge, my son. Judge now between us two. Ask of me
+ anything you think is due to him. As to outsiders, what do they matter! I
+ will do anything you say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> say! Oh, mother! Every hand he loved was against him&mdash;bruising
+ his gentle will. Each one of us has cast a stone upon his grave. But you
+ took the brunt of it. You spoke out plain the denial that was in my
+ coward's heart from the first. And I judged you! I&mdash;who uncovered my
+ father's soul to ease my own conscience, and put him to shame and torture,
+ and you to a trial worse than death. Now let us think of the whole of his
+ life. I have much to tell you. You could not listen before; but now he is
+ listening. I speak for him. This is how he loved us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In hard, brief words Paul told the story of his father's sin and
+ self-judgment; his abdication in the flesh; what he esteemed the rights to
+ be of a woman placed as he had placed his wife; how carefully he had
+ guarded her in those rights, and perjured himself at the last to leave her
+ free in peace and honor with her children. She listened, not weeping, but
+ with her great eyes shining in her pallid face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All that came after,&rdquo; said Paul, taking her cold hands in his&mdash;&ldquo;after
+ his last solemn recantation does not touch the true spirit of his
+ sacrifice. It was finished. My father died to us then as he meant to die.
+ The body remained&mdash;to serve out its time, as he said. But his brain
+ was tired. I do not think he connected the past very clearly with the
+ present. I think you should forget what has happened here. It was a
+ hideous net of circumstance that did it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no such thing as circumstance,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus with
+ loftiness. Her face was calm and sweet in its exaltation. &ldquo;I cannot say
+ things as you can, but this is what I mean. I was the wife of his body&mdash;sworn
+ flesh of his flesh. In the flesh that made us one I denied him, and caused
+ his death. And if I could believe as I used to about punishment, I would
+ lock myself in that room, and for every hour he suffered there, I would
+ suffer two. And no one should prevent me, or hasten the end. And the feet
+ of the young men that carried out my husband who lied to save me, should
+ wait there for me who lied to save myself. All lies are death. But what is
+ a made-up punishment to me! I shall take it as it comes&mdash;drop by drop&mdash;slowly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother&mdash;my mother! The fashion of this world does not last; but one
+ thing does. Is it nothing to you, mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I my son&mdash;after all?&rdquo; she said as one dreaming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night lamp expired in smoke that tainted the cold air. Paul drew back
+ the curtains one by one, and let in the new-born day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Peace to this house,'&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;'not as the world giveth,'&rdquo; his thought
+ concluded.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Desert and The Sown
+
+Author: Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8219]
+This file was first posted on July 3, 2003
+Last Updated: May 19, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DESERT AND THE SOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Eldred, Clay Massei and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DESERT AND THE SOWN
+
+
+By Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+I. A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+
+II. INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+
+III. THE INITIAL LOVE
+
+IV. "A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT"
+
+V. DISINHERITED
+
+VI. AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+
+VII. MARKING TIME
+
+VIII. A HUNTER'S DIARY
+
+IX. THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+
+X. THE WHITE PERIL
+
+XI. A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+
+XII. THE BLOOD-WITE
+
+XIII. CURTAIN
+
+XIV. KIND INQUIRIES
+
+XV. A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+
+XVI. THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+
+XVII. THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+
+XVIII.THE STAR IN THE EAST
+
+XIX. PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+
+XX. A STATION IN THE DESERT
+
+XXI. INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+
+XXII. THE CASE STRIKES IN
+
+XXIII.RESTIVENESS
+
+XXIV. INDIAN SUMMER
+
+XXV. THE FELL FROST
+
+XXVI. PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+
+It was an evening of sudden mildness following a dry October gale.
+The colonel had miscalculated the temperature by one log--only one, he
+declared, but that had proved a pitchy one, and the chimney bellowed
+with flame. From end to end the room was alight with it, as if the
+stored-up energies of a whole pine-tree had been sacrificed in the
+consumption of that four-foot stick.
+
+The young persons of the house had escaped, laughing, into the fresh
+night air, but the colonel was hemmed in on every side; deserted by
+his daughter, mocked by the work of his own hands, and torn between the
+duties of a host and the host's helpless craving for his after-dinner
+cigar.
+
+Across the hearth, filling with her silks all the visible room in his
+own favorite settle corner, sat the one woman on earth it most behooved
+him to be civil to,--the future mother-in-law of his only child. That
+Moya was a willing, nay, a reckless hostage, did not lessen her father's
+awe of the situation.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus, according to her wont at this hour, was composedly doing
+nothing. The colonel could not make his retreat under cover of her real
+or feigned absorption in any of the small scattering pursuits which
+distract the female mind. When she read she read--she never "looked at
+books." When she sewed she sewed--presumably, but no one ever saw her
+do it. Her mind was economic and practical, and she saved it whole, like
+many men of force, for whatever she deemed her best paying sphere of
+action.
+
+It was a silence that crackled with heat! The colonel, wrathfully
+perspiring in the glow of that impenitent stick, frowned at it like
+an inquisitor. Presently Mrs. Bogardus looked up, and her expression
+softened as she saw the energetic despair upon his face.
+
+"Colonel, don't you always smoke after dinner?"
+
+"That is my bad habit, madam. I belong to the generation that
+smokes--after dinner and most other times--more than is good for us."
+Colonel Middleton belonged also to the generation that can carry a
+sentence through to the finish in handsome style, and he did it with a
+suave Virginian accent as easy as his seat in the saddle. Mrs. Bogardus
+always gave him her respectful attention during his best performances,
+though she was a woman of short sentences herself.
+
+"Don't you smoke in this room sometimes?" she asked, with a barely
+perceptible sniff the merest contraction of her housewifely nostrils.
+
+"Ah--h! Those rascally curtains and cushions! You ladies--women,
+I should say--Moya won't let me say ladies--you bolster us up with
+comforts on purpose to betray us!"
+
+"You can say 'ladies' to me," smiled the very handsome one before him.
+"That's the generation _I_ belong to."
+
+The colonel bowed playfully. "Well, you know, I don't detect myself, but
+there's no doubt I have infected the premises."
+
+"Open fires are good ventilators. I wish you would smoke now. If you
+don't, I shall have to go away, and I'm exceedingly comfortable."
+
+"You are exceedingly charming to say so--on top of that last stick,
+too!" The colonel had Irish as well as Virginian progenitors. "Well," he
+sighed, proceeding to make himself conditionally happy, "Moya will never
+forgive me! We spoil each other shamefully when we're alone, but of
+course we try to jack each other up when company comes. It's a great
+comfort to have some one to spoil, isn't it, now? I needn't ask which it
+is in your family!"
+
+"The spoiled one?" Mrs. Bogardus smiled rather coldly. "A woman we had
+for governess, when Christine was a little thing, used to say: 'That
+child is the stuff that tyrants are made of!' Tyrants are made by the
+will of their subjects, don't you think, generally speaking?"
+
+"Well, you couldn't have made a tyrant of your son, Mrs. Bogardus. He's
+the Universal Spoiler! He'll ruin my striker, Jephson. I shall have to
+send the fellow back to the ranks. I don't know how you keep a servant
+good for anything with Paul around."
+
+"Paul thinks he doesn't like to be waited on," Paul's mother observed
+shrewdly. "He says that only invalids, old people, and children have any
+claim on the personal service of others."
+
+"By George! I found him blacking his own boots!"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus laughed.
+
+"But I'm paying a man to do it for him. It upsets my contract with that
+other fellow for Paul to do his work. We have a claim on what we pay for
+in this world."
+
+"I suppose we have. But Paul thinks that nothing can pay the price of
+those artificial relations between man and man. I think that's the way
+he puts it."
+
+"Good Heavens! Has the boy read history? It's a relation that began when
+the world was made, and will last while men are in it."
+
+"I am not defending Paul's ideas, Colonel. I have a great sympathy with
+tyrants myself. You must talk to him. He will amuse you."
+
+"My word! It's a ticklish kind of amusement when _we_ get talking. Why,
+the boy wants to turn the poor old world upside down--make us all stand
+on our heads to give our feet a rest. Now, I respect my feet,"--the
+colonel drew them in a little as the lady's eyes involuntarily took the
+direction of his allusion,--"I take the best care I can of them; but
+I propose to keep my head, such as it is, on top, till I go under
+altogether. These young philanthropists! They assume that the Hands and
+the Feet of the world, the class that serves in that capacity, have got
+the same nerves as the Brain."
+
+"There's a sort of connection," said Mrs. Bogardus carelessly. "Some
+of our Heads have come from the class that you call the Hands and Feet,
+haven't they?"
+
+The colonel admitted the fact, but the fact was the exception. "Why,
+that's just the matter with us now! We've got no class of legislators.
+I don't wish to plume myself, but, upon my word, the two services are
+about all we have left to show what selection and training can do. And
+we're only just getting the army into shape, after the raw material that
+was dumped into it by the civil war."
+
+"Weren't you in the civil war yourself?"
+
+"I was--a West Pointer, madam; and I was true to my salt and false to my
+blood. But, the flag over all!--at the cost of everything I held dear
+on earth." After this speech the colonel looked hotter than ever and a
+trifle ashamed of himself.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus's face wore its most unobservant expression. "I don't
+agree with Paul," she said. "I wish in some ways he were more like other
+young men--exercise, for instance. It's a pity for young men not to love
+activity and leadership. Besides, it's the fashion. A young man might
+as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Blood is a strange
+thing," she mused.
+
+The colonel looked at her curiously. In a woman so unfrank, her
+occasional bursts of frankness were surprising and, as he thought, not
+altogether complimentary. It was as if she felt herself so far removed
+from his conception of her that she might say anything she pleased, sure
+of his miscomprehension.
+
+"He is not lazy intellectually," said the colonel, aiming to comfort
+her.
+
+"I did not say he was lazy--only he won't do things except to what he
+calls some 'purpose.' At his age amusement ought to be purpose enough.
+He ought to take his pleasures seriously--this hunting-trip, for
+instance. I believe, on the very least encouragement, he would give it
+all up!"
+
+"You mustn't let him do that," said the colonel, warming. "All that
+country above Yankee Fork, for a hundred miles, after you've gone fifty
+north from Bonanza, is practically virgin forest. Wonderful flora
+and fauna! It's late for the weeds and things, but if Paul wants game
+trophies for your country-house, he can load a pack-train."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus continued to be amused, in a quiet way. "He calls them
+relics of barbarism! He would as soon festoon his walls with scalps, as
+decorate them with the heads of beautiful animals,--nearer the Creator's
+design than most men, he would say."
+
+"He's right there! But that doesn't change the distinction between men
+and animals. He is your son, madam--and he's going to be mine. But, fine
+boy as he is, I call him a crank of the first water."
+
+"You'll find him quite good to Moya," Mrs. Bogardus remarked
+dispassionately. "And he's not quite twenty-four."
+
+"Very true. Well, _I_ should send him into the woods for the sake of
+getting a little sense into him, of an every-day sort. He 'll take in
+sanity with every breath."
+
+"And you don't think it's too late in the season for them to go out?"
+
+There was no change in Mrs. Bogardus's voice, unconcerned as it was; yet
+the colonel felt at once that this simple question lay at the root of
+all her previous skirmishing.
+
+"The guide will decide as to that," he said definitely. "If it is, he
+won't go out with them. They have got a good man, you say?"
+
+"They are waiting for a good man; they have waited too long, I think.
+He is expected in with another party on Monday, perhaps, Paul is to meet
+the Bowens at Challis, where they buy their outfit. I do believe"--she
+laughed constrainedly--"that he is going up there more to head them off
+than for any other reason."
+
+"How do you mean?"
+
+"Oh, it's very stupid of them! They seem to think an army post is part
+of the public domain. They have been threatening, if Paul gives up the
+trip, to come down here on a gratuitous visit."
+
+"Why, let them come by all means! The more the merrier! We will quarter
+them on the garrison at large."
+
+"Wherever they were quartered, they would be here all the time. They are
+not intimate friends of Paul's. _Mrs._ Bowen is--a very great friend.
+He is her right-hand in all that Hartley House work. The boys are just
+fashionable young men."
+
+"Can't they go hunting without Paul?"
+
+"Wheels within wheels!" Mrs. Bogardus sighed impatiently. "Hunting trips
+are expensive, and--when young men are living on their fathers, it
+is convenient sometimes to have a third. However, Paul goes, I half
+believe, to prevent their making a descent upon us here."
+
+"Well; I should ask them to come, or make it plain they were not
+expected."
+
+"Oh, would you?--if their mother was one of the nicest women, and your
+friend? Besides, the reservation does not cover the whole valley. Banks
+Bowen talks of a mine he wants to look at--I don't think it will make
+much difference to the mine! This is simply to say that I wish Paul
+cared more about the trip for its own sake."
+
+"Well, frankly, I think he's better out of the way for the next
+fortnight. The girls ought to go to bed early, and keep the roses in
+their cheeks for the wedding. Moya's head is full of her frocks and
+fripperies. She is trying to run a brace of sewing women; and all those
+boxes are coming from the East to be 'inspected, and condemned' mostly.
+The child seems to make a great many mistakes, doesn't she? About every
+other day I see a box as big as a coffin in the hall, addressed to some
+dry-goods house, 'returned by ----'"
+
+"Moya should have sent to me for her things," said Mrs. Bogardus. "I am
+the one who makes her return them. She can do much better when she is
+in town herself. It doesn't matter, for the few weeks they will be
+away, what she wears. I shall take her measures home with me and set the
+people to work. She has never been _fitted_ in her life."
+
+The colonel looked rather aghast. He had seldom heard Mrs. Bogardus
+speak with so much animation. He wondered if really his household was so
+very far behind the times.
+
+"It's very kind of you, I'm sure, if Moya will let you. Most girls think
+they can manage these matters for themselves."
+
+"It's impossible to shop by mail," Mrs. Bogardus said decidedly. "They
+always keep a certain style of things for the Western and Southern
+trade."
+
+The colonel was crushed. Mrs. Bogardus rose, and he picked up her
+handkerchief, breathing a little hard after the exertion. She passed
+out, thanking him with a smile as he opened the door. In the hall she
+stopped to choose a wrap from a collection of unconventional garments
+hanging on a rack of moose horns.
+
+"I think I shall go out," she said. "The air is quite soft to-night. Do
+you know which way the children went?" By the "children," as the colonel
+had noted, Mrs. Bogardus usually meant her daughter, the budding tyrant,
+Christine.
+
+"Fine woman!" he mused, alone with himself in his study. "Splendid
+character head. Regular Dutch beauty. But hard--eh?--a trifle hard in
+the grain. Eyes that tell you nothing. Mouth set like a stone. Never
+rambles in her talk. Never speculates or exaggerates for fun. Never runs
+into hyperbole--the more fool some other folks! Speaks to the point or
+keeps still."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+
+The colonel's papers failed to hold him somehow. He rose and paced the
+room with his short, stiff-kneed tread. He stopped and stared into the
+fire; his face began to get red.
+
+"So! Moya's clothes are not good enough. Going to set the people to
+work, is she? Wants an outfit worthy of her son. And who's to pay for
+it, by gad? Post-nuptial bills for wedding finery are going to hurt poor
+little Moya like the deuce. Confound the woman! Dressing my daughter
+for me, right in my own house. Takes it in her hands as if it were
+her right, by----!" The colonel let slip another expletive. "Well,"
+he sighed, half amused at his own violence, "I'll write to Annie. I
+promised Moya, and it's high time I did."
+
+Annie was the colonel's sister, the wife of an infantry captain,
+stationed at Fort Sherman. She was a very understanding woman; at least
+she understood her brother. But she was not solely dependent upon his
+laggard letters for information concerning his private affairs. The
+approaching wedding at Bisuka Barracks was the topic of most of the
+military families in the Department of the Columbia. Moya herself had
+written some time before, in the self-conscious manner of the newly
+engaged. Her aunt knew of course that Moya and Christine Bogardus had
+been room-mates at Miss Howard's, that the girls had fallen in love with
+each other first, and with visits at holidays and vacations, when the
+army girl could not go to her father, it was easily seen how the
+rest had followed. And well for Moya that it had, was Mrs. Creve's
+indorsement. As a family they were quite sufficiently represented in
+the army; and if one should ever get an Eastern detail it would be very
+pleasant to have a young niece charmingly settled in New York.
+
+The colonel drew a match across the top bar of the grate and set it
+to his pipe. His big nostrils whitened as he took a deep in-breath. He
+reseated himself and began his duty letter in the tone of a judicious
+parent; but, warming as he wrote, under the influence of Annie's
+imagined sympathy, he presently broke forth with his usual arrogant
+colloquialism.
+
+"She might have had her pick of the junior officers in both branches.
+And there was a captain of engineers at the Presidio, a widower, but an
+awfully good fellow. And she has chosen a boy, full of transcendental
+moonshine, who climbs upon a horse as if it were a stone fence, and has
+mixed ideas which side of himself to hang a pistol on.
+
+"I have no particular quarrel with the lad, barring his great burly
+mouthful of a name, Bo--gardus! To call a child Moya and have her fetch
+up with her soft, Irish vowels against such a name as that! She had a
+fond idea that it was from Beauregard. But she has had to give that up.
+It's Dutch--Hudson River Dutch--for something horticultural--a tree,
+or an orchard, or a brush-pile; and she says it's a good name where it
+belongs. Pity it couldn't have stayed where it belongs.
+
+"However, you won't find him quite so scrubby as he sounds. He's very
+proper and clean-shaven, with a good pair of dark, Dutch eyes, which he
+gets from his mother; and I wish he had got her business ability with
+them, and her horse sense, if the lady will excuse me. She runs the
+property and he spends it, as far as she'll let him, on the newest
+reforms. And there's another hitch!--To belong to the Truly Good
+at twenty-four! But beggars can't be choosers. He's going to settle
+something handsome on Moya out of the portion Madame gives him on his
+marriage. My poor little girl, as you know, will get nothing from me but
+a few old bits and trinkets and a father's blessing,--the same
+doesn't go for much in these days. I have been a better dispenser than
+accumulator, like others of our name.
+
+"I do assure you, Annie, it bores me down to the ground, this
+humanitarian racket from children with ugly names who have just chipped
+the shell. This one owns his surprise that we _work_ in the army! That
+our junior officers teach, and study a bit perforce themselves. His own
+idea is that every West Pointer, before he gets his commission, should
+serve a year or two in the ranks, to raise the type of the enlisted man,
+and chiefly, mark you, to get his point of view, the which he is to
+bear in mind when he comes to his command. Oh, we've had some pretty
+arguments! But I suspect the rascal of drawing it mild, at this stage,
+for the old dragon who guards his Golden Apple. He doesn't want to poke
+me up. How far he'd go if he were not hampered in his principles by the
+fact that he is in love, I cannot say. And I'd rather not imagine."
+
+The commandant's house at Bisuka Barracks is the nearest one to the
+flag-pole as you go up a flight of wooden steps from the parade ground.
+These steps, and their landings, flanked by the dry grass terrace of the
+line, are a favorite gathering place for young persons of leisure at
+the Post. They face the valley and the mountains; they lead past the
+adjutant's office to the main road to town; they command the daily
+pageant of garrison duty as performed at such distant, unvisited posts,
+with only the ladies and the mountains looking on.
+
+Retreat had sounded at half after five, for the autumn days grew short.
+The colonel's orderly had been dismissed to his quarters. There was no
+excuse, at this hour, for two young persons lingering in sentimental
+corners of the steps, beyond a flagrant satisfaction in the shadow
+thereof which covered them since the lighting of lamps on Officers' Row.
+
+The colonel stood at his study window keeping his pipe alive with slow
+and dreamy puffs. The moon was just clearing the roof of the men's
+quarters. His eye caught a shape, or a commingling of shapes, ensconced
+in an angle of the steps; the which he made out to be his daughter,
+in her light evening frock with one of his own old army capes over her
+shoulders, seated in close formation beside the only man at the Post who
+wore civilian black.
+
+The colonel had the feelings of a man as well as a father. He went back
+to his letter with a softened look in his face. He had said too much; he
+always did--to Annie; and now he must hedge a little or she would think
+there was trouble brewing, and that he was going to be nasty about
+Moya's choice.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+THE INITIAL LOVE
+
+"Let us be simple! Not every one can be, but we can. We can afford to
+be, and we know how!"
+
+Moya was speaking rapidly, in her singularly articulate tones. A reader
+of voices would have pronounced hers the physical record of unbroken
+health and constant, joyous poise.
+
+"Hear the word of your prophet Emerson!" she brought a little fist down
+upon her knee for emphasis, a hand several sizes larger closed upon it
+and held it fast. "Hear the word--are you listening? 'Only _two_ in the
+Garden walked and with Snake and Seraph talked.'"
+
+The young man's answer was an instant's impassioned silence. Too close
+it touched him, that vital image of the Garden. Then, with an effect of
+sternness, he said,--
+
+"Have we the right to do as we please? Have we the courage that comes of
+right to cut ourselves off from all those calls and cries for help?"
+
+"_I_ have," said the girl; "I have just that right--of one who knows
+exactly what she wants, and is going to get it if she can!"
+
+He laughed at her happy insolence, with which all the youth and nature
+in him made common cause.
+
+"I shouldn't mind thinking about your Poor Man," she tripped along, "if
+he liked being poor, or if it seemed to improve him any; or if it were
+only now and then. But there is so dreadfully much of him! Once we
+begin, how should we ever think about anything else? He'd rise up and
+sit down with us, and eat and drink with us, and tell us what to wear.
+Every pleasure of our lives would be spoiled with his eternal 'Where do
+_I_ come in?' It was simple enough in _that_ garden, with only those
+two and nobody outside to feel injured. But we are those two, aren't
+we? Isn't everybody--once in a life, and once only?" She turned her face
+aside, slighting by her manner the excessive meaning of her words. "I
+ask for myself only what I think I have a right to give you--my absolute
+undivided attention for those first few years. They say it never lasts!"
+she hastened to add with playful cynicism.
+
+Young Bogardus seemed incapable under the circumstances of any adequate
+reply. Free as they were in words, there was an extreme personal shyness
+between these proud young persons, undeveloped on the side of passion
+and better versed in theories of life than in life itself. They had
+separated the day after their sudden engagement, and their nearest
+approaches to intimacy had been through letters. Naturally the girl was
+the bolder, having less in herself to fear.
+
+"That is what _I_ call being simple," she went on briskly. "If you
+think we can be that in New York, let us live there. _I_ could be simple
+there, but not with you, sir! That terrible East Side would be shaking
+its gory locks at us. We should feel that we did it--or you would! Then
+good-by to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"
+
+"You are my life, liberty, and happiness, and I will be your almoner,"
+said Paul, "and dispense you"--
+
+"Dispense _with_ me!" laughed the girl. "And what shall I be doing while
+you are dispensing me on the East Side? New York has other sides. While
+you go slumming with the Seraph, I shall be talking to the Snake! Now,
+_do_ laugh!" she entreated childishly, turning her sparkling face to
+his.
+
+"Am I expected to laugh at that?"
+
+"Well, what shall we do? Don't make me harden my heart before it has had
+time to soften naturally. Give my poor pagan sympathies a little time to
+ripen."
+
+"But you have lived in New York. Did you find it such a strain on your
+sympathies?"
+
+"I was a visitor; and a girl is not expected to have sympathies. But to
+begin our home there: we should have to strike a note of some sort.
+How if my note should jar with yours? Paul, dear, it isn't nice to
+have convictions when one is young and going to be married. You know it
+isn't. It's not poetic, and it's not polite, and it's a dreadful bore!"
+
+The altruist and lover winced at this. Allowing for exaggeration, which
+was the life of speech with her, he knew that Moya was giving him a bit
+of her true self, that changeful, changeless self which goes behind all
+law and "follows joy and only joy." Her voice dropped into its sweetest
+tones of intimacy.
+
+"Why need we live in a crowd? Why must we be pressed upon with all this
+fuss and doing? Doing, doing! We are not ready to do anything yet. Every
+day must have its dawn;--and I don't see my way yet; I'm hardly awake!"
+
+"Darling, hush! You must not say such things to me. For you only to look
+at me like that is the most terrible temptation of my life. You make
+me forget everything a man is bound--that I of all men am bound to
+remember."
+
+"Then I will keep on looking! Behold, I am Happiness, Selfishness, if
+you like! I have come to stay. No, really, it's not nice of you to act
+as if you were under higher orders. You are under my orders. What right
+have we to choose each other if we are not to be better to each other
+than to any one else?--if our lives belong to any one who needs us, or
+our time and money, more than we need it ourselves? Why did you choose
+me? Why not somebody pathetic--one of your Poor Things; or else save
+yourself whole for all the Poor Things?"
+
+"Now you are 'talking for victory,'" he smiled. "You don't believe we
+must be as consistent as all that. Hearts don't have to be coddled
+like pears picked for market. But I'm not preaching to you. The heavens
+forbid! I'm trying to explain. You don't think this whole thing with me
+is a pose? I know I'm a bore with my convictions; but how do we come by
+such things?"
+
+"Ah! How do I come not to have any, or to want any?" she rejoined.
+
+"Once for all, let me tell you how I came by mine. Then you will know
+just where and how those cries for help take hold on me."
+
+"I don't wish to know. Preserve me from knowing! Why didn't you choose
+somebody different?"
+
+He looked at her with all his passion in his eyes. "I did not choose.
+Did you?"
+
+"It isn't too late," she whispered. Her face grew hot in the darkness.
+
+"Yes; it is too late--for anything but the truth. Will you listen,
+sweet? Will you let the nonsense wait?"
+
+"Deeper and deeper! Haven't we reached the bottom yet?"
+
+"Go on! It's the dearest nonsense," she heard him say; but she detected
+pain in his voice and a new constraint.
+
+"What is it? What is the 'truth'?"
+
+"Oh, it's not so dreadful. Only, you always put me in quite a different
+class from where I belong, and I haven't had the courage to set you
+right."
+
+"Children, children!" a young voice called, from the lighted walk above.
+Two figures were going down the line, one in uniform keeping step beside
+a girl in white who reefed back her skirts with one hand, the other was
+raised to her hair which was blowing across her forehead in bewitching
+disorder. Every gesture and turn of her shape announced that she was
+pretty and gay in the knowledge of her power. It was Chrissy, walking
+with Lieutenant Lane.
+
+"Where are you--ridiculous ones? Don't you want to come with us?"
+
+"'Now who were they?'" Paul quoted derisively out of the dark.
+
+"We are going to Captain Dawson's to play Hearts. Come! Don't be
+stupid!"
+
+"We are not stupid, we are busy!" Moya called back.
+
+"Busy! Doing what?"
+
+"Oh, deciding things. We are talking about the Poor Man."
+
+"The poor men, she means." Christine's high laugh followed the
+lieutenant's speech, as the pair went on.
+
+"He _is_ a bore!" Moya declared. "We can't even use him for a joke."
+
+"Speaking of Lane, dear?"
+
+"The Poor Man. Are you sure that you've got a sense of humor, Paul?
+Can't we have charity for jokes among the other poor things?"
+
+Paul had raised himself to the step beside her. "You are shivering," he
+said, "I must let you go in."
+
+"I'm not shivering--I'm chattering," she mocked. "Why should I go in
+when we are going to be really serious?"
+
+Paul waited a moment; his breath came short, as if he were facing a
+postponed dread. "Moya, dear," he began in a forced tone, "I can't help
+my constraints and convictions that bore you so, any more than you can
+help your light heart--God bless it--and your theory of class which to
+me seems mediaeval. I have cringed to it, like the coward a man is when
+he is in love. But now I want you to know me."
+
+He took her hand and kissed it repeatedly, as if impressing upon her
+the one important fact back of all hypothesis and perilous efforts at
+statement.
+
+"Well, are you bidding me good-by?"
+
+"You must give me time," he said. "It takes courage in these days for
+a good American to tell the girl he loves that his father was a hired
+man."
+
+He smiled, but there was little mirth and less color in his face.
+
+"What absurdity!" cried Moya. Then glancing at him she added quickly,
+"_My_ father is a hired man. Most fathers who are worth anything are!"
+
+"My father was because he came of that class. His father was one before
+him. His mother took in tailoring in the village where he was born. He
+had only the commonest common-school education and not much of that.
+At eleven he worked for his board and clothes at my Grandfather Van
+Elten's, and from that time he earned his bread with his hands. Don't
+imagine that I'm apologizing," Paul went on rapidly. "The apology
+belongs on the other side. In New York, for instance, the Bogardus blood
+is quite as good as the Bevier or the Broderick or the Van Elten; but
+up the Hudson, owing to those chances or mischances that selected our
+farming aristocracy for us, my father's people had slipped out of
+their holdings and sunk to the poor artisan class which the old Dutch
+landowners held in contempt."
+
+"We are not landowners," said Moya. "What does it matter? What does any
+of it matter?"
+
+"It matters to be honest and not sail under false colors. I thought
+you would not speak of the Poor Man as you do if you knew that I am his
+son."
+
+"Money has nothing to do with position in the army. I am a poor man's
+daughter."
+
+"Ah, child! Your father gives orders--mine took them, all his life."
+
+"My father has to take what he gives. There is no escaping 'orders.'
+Even I know that!" said Moya. A slight shiver passed over her as she
+spoke, laughing off as usual the touch of seriousness in her words.
+
+"Why did you do that?" Paul touched her shoulder. "Is it the wind? There
+is a wind creeping down these steps." He improved the formation slightly
+in respect to the wind.
+
+"Listen!" said Moya. "Isn't that your mother walking on the porch?
+Father, I know, is writing. She will be lonely."
+
+"She is never lonely, more or less. It is always the same loneliness--of
+a woman widowed for years."
+
+"How very much she must have cared for him!" Moya sighed incredulously.
+What a pity, she thought, that among the humbler vocations Paul's father
+should have been just a plain "hired man." Cowboy, miner, man-o'-war's
+man, even enlisted man, though that were bad enough--any of these he
+might have been in an accidental way, that at least would have been
+picturesque; but it is only the possession of land, by whatsoever means
+or title, that can dignify an habitual personal contact with it in the
+form of soil. That is one of the accepted prejudices which one does not
+meddle with at nineteen. "Youth is conservative because it is afraid."
+Moya, for all her fighting blood, was traditionally and in social ways
+much more in bonds than Paul, who had inherited his father's dreamy
+speculative habit of thought, with something of the farm-hand's distrust
+of society and its forms and shibboleth.
+
+Paul's voice took a narrative tone, and Moya gave herself up to
+listening--to him rather more, perhaps, than to his story.
+
+Few young men of twenty-four can go very deeply into questions of
+heredity. Of what follows here much was not known to Paul. Much that he
+did know he would have interpreted differently. The old well at Stone
+Ridge, for instance, had no place in his recital; and yet out of it
+sprang the history of his shorn generation. Had Paul's mother grown up
+in a houseful of brothers and sisters, governed by her mother instead
+of an old ignorant servant, in all likelihood she would have married
+differently--more wisely but not perhaps so well, her son would loyally
+have maintained. The sons of the rich farmers who would have been her
+suitors were men inferior to their fathers. They inherited the vigor and
+coarseness of constitution, the unabashed materialism of that earlier
+generation that spent its energies coping with Nature on its stony
+farms, but the sons were spared the need of that hard labor which their
+blood required. They supplied an element of force, but one of great
+corruption later, in the state politics of their time.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT
+
+In the kitchen court called the "Airy" at Abraham Van Elten's, there
+was one of those old family wells which our ancestors used to locate so
+artlessly. And when it tapped the kitchen drain, and typhoid took the
+elder children, and the mother followed the children, it was called the
+will of God. A gloomy distinction rested on the house. Abraham felt the
+importance attaching to any supreme experience in a community where life
+runs on in the middle key.
+
+A young doctor who had been called in at the close of the last case
+went prying about the premises, asking foolish questions that angered
+Abraham. It is easier for some natures to suffer than to change. If the
+farmer had ever drunk water himself, except as tea or coffee, or mixed
+with something stronger, he must have been an early victim, to his own
+crass ignorance. He was a vigorous, heavy-set man, a grand field for
+typhoid. But he prospered, and the young doctor was turned down with
+the full weight and breadth of the Van Elten thumb, or the Broderick;
+Abraham's build was that of his maternal grandmother, Hillotje
+Broderick.
+
+On the Ridge, which later developed into a valuable slate quarry,
+there was a spring of water, cold and perpetual, flowing out of the
+trap-formation. Abraham had piped this water down to his barns and
+cattle-sheds; it furnished power for the farm-work. But to bring it to
+the house, in obedience to the doctor's meddlesome advice, would be an
+acknowledgment of fatal mistakes in the past; would raise talk and blame
+among the neighbors, and do away with the honor of a special visitation;
+would cost no trifle of money; would justify the doctor's interference,
+and insult the old well of his father and his father's father, the
+fountain of generations. To seal its mouth and bid its usefulness cease
+in the house where it had ministered for upwards of a hundred years was
+an act of desecration impossible to the man who in his stolid way loved
+the very stones that lined its slimy sides. The few sentiments that had
+taken hold on Abraham's arid nature went as deep as his obstinacy and
+clung as fast as his distrust of new opinions and new men. The question
+of water supply was closed in his house; but the well remained open and
+kept up its illicit connection with the drain.
+
+Old Becky, keeper of the widower's keys, had followed closely the
+history of those unhappy "cases;" she had listened to discussions,
+violent or suppressed, she had heard much talk that went on behind her
+master's back.
+
+Employers of that day and generation were masters; and masters are meant
+to be outwitted. Emily, the youngest and last of the flock, was now a
+child of four, dark like her mother, sturdy and strong like her father.
+On an August day soon after the mother's funeral, Becky took her little
+charge to the well and showed her a tumbler filled, with water not
+freshly drawn.
+
+"See them little specks and squirmy things?" Emmy saw them. She followed
+their wavering motion in the glass as the stern forefinger pointed.
+"Those are little baby snakes," said Becky mysteriously. "The well is
+full of 'em. Sometimes you can see 'em, sometimes you can't, but they're
+always there. They never grow big down the well; it's too dark 'n' cold.
+But you drink that water and the snakes will grow and wriggle and
+work all through ye, and eat your insides out, and you'll die. Your
+mother"--in a whisper--"she drunk that water, and she died. Your sister
+Ruth, and Dirck, and Jimmy, they drunk it, and they died. Now if Emmy
+wants to die"--Large eyes of horror fastened on the speaker's face.
+"No--o, she don't want to die, the Loveums! She don't want Becky to have
+no little girl left at all! No; we mustn't ever drink any of that bad
+water--all full of snakes, ugh! But if Emmy's thirsty, see here! Here's
+good nice water. It's going to be always here in this pail--same water
+the little lambs drink up in the fields. Becky 'll take Emmy up on the
+hill sometime and show where the little lambs drink."
+
+Grief had not clouded the farmer's oversight in petty things. He noticed
+the innocent pail on the area bench, never empty, always specklessly
+clean.
+
+"What is this water?" he asked.
+
+Becky was surly. "Drinking water. Want some?"
+
+"What's it doing here all the time?"
+
+"I set it there for Emmy. She can't reach up to the bucket."
+
+Abraham tasted the water suspiciously. The well-water was hard, with
+a tang of iron. The spring soft, and less cold for its journey to the
+barn.
+
+"Where did you get this water?"
+
+"Help yourself. There's plenty more."
+
+"Becky, where did this water come from? Out o' the well?"
+
+Becky gave a snort of exasperation. "Sam Lewis brought it from the barn!
+I'm too lame to be histin' buckets. I've got the rheumatiz' awful in my
+back and shoulders, if ye want to know!"
+
+"Becky, you're lying to me. You've been listening to what don't concern
+you. Now, see here. You are not going to ask the men to carry water for
+you. They've got something else to do. _There's_ your water, as handy as
+ever a woman had it; use that or go without."
+
+Abraham caught up the pail and flung its contents out upon the grass,
+scattering the hens that came sidling back with squawks of inquiring
+temerity.
+
+When next Emmy came for water, the old woman took her by the hand in
+silence and led her into the dim meat-cellar, a half-basement with one
+low window level with the grass. There was the pail, safe hidden behind
+the soft-soap barrel.
+
+"I had to hide it from your pa," Becky whispered. "Don't you never let
+him know you're afraid o' the well-water. He drunk it when he was a
+little boy. He don't believe in the snakes. But _there wa'n't none
+then_. It's when water gets old and rotten. You can believe what Becky
+says. _She_ knows! But you mustn't ever tell. Your father 'd be as mad
+as fire if he knowed I said anything about snakes. He'd send me right
+away, and some strange woman would come, and maybe she'd whip Emmy.
+Emmy want Becky to go?" Sobs, and little arms clinging wildly to Becky's
+aproned skirts. "No, no! Well, she ain't goin'. But Emmy mustn't tell
+tales or she might have to. Tattlers are wicked anyway. 'Telltale tit!
+Your tongue shall be slit, and all the little dogs'--There! run now!
+There's your poppy. Don't you never,--never!"
+
+Emmy let her eyes be wiped, and with one long, solemn, secret look of
+awed intelligence she ran out to meet her father. She did not love him,
+and the smile with which she met him was no new lesson in diplomacy. But
+her first secret from him lay deep in the beautiful eyes, her mother's
+eyes, as she raised them to his.
+
+"Ain't that wonderful!" said Becky, with a satisfied sigh, watching her.
+"Safe as a jug! An' she not five years old!" For vital reasons she had
+taught the child an ugly lesson. Such lessons were common enough in her
+experience of family discipline. She never thought of it again.
+
+That year which took Emmy's mother from her brought to the child her
+first young companion and friend. Adam Bogardus came as chore-boy to
+the farm,--an only child himself, and sensitive through the clashing
+of gentle instincts with rough and inferior surroundings; brought up
+in that depressed God-fearing attitude in which a widow not strong,
+and earning her bread, would do her duty by an only son. Not a natural
+fighter, she took what little combativeness he had out of him, and made
+his school-days miserable--a record of humiliations that sunk deep and
+drove him from his kind. He was a big, clumsy, sagacious boy, grave
+as an old man, always snubbed and condescended to, yet always trusted.
+Little Emmy made him her bondslave at sight. His whole soul blossomed in
+adoration of the beautiful, masterful child who ordered him about as her
+vassal, while slipping a soft little trustful hand in his. She trotted
+at his heels like one of the lambs or chickens that he fed. She brought
+him into perpetual disgrace with Becky, for wasting his time through her
+imperious demands. She was the burden, the delight, the handicap, the
+incentive, and the reward of his humble apprenticeship. And when he was
+promoted to be one of the regular hands she followed him still, and got
+her pleasure out of his day's work. No one had such patience to tell
+her things, to wait for her and help her over places where her tagging
+powers fell short. But though she bullied him, she looked up to him
+as well. His occupations commanded her respect. He was the god of the
+orchards and of the cider-making; he presided at all the functions of
+the farm year. He was a perfect calendar besides of country sports in
+their season. He swept the ice pools in the meadow for winter sliding,
+after his day's work was done. He saved up paper and string for
+kite-making in March. He knew when willow bark would slip for April's
+whistles. In the first heats of June he climbed the tall locust-trees
+to put up a swing in which she could dream away the perfumed hours.
+At harvest she waited in the meadow for him to toss her up on the
+hay-loads, and his great arms received her when she slid off in the
+barn. She knelt at his feet on the bumping boards of the farm-wagon
+while he braced himself like a charioteer, holding the reins above
+her head. He threshed the nut-trees and routed marauding boys from her
+preserves, and carved pumpkin lanterns to light her to her attic chamber
+on cold November nights, where she would lie awake watching strange
+shadows on the sloping roof, half worshiping, half afraid of her idol's
+ugliness in the dark.
+
+These were some of Paul's illustrations of that pastoral beginning, and
+no doubt they were sympathetically close to the truth. He lingered
+over them, dressing up his mother's choice instinctively to the little
+aristocrat beside him.
+
+When Emmy grew big enough to go to the Academy, three miles from the
+farm, it was all in the day's work that Adam should take her and fetch
+her home. He combined her with the mail, the blacksmith, and other
+village errands. Whoever met her father's team on those long stony hills
+of Saugerties would see his little daughter seated beside his hired man,
+her face turned up to his in endless confiding talk. It was a face, as
+we say, to dream of. But there were few dreamers in that little world.
+The farmers would nod gravely to Adam. "Abraham's girl takes after her
+mother; heartier lookin', though. Guess he'll need a set o' new tires
+before spring." The comments went no deeper.
+
+Abraham was now well on in years; he made no visits, and he never drove
+his own team at night. When his daughter began to let down her frocks
+and be asked to evening parties, it was still Adam who escorted her.
+He sat in the kitchen while she was amusing herself in the parlor. She
+discussed her young acquaintances with him on their way home. The
+time for distinctions had come, but she was too innocent to feel
+them herself, and too proud to accept the standards of others. He was
+absolutely honest and unworldly. He thought it no treachery to love her
+for herself, and he believed, as most of us do, that his family was as
+good as hers or any other.
+
+It would be hard to explain the old man's obliviousness. Perhaps he had
+forgotten his own youth; or class prejudice had gone so deep with him as
+to preclude the bare thought of a child of his falling in love with one
+of his "men." His imagination could not so insult his own blood. But
+when the awakening came, his passion of anger and resentment knew no
+bounds. To discharge his faithless employee out of hand would be the
+cripple throwing away his crutch. Though he called Adam _one_ of his
+men, and though his pay was that of a common laborer, his duties had
+long been of a much higher order. Abraham had made a very good bargain
+out of the widow's son. Adam knew well that he could not be spared, and
+pitied the old man's helpless rage. He took his frantic insults as part
+of his senility, and felt it no unmanliness to appease it by giving his
+promise that he would speak no more of love to Emmy while he was taking
+her father's wages. But Emmy did not indorse this promise fully. To her
+it looked like weakness, and implied a sort of patience which did
+not become a lover such as she wished hers to be. The winter wore on
+uncomfortably for all. Towards spring, Becky's last illness and passing
+away brought the younger ones together again, and closer than before.
+Adam kept his promise through days and nights of sickroom intimacy; but
+though no word of love was spoken, each bore silent witness to what was
+loveliest in the other, and the bond between them deepened.
+
+Then spring came, and its restlessness was strong upon them both. But it
+was Emmy to whom it meant action and rebellion.
+
+They stood on the orchard hill one Sunday afternoon at the pause of the
+year. Buds were swelling and the edges of the woods wore a soft blush
+against the vaporous sky. The bare brown slopes were streaked with snow.
+A floe of winter ice, grinding upon itself with the tide, glared yellow
+as an old man's teeth in the setting sun. From across the river came
+the thunder of a train, bound north, two engines dragging forty cars of
+freight piled up by some recent traffic-jam; it plunged into a tunnel,
+and they waited, listening to the monster's smothered roar. Out it
+burst, its breath packed into clouds, the engines whooped, and round
+the curve where a point of cedars cut the sky the huge creature unwound
+itself, the hills echoing to its tread.
+
+Emmy watched it out of sight, and breathed again. "Hundreds, hundreds
+going every day! It seems easy enough for everybody else. Oh, if I were
+a man!"
+
+"What do you want I should do, Emmy?" Adam knew well what man she was
+thinking of.
+
+"_I_ want? Don't you ever want things yourself?"
+
+"When I want a thing bad, I gen'ly think it's worth waiting for."
+
+"People don't get things by waiting. I don't know how you can stand
+it,--to stay here year after year. And now you've tied yourself up with
+a promise, and you know you cannot keep it!"
+
+"I'm trying to keep it."
+
+"You couldn't keep it if you cared--really and truly--as some do!" She
+dropped her voice hurriedly. "To live here and eat your meals day after
+day and pass me like a stick or a stone!"
+
+The slow blood burned in Adam's face and hammered in his pulses. His
+blue eyes were bashful through its heat. "I don't feel like a stick nor
+a stone. You know it, Emmy. You want to be careful," he added gently.
+"Would going away look as if I cared?"
+
+"Why--why don't you ask me to go with you?" The girl tried to meet his
+eyes. She turned off her question with a proud laugh.
+
+"Be--careful, child! You know why I can't take you up on that. Would
+you want we should leave him here alone--without even Becky? You're only
+trying me for fun."
+
+"No; I am not!" Emmy was pale now. Her breast was rising in strong
+excitement. "If we were gone, he would know then what you are worth to
+him. Now, you're only Adam! He thinks he can put you down like a boy. He
+won't believe I care for you. There's only one way to show him--that
+is, if we do care. In one month he would be sending for us back. Then we
+could come, and you would take your right place here, and be somebody.
+You would not eat in the kitchen, then. Haven't you been like a son to
+him? And why shouldn't he own it?"
+
+"But if he won't? Suppose he don't send for us to come back?"
+
+"Then you could strike out for yourself. What was Tom Madden, before
+he went away to Colorado, or somewhere--where was it? And now everybody
+stops to shake hands with him;--he's as much of a man as anybody. If you
+could make a little money. That's the proof he wants. If you were rich,
+you'd be all right with him. You know that!"
+
+"I'd hate to think it. But I'll never be rich. Put that out of your
+mind, Emmy. It don't run in the blood. I don't come of a money-making
+breed."
+
+"What a silly thing to say! Of course, if you don't believe you can, you
+can't. Who has made the money here for the last ten years?"
+
+"It was his capital done it. It ain't hard to make money after you've
+scraped the first few thousands together. But it's the first thousand
+that costs."
+
+"How much have you got ahead?"
+
+Adam answered awkwardly, "Eleven hundred and sixty odd." He did not like
+to talk of money to the girl who was the prayer, the inspiration, of his
+life. It hurt him to be questioned by her in this sordid way.
+
+"You earned it all, didn't you?"
+
+"I've took no risks. Here was my home. He give me the chance and he
+showed me how. And--he's your father. I don't like to talk about his
+money, nor about my own, to you."
+
+"Oh, you are good, good! Nobody knows! But it's all wasted if you
+haven't got any push--anything inside of yourself that makes people know
+what you are. I wish I could put into you some of my _fury_ that I
+feel when things get in my way! You have held yourself in too long. You
+can't--_can't_ love a girl, and be so careful--like a mother. Don't you
+understand?"
+
+"Stop right there, Emmy! You needn't push no harder. I can let go
+whenever you say so. But--do _you_ understand, little girl? Man and wife
+it will have to be."
+
+Emmy did not shrink at the words. Her face grew set, her dark eyes full
+of mystery fixed themselves on the slow-moving ice-floe grinding along
+the shore.
+
+"I know," she assented slowly.
+
+"I can't give you no farm, nor horses and carriages, nor help in the
+kitchen. It's bucklin' right down with our bare hands--me outside and
+you in? And you only eighteen. See what little hands--If I could do it
+all!"
+
+"Your promise is broken," she whispered. "I made you break it. You will
+have to tell him now, or--we must go."
+
+"So be!" said Adam solemnly. "And God do so to me and more also, if I
+have to hurt my little girl,--Emmy--wife!"
+
+He folded her in his great arms clumsily--the man she had said was like
+a mother. He was almost as ignorant as she, and more hopeful than he had
+dared to seem, as to their worldly chances. But the love he had for her
+told him it was not love that made her so bold. The first touch of
+such love as his would have made her fear him as he feared her. And the
+subtle pain of this instinctive knowledge, together with that broken
+promise, shackled the wings of his great joy. It was not as he had hoped
+to win the crown of life.
+
+Paul, it may be supposed, had never liked to think of his mother's
+elopement. It had been the one hard point to get over in his conception
+of his father, but he could never have explained it by such a scene as
+this. It would have hampered him terribly in his tale had he dreamed of
+it. He passed over the unfortunate incident with a romancer's touch, and
+dwelt upon his grandfather's bitter resentment which he resented as
+the son of his mother's choice. The Van Eltens and Brodericks all fared
+hardly at the hands of their legatee.
+
+It was not only in the person of a hireling who had abused his trust
+that Abraham had felt himself outraged. There were old neighborhood
+spites and feuds going back, dividing blood from blood--even brothers of
+the same blood. There was trouble between him and his brother Jacob, of
+New York, dating from the settlement of their father's, Broderick Van
+Elten's, estate; and no one knows what besides that was private and
+personal may have entered into it. It was years since they had met,
+but Jacob kept well abreast of his brother's misfortunes. A bachelor
+himself, with no children to lose or to quarrel with, it was not
+displeasing to him to hear of the breaks in his brother's household.
+
+"What, what, what! The last one left him,--run off with one of his men!
+What a fool the man must be. Can't he look after his women folks better
+than that? Better have lost her with the others. Two boys, and Chrissy,
+and the girl--and now the last girl gone off with his hired man. Poor
+Chrissy! Guess she had about enough of it. Things have come out pretty
+much even, after all! There was more love and lickin's wasted on Abe.
+Father was proudest of him, but he couldn't break him. Hi! but I've
+crawled under the woodshed to hear him yell, and father would tan him
+with a raw-hide, but he couldn't break him; couldn't get a sound out
+of him. Big, and hard, and tough--Chrissy thought she knew a man; she
+thought she took the best one."
+
+With slow, cold spite Jacob had tracked his brother's path in life
+through its failures. Jacob had no failures, and no life.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+DISINHERITED
+
+Proud little Emmy, heiress no longer, had put her spirit into her
+farm-hand and incited him to the first rebellion of his life. They
+crossed the river at night, poling through floating ice, and climbed
+aboard one of those great through trains whose rushing thunder had made
+the girlish heart so often beat. This was long before the West Shore
+Line was built. Neither of them had ever seen the inside of a Pullman
+sleeper. Emmy could count the purchased meals she had eaten in her life;
+she had never slept in a hotel or hired lodging till after her marriage.
+Hardly any one could be so provincial in these days.
+
+Adam Bogardus was a plodder in the West as he had been in the East. He
+was an honest man, and he was wise enough not to try to be a shrewd one.
+He tried none of the short-cuts to a fortune. Hard work suited him best,
+and no work was too hard for his iron strength and patient resolution.
+But it broke the spirit of a man in him to see his young wife's despair.
+Poverty frightened and quelled her. The deep-rooted security of her old
+home was something she missed every day of her makeshift existence. It
+was degradation to live in "rooms," or a room; to move for want of means
+to pay the rent. She pined for the good food she had been used to. Her
+health suffered through anxiety and hard work. She was too proud to
+complain, but the sight of her dumb unacceptance of what had come to
+her through him undoubtedly added the last straw to her husband's mental
+strain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It is hard for me to realize it as I once did," said Paul, as the story
+paused. "You make tragedy a dream. But there is a deep vein of tragedy
+in our blood. And my theory is that it always crops out in families
+where it's the keynote, as it were."
+
+"Never mind, you old care-taker! We Middletons carry sail enough to need
+a ton or two of lead in our keel."
+
+"But, you understand?"--
+
+"I understand the distinction between what I call your good blood, and
+the sort of blood I thought you had. It explains a certain funny way you
+have with arms--weapons. Do you mind?"
+
+"Not at all," said Paul coldly. "I hate a weapon. I am always ashamed of
+myself when I get one in my hand."
+
+"You act that way, dear!"
+
+"God made tools and the Devil made weapons."
+
+"You are civil to my father's profession."
+
+"Your father is what he is aside from his profession."
+
+"You are quite mistaken, Paul. My father and his profession are one.
+His sword is a symbol of healing. The army is the great surgeon of the
+nation when the time comes for a capital operation."
+
+"It grows harder to tell my story," said Paul gloomily;--"the short and
+simple annals of the poor."
+
+"Now come! Have I been a snob about my father's profession?"
+
+"No; but you love it, naturally. You have grown up with its pomp and
+circumstance around you. You are the history makers when history is most
+exciting."
+
+"Go on with your story, you proud little Dutchman! When I despise you
+for your farming relatives, you can taunt me with my history making."
+
+Paul was about two years old when his parents broke up in the Wood
+River country and came south by wagon on the old stage-road to Felton.
+Whenever he saw a "string-bean freighter's" outfit moving into Bisuka,
+if there was a woman on the driver's seat, he wanted to take off his hat
+to her. For so his mother sat beside his father and held him in her arms
+two hundred miles across the Snake River desert. The stages have been
+laid off since the Oregon Short Line went through, but there were
+stations then all along the road.
+
+One night they made camp at a lonely place between Soul's Rest and
+Mountain Home. Oneman Station it was called; afterwards Deadman Station,
+when the keeper's body was found one morning stiff and cold in his bunk.
+He died in the night alone. Emily Bogardus had cause to hate the man
+when he was living, and his dreary end was long a shuddering remembrance
+to her, like the answer to an unforgiving prayer.
+
+The station was in a hollow with bare hills around, rising to the
+highest point of that rolling plain country. The mountains sink below
+the plain, only their white tops showing. It was October. All the wild
+grass had been eaten close for miles on both sides of the road, but over
+a gap in the Western divide was the Bruneau Valley, where the bell-mare
+of the team had been raised. In the night she broke her hopples and
+struck out across the summit with the four mules at her heels. Towards
+morning a light snow fell and covered their tracks. Adam was compelled
+to hunt his stock on foot; the keeper refusing him a horse, saying he
+had got himself into trouble before through being friendly with the
+company's horses. He started out across the hills, expecting that the
+same night would see him back, and his wife was left in the wagon camp
+alone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I know this story very well," said Paul, "and yet I never heard it but
+once, when mother decided I was old enough to know all. But every word
+was bitten into me--especially this ugly part I am coming to. I wish
+it need not be told, yet all the rest depends on it; and that such an
+experience could come to a woman like my mother shows what exposure and
+humiliation lie in the straightest path if there is no money to smooth
+the way. You hear it said that in the West the toughest men will be
+chivalrous to a woman if she is the right sort of a woman. I'm afraid
+that is a romantic theory of the Western man.
+
+"That night, before his team stampeded, as he sat by the keeper's fire,
+father had made up his mind that the less they had to do with that man
+the better. He may have warned mother; and she, left alone with the
+brute, did not know the wisdom of hiding her fear and loathing of him.
+He may have meant no more than a low kind of teasing, but her suffering
+was the same.
+
+"Father did not come. She dared not leave the camp. She knew no place to
+go to, and in his haste, believing he would soon be with her again, he
+had taken all their little stock of funds. But he had left her his gun,
+and with this within reach of her hand in the shelter of the wagon hood,
+without fire and without cooked food, she kept a sleepless watch.
+
+"The stages came and went; help was within sound of her voice, but she
+dared make no sign. The passengers were few at that season, always
+men, on the best of terms with the keeper. He had threatened--well, no
+matter--such a threat as a more sophisticated woman would have smiled
+at. She was simple, but she was not weak. It was a moral battle between
+them. There were hours when she held him by the power of her eye alone;
+she conquered, but it nearly killed her.
+
+"One morning a man jumped down from the stage whose face she knew. He
+had recognized my father's outfit and he came to speak to her, amazed
+to find her in that place alone. There was no need to put her worst fear
+into words; he knew the keeper. He made the best he could of father's
+detention, but he assured her, as she knew too well, that she could not
+wait for him there. He was on his way East, and he took us with him as
+far as Mountain Home. To this day she believes that if Bud Granger had
+led the search, my father would have been found; but he went East to
+sell his cattle, the snows set in, and the search party came straggling
+home. The man, Granger, had left a letter of explanation, inclosing one
+from mother to father, with the keeper. He bribed and frightened him,
+but for years she used to agonize over a fear that father had come back
+and the keeper had withheld the letter and belied her to him with some
+devilish story that maddened him and drove him from her. Such a fancy
+might have come out of her mental state at that time. I believe that
+Granger left the letter simply to satisfy her. He must have believed my
+father was dead. He could not have conceived of a man's being lost in
+that broad country at that season; but my father was a man of hills and
+farms, all small, compact. The plains were another planet to him.
+
+"The letter was found in the keeper's clothing after his death; no
+one ever came to claim it of his successor. Somewhere in this great
+wilderness a tired man found rest. What would we not give if we knew
+where!
+
+"And she worked in a hotel in Mountain Home. Can you imagine it! Then
+Christine was born and the multiplied strain overcame her. Strangers
+took care of her children while she lay between life and death. She had
+been silent about herself and her past, but they found a letter from one
+of her old schoolmates asking about teachers' salaries in the West, and
+they wrote to her begging her to make known my mother's condition to
+her relatives if any were living. At length came a letter from
+grandfather--characteristic to the last. The old home was there, for her
+and for her children, but no home for the traitor, as he called father.
+She must give him up even to his name. No Bogardus could inherit of a
+Van Elten.
+
+"She had not then lost all hope of father's return, and she never
+forgave her father for trying to buy her back for the price of what she
+considered her birthright. She settled down miserably to earn bread for
+her children. Then, when hope and pride were crushed in her, and faith
+had nothing left to cling to, there came a letter from Uncle Jacob, the
+bachelor, who had bided his time. Out of the division in his brother's
+house he proposed to build up his own; just as he would step in and buy
+depreciated bonds to hold them for a rise. He offered her a home and
+maintenance during his lifetime, and his estate for herself and her
+children when he was through. There were no conditions referring to our
+father, but it was understood that she should give up her own. This,
+mainly, to spite his brother, yet under all there was an old man's plea.
+She felt she could make the obligation good, though there might not be
+much love on either side. Perhaps it came later; but I remember enough
+of that time to believe that her children's future was dearly paid for.
+Grandfather died alone, in the old rat-ridden house up the Hudson. He
+left no will, to every one's surprise. It might have been his negative
+way of owning his debt to nature at the last.
+
+"That is how we came to be rich; and no one detects in us now the crime
+of those early struggles. But my father was a hired man; and my mother
+has done every menial thing with those soft hands of hers." A softer one
+was folded in his own. Its answering clasp was loyal and strong.
+
+"Is _this_ the story you had not the courage to tell me?"
+
+"This is the story I had the courage to tell you--not any too soon,
+perhaps you think?"
+
+"And do you think it needed courage?"
+
+"The question is what you think. What are we to do with Uncle Jacob's
+money? Go off by ourselves and have a good time with it?"
+
+"We will not decide to-night," said Moya, tenderly subdued. But, though
+the story had interested and touched her, as accounting for her lover's
+saddened, conscience-ridden youth, it was no argument against teaching
+him what youth meant in her philosophy. The differences were explained,
+but not abolished.
+
+"It was spite money, remember, not love money," he continued, reverting
+to his story. "It purchased my mother's compliance to one who hated her
+father, who forced her to listen, year after year, to bitter, unnatural
+words against him. I am not sure but it kept her from him at the last;
+for if Uncle Jacob had not stepped in and made her his, I can't help
+thinking she would have found somehow a way to the soft place in his
+heart. Something good ought to be done with that money to redeem its
+history."
+
+"You must not be morbid, Paul."
+
+"That sounds like mother," said Paul, smiling. "She is always jealous
+for our happiness; because she lost her own, I think, and paid so
+heavily for ours. She prizes pleasure and success, even worldly success,
+for us."
+
+"I don't blame her!" cried Moya.
+
+"No; of course not. But you mustn't both be against me, and Chrissy,
+too. She is so, unconsciously; she does not know the pull there is on
+me, through knowing things she doesn't dream of, and that I can never
+forget."
+
+"No," said Moya. "I am sure she is perfectly unconscious. We exchanged
+biographies at school, and there was nothing at all like this in hers.
+Why was she never told?"
+
+"She has always been too strained, too excitable. Every least incident
+is an emotion with her. When she laughs, her laugh is like a cry.
+Haven't you noticed that? Startle her, and her eyes are the very eyes of
+fear. Mother was wise, I think, not to pour those old sorrows into her
+little fragile cup."
+
+"So she emptied them all into yours!"
+
+"That was my right, of the elder and stronger. I wouldn't have missed
+the knowledge of our beginnings for the world. What a prosperous fool
+and ass I might have made of myself!"
+
+"Morbid again," said Moya. "You belong to your own day and generation.
+You might as well wear country shoes and clothes because your father
+wore them."
+
+"Still, if we have such a thing in this country as class, then you and I
+do not belong to the same class except by virtue of Uncle Jacob's money.
+Confess you are glad I am a Bevier and a Broderick and a Van Elten, as
+well as a Bogardus."
+
+"I shall confess nothing of the kind. Now you do talk like a _nouveau_
+Paul, dear," said Moya, with her caressing eyes on his--they had paused
+under the lamp at the top of the steps--"I think your father must have
+been a very good man."
+
+"All our fathers were," Paul averred, smiling at her earnestness.
+
+"Yes, but yours in particular; because _you_ are an angel; and your
+mother is quite human, is she not?--almost as human as I am? That
+carriage of the head,--if that does not mean the world!"--
+
+"She has needed all her pride."
+
+"I don't object to pride, myself," said the girl, "but you dwell so upon
+her humiliations. I see no such record in her face."
+
+"She has had much to hide, you must remember."
+
+"Well, she can hide things; but one's self must escape sometimes. What
+has become of little Emily Van Elten who ran away with her father's
+hired man? What has become of the freighter's wife?"
+
+"She is all mother now. She brought us back to the world, and for our
+sakes she has learned to take her place in it. Herself she has buried."
+
+"Yes; but which is--was herself?"
+
+"And you cannot see her story in her face?"
+
+"Not that story."
+
+"Not the crushing reserve, the long suspense, the silence of a sorrow
+that even her children could not share?"
+
+"I know her silence. Your mother is a most reticent woman. But is she
+now the woman of that story?"
+
+"I don't understand you quite," said Paul. "How much are we ourselves
+after we have passed through fires of grief, and been recast under the
+pressure of circumstances! She was that woman once."
+
+"The saddest part of the story to me is, that your father, who loved her
+so, and worked so hard for his family, should have served you all the
+better by his death."
+
+"Oh, don't say that, dear! Who knows what is best? But one thing we do
+know. The sorrow that cut my mother's life in two brought you and me
+together. It rent the stratum on which I was born and raised it to the
+level of yours, my lady!"
+
+"I shall not forget," whispered Moya with blissful irony, "that you are
+the Poor Man's son!"
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+
+The autumn days were shortening imperceptibly and the sunsets had
+gained an almost articulate splendor: cloud calling unto cloud, the west
+horizon signaling to the east, and answering again, while the mute dark
+circle of hills sat like a council of chiefs with their blankets drawn
+over their heads. Soon those blankets would be white with snow.
+
+Behind the Post where the hills climb toward the Cottonwood Creek
+divide, there is a little canon which at sunset is especially inviting.
+It hastens twilight by at least an hour during midsummer, and in autumn
+it leads up a stairway of shadow to the great spectacle of the day--the
+day's departure from the hills.
+
+The canon has its companion rivulet always coming down to meet the
+stage-road going up. As this road is the only outlet hillward for all
+the life of the plain, and as the tendency of every valley population is
+to climb, one thinks of it as a way out rather than a way in. Higher up,
+the stage-road becomes a pass cut through a wall of splintered cliffs;
+and here it leads its companion, the brook, a wild dance over boulders,
+and under culverts of fallen rock. At last it emerges on what is
+called The Summit; and between are green, deep valleys where the little
+ranches, fields and fences and houses, seem to have slid down to the
+bottom and lie there at rest.
+
+A party of young riders from the post had gone up this road one evening,
+and two had come down, laughing and talking; but the other two remained
+in the circle of light that rested on the summit. Prom where they sat
+in the dry grass they could hear a hollow sound of moving feet as the
+cattle wandered down through folds of the hills, seeking the willow
+copses by the water. On the breast of her habit Moya wore the blossoms
+of the wild evening primrose, which in this region flowers till the
+coming of frost. They had been gathered for her on the way up, and as
+she had waited for them, sitting her horse in silence, the brown owls
+gurgled and hooted overhead from nest to nest in the crannies of the
+rocks.
+
+"You need not hold the horses," she commanded, in her fresh voice.
+"Throw my bridle over your saddle pommel and yours over mine.--There!"
+she said, watching the horses as they shuffled about interlinked. "That
+is like half the marriages in this world. They don't separate and they
+don't go astray, but they don't _get_ anywhere!"
+
+"I have been thinking of those 'two in the Garden,'" mused Paul, resting
+his dark, abstracted eyes on her. "Whether or no your humble servant has
+a claim to unchallenged bliss in this world, there's no doubt about your
+claim. If my plans interfere, I must take myself out of the way."
+
+"Oh, you funny old croaker!" laughed the girl. "Take yourself out of the
+way, indeed! Haven't you chosen me to show you the way?"
+
+"Moya, Moya!" said Paul in a smothered voice.
+
+"I know what you are thinking. But stop it!" she held one of her crushed
+blossoms to his lips. "What was this made for? Why hasn't it some work
+to do? Isn't it a skulker--blooming here for only a night?"
+
+"'Ripen, fall, and cease!'" Paul murmured.
+
+"How much more am I--are you, then? The sum of us may amount to
+something, if we mind our own business and keep step with each other,
+and finish one thing before we begin the next. I will not be in a hurry
+about being good. Goodness can take care of itself. What you need is to
+be happy! And it's my first duty to make you so."
+
+"God knows what bliss it would be."
+
+"Don't say 'would be.'"
+
+"God knows it is!"
+
+"Then hush and be thankful!" There was a long hush. They heard the far,
+faint notes of a bugle sounding from the Post.
+
+"Lights out," said Moya. "We must go."
+
+"You haven't told me yet where our Garden is to be," he said.
+
+"I will tell you on the way home."
+
+When they had come down into the neighborhood of ranches, and Bisuka's
+lights were twinkling below them, she asked: "Who lives now in the
+grandfather's house on the Hudson?"
+
+"The farmer, Chauncey Dunlop."
+
+"Is there any other house on the place?"
+
+"Yes. Mother built a new one on the Ridge some years ago."
+
+"What sort of a house is it?"
+
+"It was called a good house once; but now it's rather everything it
+shouldn't be. It was one of the few rash things mother ever did; build a
+house for her children while they were children. Now she will not change
+it. She says we shall build for ourselves, how and where we please.
+Stone Ridge is her shop. Of course, if Chrissy liked it--But Chrissy
+considers it a 'hole.' Mother goes up there and indulges in secret
+orgies of economy; one man in the stable, one in the garden--'Economy
+has its pleasures for all healthy minds.'"
+
+"Economy is as delicious as bread and butter after too much candy. I
+should love to go up to Stone Ridge and wear out my old clothes. Did any
+one tell me that place would some day be yours?"
+
+"It will be my wife's on the day we are married."
+
+"That is where your wife, sir, would like to live."
+
+"It is a stony Garden, dear! The summer people have their places nearer
+the river. Our land lies back, with no view but hills. For one who has
+the world before her where to choose, it strikes me she has picked out a
+very humble Paradise."
+
+"Did you think my idea was to travel--a poor army girl who spends
+her life in trunks? Do we ever buy a book or frame a picture without
+thinking of our next move? As for houses, who am I that I should be
+particular? In the Army's House are many mansions, but none that we
+can call our own. Oh, I'm very primitive; I have the savage instinct to
+gather sticks and stones, and get a roof over my head before winter sets
+in."
+
+To such a speech as this there was but one obvious answer, as she rode
+at his side, her appealing slenderness within reach of his arm. It did
+not matter what thousands he proposed to spend upon the roof that should
+cover her; it was the same as if they were planning a hut of tules or a
+burrow in the snow.
+
+"It is a poor man's country," he said; "stony hillsides, stony roads
+lined with stone fences. The chief crop of the country is ice and stone.
+In one of my grandfather's fields there is a great cairn which Adam
+Bogardus, they say, picked up, stone by stone, with his bare hands, and
+carted there when he was fourteen years old. We will build them into the
+walls of our new house for a blessing."
+
+"No," said Moya. "We will let sleeping stones lie!"
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+MARKING TIME
+
+There was impatience at the garrison for news that the hunters had
+started. Every day's delay at Challis meant an abridgment of the
+bridegroom's leave, and the wedding was now but a fortnight away. It
+began to seem preposterous that he should go at all, and the colonel
+was annoyed with himself for his enthusiasm over the plan in the first
+place. Mrs. Bogardus's watchfulness of dates told the story of her
+thoughts, but she said nothing.
+
+"Mamsie is restless," said Christine, putting an arm around her mother's
+solid waist and giving her a tight little hug apropos of nothing. "I
+believe it's another case of 'mail-time fever.' The colonel says it
+comes on with Moya every afternoon about First Sergeant's call. But
+Moya is cunning. She goes off and pretends she isn't listening for the
+bugle."
+
+"'First Sergeant or Second,' it's all one to me," said Mrs. Bogardus. "I
+never know one call from another, except when the gun goes off."
+
+"Mamsie! 'When the gun goes off!' What a civilian way of talking. You
+are not getting on at all with your military training. Now let me give
+you some useful information. In two seconds the bugle will call the
+first sergeant--of each company--to the adjutant's office, and there
+he'll get the mail for his men. The orderly trumpeter will bring it to
+the houses on the line, and the colonel's orderly--beautiful creature!
+There he goes! How I wish we could take him home with us and have him
+in our front hall. Fancy the feelings of the maids! And the rage on the
+noble brow of Parkins--awful Parkins. I should like to give his pride a
+bump."
+
+Mother and daughter were pacing the colonel's veranda, behind a partial
+screen of rose vines--October vines fast shedding their leaves. Every
+breeze shook a handful down, which the women's skirts swept with them as
+they walked. Mrs. Bogardus turned and clasped Christine's arm above the
+elbow; through the thin sleeve she could feel its cool roundness. It was
+a soft, small, unmuscular arm, that had never borne its own burdens, to
+say nothing of a share in the burdens of others.
+
+"Get your jacket," said the mother. "There is a chill in the air."
+
+"There is no chill in me," laughed Christine. "You know, mamsie, you
+aren't a girl. I should simply die in those awful things that you wear.
+Did you ever know such a hot house as the colonel keeps!"
+
+"The rooms are small, and the colonel is--impulsive," Mrs. Bogardus
+added with a smile.
+
+"There is something very like him about his fire-making. I should know
+by the way he puts on wood that he never would have "--Mrs. Bogardus
+checked herself.
+
+"A large bank account?" Christine supplied, with her quick wit, which
+was not of a highly sensitive order.
+
+"He has a large heart," said her mother.
+
+"And plenty of room for it, bless him! The slope of his chest is like
+the roof of a house. The only time I envy Moya is when she lays her head
+down on it and tries to meet her arms around him as if he were a tree,
+and he strokes her hair as if his hand was a bough! If ever I marry a
+soldier he shall be a colonel with a white mustache and a burnt-sienna
+complexion, and a sword-belt that measures--what is the colonel's
+waist-measure, do you suppose?"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus listened to this nonsense with the smile of a silent
+woman who has borne a child that can talk. Moya had often noticed how
+uncritical she was of Christine's "unruly member."
+
+"It isn't polite to speak of waist-measures to middle-aged persons like
+your mother and the colonel," she said placidly. "You like it very much
+out here?"
+
+"Fascinating! Never had such a good time in my whole life."
+
+"And you like the West altogether? Would you like to live here?"
+
+"Oh, if it came to living, I should want to be sure there was a way
+out."
+
+"There generally is a way out of most things. But it costs something."
+Mrs. Bogardus was so concise in her speech as at times to be almost
+oracular.
+
+"Army people are sure of their way out," said Christine, "and I guess
+they find it costs something."
+
+"Why do they buy so many books, I wonder? If I moved as often as they
+do, I'd have only paper covers and leave them behind."
+
+"You are not a reader, mummy. You're a business woman. You look at
+everything from the practical side."
+
+"And if I didn't, who would?" Mrs. Bogardus spoke with earnestness. "We
+can't all be dreamers like Paul or privileged persons like you. There
+has to be one in every family to say the things no one likes to hear and
+do the things nobody likes to do."
+
+"We are the rich repiners and you are the household drudge!" Christine
+shouted, laughing at her own wit.
+
+"Hush, hush!" her mother smiled. "Don't make so much noise."
+
+"I should like to know who's to be the drudge in Paul's privileged
+family. It doesn't strike me it's going to be Moya. And Paul only
+drudges for people he doesn't know."
+
+"Moya is a girl you can expect anything of. She is a wonderful mixture
+of opposites. She has the Irish quickness, and yet she has learned to
+obey. She has had the freedom and the discipline of these little lordly
+army posts. She is one of the few girls of her age who does not measure
+everything from her own point of view."
+
+"Is that a dig at me, ma'am?"
+
+At that moment Moya came out upon the porch.
+
+She was very striking with the high color and brilliant eyes that
+mail-time fever breeds. Christine looked at her with freshly aroused
+curiosity, moved by her mother's unwonted burst of praise. The faintest
+tinge of jealousy made her feel naughty. As Moya went down the board
+walk, the colonel's orderly came springing up the steps to meet her with
+the mail-bag. He saluted and turned off at an angle down the embankment
+not to present his back to the ladies.
+
+"Did you see that! He never raised his eyes. They are like priests. You
+can't make them look at you." Moya looked at Christine in amazement.
+The man himself might have heard her. It was not the first time
+this privileged guest had rubbed against garrison customs in certain
+directions hardly worth mentioning. Moya hesitated. Then she laughed
+a little, and said: "Only a raw recruity would look at an officer's
+daughter, or any lady of the line."
+
+"Oh, you horrid little aristocrat! Well, I look at them, when they are
+as pretty as that one, and I forgive them if they look at me."
+
+Moya turned and hovered over the contents of the mail-bag. In the
+exercise of one of her prerogatives, it was her habit to sort its
+contents before delivering it at the official door.
+
+"All, all for you!" she offered a huge packet of letters, smiling, to
+Mrs. Bogardus. It was faced with one on top in Paul's handwriting. "All
+but one," she added, and proceeded to open her own much fatter one in
+the same hand. She stood reading it in the hall.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus presently followed and remained beside her. "Could I speak
+to your father a moment?" she asked.
+
+"Certainly, I will call him," said Moya.
+
+"Wait: I hear him now." The study door opened and Colonel Middleton
+joined them. Mrs. Bogardus leading the way into the sitting-room, the
+colonel followed her, and Moya, not having been invited, lingered in the
+hall.
+
+"Well, have the hunters started yet?" the colonel inquired in his breezy
+voice, which made you want to open the doors and windows to give it
+room. "Be seated! Be seated! I hope you have got a long letter to read
+me."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stood reflecting. "The day this letter was mailed they got
+off--only two days ago," she said. "Could I reach them, Colonel, with a
+telegram?"
+
+"Two days ago," the colonel considered. "They must have made Yankee Fork
+by yesterday. Today they are deep in the woods. No; I should say a man
+on horseback would be your surest telegram. Is it anything important?"
+
+"Colonel, I wish we could call them back! They have gone off, it seems
+to me, in a most crazy way--against the judgment of every one who knows.
+The guide, this man whom they waited for, refused, it appears, to go
+out again with another party so late in the fall. But the Bowens were
+determined. They insisted on making arrangements with another man. Then,
+when 'Packer John,' they call him, heard of this, he went to Paul and
+urged him, if he could not prevent the others from going, to give up the
+trip himself. The Bowens were very much annoyed at his interference,
+and with Paul for listening to him. And Paul, rather than make things
+unpleasant, gave in. You know how young men are! What silly grounds are
+enough for the most serious decisions when it is a question of pride or
+good faith. The Bowens had bought their outfit on Paul's assurance that
+he would go. He felt he could not leave them in the lurch. On that, the
+guide suddenly changed his mind and said he would go with them sooner
+than see them fall into worse hands. They were, in a way, committed to
+the other man, so they took _him_ along as cook--the whole thing done in
+haste, you see, and unpleasant feelings all around. Do you call that a
+good start for a pleasure trip?"
+
+"It's very much the way with young troops when they start
+out--everything wrong end foremost, everybody mad with everybody else. A
+day in the saddle will set their little tempers all right."
+
+"That isn't the point," Mrs. Bogardus persisted gloomily. As she spoke,
+the two girls came into the room and stood listening.
+
+"What is the point, then?" Christine demanded. "Moya has no news; all
+those pages and pages, and nothing for anybody or about anybody!"
+
+"'Such an intolerable deal of sack to such a poor pennyworth of bread,'"
+the colonel quoted, smiling at Moya's bloated envelope.
+
+"But what do you think?" Mrs. Bogardus recalled him. "Don't you think
+it's a mistake all around?"
+
+"Not at all, if they have a good man. This flat-footed fellow, John,
+will take command, as he should. There is no danger in the woods at any
+season unless the party gets rattled and goes to pieces for want of a
+head."
+
+"Father!" exclaimed Moya. "You know there is danger. Often, things have
+happened!"
+
+"Why, what could happen?" asked Christine, with wide eyes.
+
+"Many things very interesting could happen," the colonel boasted
+cheerfully. "That is the object of the trip. You want things to happen.
+It is the emergency that makes the man--sifts him, and takes the chaff
+out of him."
+
+"Take the chaff out of Banks Bowen," Moya imprudently struck in, "and
+what would you have left?" She had met Banks Bowen in New York.
+
+"Tut, tut!" said the colonel. "Silence, or a good word for the
+absent--same as the"--The colonel stopped short.
+
+"You are so scornful about the other men, now you have chosen one!"
+Christine's face turned red.
+
+"Why, Chrissy! You would not compare your brother to those men! Papa, I
+beg your pardon; this is only for argument."
+
+"I don't compare him; but that's not to say all the other men are
+chaff!" Christine joined constrainedly in the laugh that followed her
+speech.
+
+"You need not go fancying things, Moya," she cried, in answer to a
+quizzical look. "As if I hadn't known the Bowen boys since I was so
+high!"
+
+"You might know them from the cradle to the grave, my dear young lady,
+and not know them as Paul will, after a week in the woods with them."
+
+The colonel had missed the drift of the girls' discussion. He was
+considering, privately, whether he had not better send a special
+messenger on the young men's trail. His assurances to the women left
+a wide margin for personal doubt as to the prudence of the trip. Aside
+from the lateness of the start, it was, undoubtedly, an ill-assorted
+company for the woods. There was a wide margin also for suspense, as all
+mail facilities ceased at Challis.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+A HUNTER'S DIARY
+
+Early in November, about a week before the hunters were expected home, a
+packet came addressed to Moya. It was a journal letter from Paul, mailed
+by some returning prospector chance encountered in the forest as the
+party were going in. Moya read it aloud, with asterisks, to a family
+audience which did not include her father.
+
+"To-day," one of the first entries read, "we halt at Twelve-Mile Cabin,
+the last roof we shall sleep under. There are pine-trees near the cabin
+cut off fifteen feet above the ground, felled in winter, John tells us,
+_at the level of the snow!_
+
+"These cabins are all deserted now; the tide of prospecting has turned
+another way. The great hills that crowd one another up against the sky
+are so infested and overridden by this enormous forest-growth, and the
+underbrush is so dense, it would be impossible for a 'tenderfoot' to
+gain any clear idea of his direction. I should be a lost man the moment
+I ventured out of call. Woodcraft must be a sixth sense which we lost
+with the rest of our Eden birthright when we strayed from innocence,
+when we ceased to sleep with one ear on the ground, and to spell our way
+by the moss on tree-trunks. In these solitudes, as we call them,
+ranks and clouds of witnesses rise up to prove us deaf and blind. Busy
+couriers are passing every moment of the day; and we do not see, nor
+hear, nor understand. We are the stocks and stones. Packer John is our
+only wood-sharp;--yet the last half of the name doesn't altogether fit
+him. He is a one-sided character, handicapped, I should say, by some
+experience that has humbled and perplexed him. Two and two perhaps
+refused to make four in his account with men, and he gave up the
+proposition. And now he consorts with trees, and hunts to live, not
+to kill. He has an impersonal, out-door odor about him, such as the
+cleanest animals have. I would as soon eat out of his dry, hard, cool
+hand, as from a chunk of pine-bark.
+
+"It is amusing to see him with a certain member of the party who tries
+to be fresh with him. He has a disconcerting eye when he fixes it on a
+man, or turns it away from one who has said a coarse or a foolish thing.
+
+"'The jungle is large,' he seems to say, 'and the cub he is small. Let
+him think and be still!'"
+
+"Who is this 'certain member' who tries to be 'fresh'?" Christine
+inquired with perceptible warmth.
+
+"The cook, perhaps," said Moya prudently.
+
+"The cook isn't a 'member'!--Well, can't you go on, Moya? Paul seems to
+need a lot of editing." Moya had paused and was glancing ahead, smiling
+to herself constrainedly.
+
+"Is there more disparagement of his comrades?" Christine persisted.
+
+"Christine, be still!" Mrs. Bogardus interfered. "Moya ought to have the
+first reading of her own letter. It's very good of her to let us hear it
+at all."
+
+"Oh dear, there's no disparagement. Quite the contrary! I'll go on with
+pleasure if you don't mind." Moya read hurriedly, laughing through her
+words:--
+
+"'If you were here, (Ah, _if_ you were here!) You should lend me an
+ear--One at the least Of a pair the prettiest'--which is, within a foot
+or two, the rhythm of 'Wood Notes.' Of course you don't know it!"
+
+"This is a gibe at me," Moya explained, "because I don't read Emerson.
+'It is the very measure of a marching chorus,' he goes on to say, 'where
+the step is broken by rocks and tree-roots;'--and he is chanting it
+to himself (to her it was in the original) as they go in single file
+through these 'haughty solitudes, the twilight of the gods!'"
+
+"'Haughty solitudes'!" Christine derided.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus sighed with impatience, and Moya's face became set. "Well,
+here he quotes again," she haughtily resumed. "Anybody who is tired of
+this can be excused. Emerson won't mind, and I'm sure Paul won't!" She
+looked a mute apology to Paul's mother, who smiled and said, "Go on,
+dear. I don't read Emerson either, but I like him when Paul reads him
+for me."
+
+"Well, I warn you there is an awful lot of him here!" Moya's voice was a
+trifle husky as she read on.
+
+"Old as Jove, Old as Love'"
+
+"I thought Love was young!"--Christine in a whisper aside.
+
+"'Who of me Tells the pedigree? Only the mountains old, Only the waters
+cold, Only the moon and stars, My coevals are.'"
+
+Moya sighed, and sank into prose again. "There is a gaudy yellow moss
+in these woods that flecks the straight and mournful tree-trunks like a
+wandering glint of sunlight; and there is a crepe-like black moss that
+hangs funeral scarfs upon the boughs, as if there had been a death in
+the forest, and the trees were in line for the burial procession. The
+grating of our voices on this supreme silence reminds one of 'Why will
+you still be talking, Monsieur Benedick?--nobody marks you.'
+
+"There are silences, and again there are whole symphonies of sound. The
+winds smites the tree-tops over our heads, a surf-like roar comes up
+the slope, and the yellow pine-needles fall across the deepest darks as
+motes sail down a sunbeam. One wearies of the constant perpendicular,
+always these stiff, columnar lines, varied only by the melancholy
+incline where some great pine-chieftain is leaning to his fall supported
+in the arms of his comrades, or by the tragic prostration of the 'down
+timber'--beautiful straight-cut English these woodsmen talk.
+
+"Last evening John and I sat by the stove in the men's tent, while the
+others were in the cabin playing penny-ante with the cook (a sodden
+brute who toadies to the Bowens, and sulks with John because he objected
+to our hiring the fellow--an objection which I sustained, hence his
+logical spite includes me). John was melting pine gum and elk tallow
+into a dressing for our boots. I took a mean advantage of him, his hands
+being in the tallow and the tent-flap down, and tried on him a little
+of--now, don't deride me!--'Wood Notes.' It is seldom one can get the
+comment of a genuine woodsman on Nature according to the poets.'"
+
+Moya read on perfunctorily, feeling that she was not carrying her
+audience with her, and longing for the time when she could take her
+letter away and have it all to herself. If she stopped now, Christine,
+in this sudden new freak of distrustfulness, would be sure to
+misunderstand.
+
+ "'For Nature ever faithful is
+ To such as trust her faithfulness.
+ When the forest shall mislead me,
+ When the night and morning lie,
+ When sea and land refuse to feed me,
+ Will be time enough to die.
+
+ Then will yet my Mother yield
+ A pillow in her greenest field;
+ Nor the June flowers scorn to cover
+ The clay of their departed lover.'"
+
+"That is beautiful," Mrs. Bogardus murmured hastily. "Even I can
+understand that." Moya thanked her with a glance.
+
+"And what did the infallible John say?" Christine inquired.
+
+"John looked at me and smiled, as at a babbling infant"--
+
+"Good for John!"
+
+"Christine, be still!"
+
+"John looked at me and smiled," Moya repeated steadily. Nothing could
+have stopped her now. She only hoped for some further scattering mention
+of that "certain member" who had set them all at odds and spoiled what
+should have been an hour's pure happiness. "'You'll get the pillow all
+right,' he said. 'It might not be a green one, nor I wouldn't bank much
+on the flowers; but you'll be tired enough to sleep without rocking
+about the time you trust to Nature's tuckin' you in and puttin' victuals
+in your mouth. I never _see_ nature till I came out here. I'd seen
+pretty woods and views, that a young lady could take down with her
+paints; but how are you going to paint that?'--he waved his tallow-stick
+towards the night outside. 'Ears can't reach the bottom of that
+stillness. That's creation before God ever thought of man. Long as I've
+been in the woods, I never get over the feeling that there's _something
+behind me_. If you go towards the trees, they come to meet you; if you
+go backwards, they go back; but you can't sit down and sit still without
+they'll come a-creeping up and creeping up, and crowding in'--
+
+"He stirred his 'dope' awhile, and then he struck another note. 'I've
+wintered alone in these mountains,' he said, 'and I've seen snowslides
+pounce out of a clear sky--a puff and a flash and a roar; an' trees four
+foot across snappin' like kindlin' wood--not because it hit 'em; only
+the breath of it struck them; and maybe a man lying dead somewheres
+under his cabin timbers. That's no mother's love-tap. Pillows and
+flowers ain't in it. But it's good poetry,' he added condescendingly.
+
+"I have not quoted him right, not being much of a snap-shot at dialect;
+and his is an undefined, unclassifiable mixture. Eastern farm-hand and
+Western ranchman, prospector, who knows what? His real language is in
+his eye and his rare, pure smile. And just as his countenance expresses
+his thoughts without circumlocution or attempt at effect, so his body
+informs his clothing. Wind and rain have moulded his hat to his head,
+his shoes grip the ground like paws; his buckskins have a surface like
+a cast after Rodin. They are repousseed by the hard bones and sinews
+underneath. I can think of nothing but the clothing of Millet's peasants
+to compare with this exterior of John's. He is himself a peasant of the
+woods. He has not the predatory instincts. If he could have his way, not
+a shot would be fired by any of us for the mere idle sport of killing.
+Shooting these innocent, fearless creatures, who have not learned that
+we are here for their destruction, is too like murder and treachery
+combined. Hunger should be our only excuse. My forbearance, or weakness,
+is a sort of unspoken bond between us. But I am a peasant, too, you
+know. I do not come of the lordly, arms-bearing blood. I shoot at a live
+mark always under protest; and when I fairly catch the look in the great
+eye of a dying elk or black-tail, it knocks me out for that day's hunt."
+
+"Paul is perfectly happy!" Christine broke in. "He has got one of his
+beloved People to grovel to. They can sleep in the same tent and eat
+from the same plate, if you like. Why, it's better than the East Side!
+He'll be blood brother to Packer John before they leave the woods."
+
+Moya blushed with anger.
+
+"You have said enough on that subject, Christine." Mrs. Bogardus bent
+her dark, keen gaze upon her daughter's face. "Come"--she rose. "Come
+with me!"
+
+Christine sat still. "Come!" her mother repeated sternly. "Moya,"--in
+a different voice,--"your letter was lovely. Shall you read it to your
+father?"
+
+"Hardly," said Moya, flushing. "Father does not care for descriptions,
+and the woods are an old story to him."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus placed her hands on the girl's shoulders and gave her one
+of her infrequent, ceremonious kisses, which, like her finest smile, she
+kept for occasions too nice for words.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+
+Christine followed her mother to their room, and the two faced each
+other a moment in pale silence.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus spoke first. "What does this mean?"--her breath came
+short, perhaps from climbing the stairs. She was a large woman.
+
+"What does what mean? I don't understand you, mother."
+
+"Ah, child, don't repulse me! Twice you and Moya have nearly quarreled
+about those men. Why were you so rude to her? Why did you behave so
+about her letter?"
+
+"Paul is so intolerant! And the airs he puts on! If he is my own brother
+I must say he's an awful prig about other men."
+
+"We are not discussing Paul. That is not the question now. Have you
+anything to tell me, Christine?"
+
+"To tell you?--about what, mother?" Christine spoke lower.
+
+"You know what I mean. Which of them is it? Is it Banks?--don't say it
+is Banks!"
+
+"Mother, how can I say anything when you begin like that?"
+
+"Have you any idea what sort of a man Banks Bowen really is? His father
+supports him entirely--six years now, ever since he left the law school.
+He does nothing, never will do anything. He has no will or purpose in
+life, except about trifles like this hunting-trip. As far as I can see
+he is without common sense."
+
+Christine stood by the dressing-table pleating the cover-frilling with
+her small fingers that were loaded with rings. She pinched the folds
+hard and let them go. "Why did no one ever say these things before?"
+
+"We don't say things about the sons of our friends, unless we are
+compelled to. They were implied in every way possible. When have I asked
+Banks Bowen to the house except when everybody was asked! I would never
+in the world have come out in Mr. Borland's car if I had known the
+Bowens were to be of the party."
+
+"That made no difference," said Christine loftily.
+
+"It was all settled before then, was it?"
+
+"Have I said it was settled, mother? He asked me if I could ever care
+for him; and I said that I did--a little. Why shouldn't I? He does what
+I like a man to do. I don't enjoy people who have wills and purposes. It
+may be very horrid of me, but I wouldn't be in Moya's place for worlds."
+
+"You poor child! You poor, unhappy child!"
+
+"Why am I unhappy? Has Paul added so much to our income since he left
+college?"
+
+"Paul does not make money; neither does he selfishly waste it. He has a
+conscience in his use of what he has."
+
+"I don't see what conscience has to do with it. When it is gone it's
+gone."
+
+"You will learn what conscience has to do with a man's spending if ever
+you try to make both ends meet with Banks Bowen. I suppose he will go
+through the form of speaking to me?"
+
+"Mother dear! He has only just spoken to me. How fast you go!"
+
+"Not fast enough to keep up with my children, it seems. Was it you,
+Christine, who asked them to come here?"
+
+Christine was silent.
+
+"Where did you learn such ways?--such want of frankness, of delicacy, of
+the commonest consideration for others? To be looking out for your own
+little schemes at a time like this!" Mrs. Bogardus saw now what must
+have been Paul's reason for doing what, with all her forced explanations
+of the hunting-trip, she had never until now understood. He had taken
+the alarm before she had, and done what he could to postpone this family
+catastrophe.
+
+Christine retreated to a deep-cushioned chair, and threw herself into
+it, her slender hands, palm upwards, extended upon its arms. Total
+surrender under pressure of cruel odds was the expression of her pointed
+eyebrows and drooping mouth. She looked exasperatingly pretty and
+irresponsibly fragile. Her blue-veined eyelids quivered, her breath came
+in distinct pants.
+
+"Perhaps you will not be troubled with my 'ways' for very many years,
+mother. If you could feel my heart now! It jumps like something trying
+to get out. It will get out some day. Have patience!"
+
+"That is a poor way to retaliate upon your mother, Christine. Your
+health is too serious a matter to trifle with. If you choose to make it
+a shield against everything I say that doesn't please you, you can cut
+yourself off from me entirely. I cannot beat down such a defense as
+that. Anger me you never can, but you can make me helpless to help you."
+
+"I dare say it's better that I should never marry at all," said
+Christine, her eyes closed in resignation. "You never would like anybody
+I like."
+
+"I shall say no more. You are a woman. I have protected you as far as
+I was able on account of your weakness. I cannot protect you from the
+weakness itself."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose. She did not offer to comfort her child with
+caresses, but in her eyes as she looked at her there was a profound,
+inalienable, sorrowing tenderness, a depth of understanding beyond
+words.
+
+"I know so well," the dark eyes seemed to say, "how you came to be the
+poor thing that you are!"
+
+The constraint which she felt towards her mother threw Chrissy back upon
+Moya. Being a lesser power, she was always seeking alliances. Moya had
+put aside their foolish tiff as unworthy of another thought; she was
+embarrassed when at bedtime Christine came humbly to her door, and
+putting her arms around her neck implored her not to be cross with
+her "poor pussy." It was always the other person who was "cross" with
+Christine.
+
+"Nobody is cross with anybody, so far as I know," said Moya briskly. A
+certain sort of sentimentality always made her feel like whistling or
+singing or asserting the commonplace side of life in some way.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+THE WHITE PERIL
+
+Mrs. Bogardus received many letters, chiefly on business, and these she
+answered with manlike brevity, in a strong, provincial hand. They took
+up much of her time, and mercifully, for it was now the last week in
+November and the young men did not return.
+
+The range cattle had been driven down into the valleys, deer-tracks
+multiplied by lonely mountain fords; War Eagle and his brethren of the
+Owyhees were taking council under their winter blankets. The nights were
+still, the mornings rimy with hoarfrost. Fogs arose from the river and
+cut off the bases of the mountains, converting the valley before sunrise
+into the likeness of a polar sea.
+
+"You have let your fire go out," said the colonel briskly. He had
+invaded the sitting-room at an unaccustomed hour, finding the lady at
+her letters as usual. She turned and held her pen poised above her paper
+as she looked at him.
+
+"You did not come to see about the fire?" she said.
+
+"No; I have had letters from the north. Would you step into my study a
+moment?"
+
+Moya was in her father's room when they entered. She had been weeping,
+but at sight of Paul's mother she rose and stood picking at the
+handkerchief she held, without raising her eyes.
+
+"Don't be alarmed at Moya's face," said the colonel stoutly. "Paul was
+all right at last accounts. We will have a merry Christmas yet."
+
+"This is not from Paul!" Mrs. Bogardus fixed her eyes upon a letter
+which she held at arm's length, feeling for her glasses. "It's not for
+me--'_Miss_ Bogardus.'"
+
+"Ah, well. I saw it was postmarked Lemhi--Fort Lemhi, you know. Sit
+down, madam. Suppose I give you Mr. Winslow's report first--Lieutenant
+Winslow. You heard of his going to Lemhi?"
+
+"She doesn't know," whispered Moya.
+
+"True. Well, two weeks ago I gave Mr. Winslow a hunter's leave, as we
+call it in the army, to beat up the trail of those boys. I thought it
+was time we heard from them, but it wasn't worth while to raise a hue
+and cry. He started out with a few picked men from Lemhi, the Indian
+Reservation, you know. I couldn't have sent a better man; the thing
+hasn't got into the local papers even. My object, of course, has been
+to save unnecessary alarm. Mr. Winslow has just got back to Challis. He
+rounded up the Bowen youths and the cook and the helper, in bad shape,
+all of them, but able to tell a story. The details we shall get
+later, but I have Mr. Winslow's report to me. It is short and probably
+correct."
+
+"Was Paul not with them?" his mother questioned in a hard, dry voice.
+"Where is he then?"
+
+"He is in camp, madam, in charge of the wounded."
+
+"Dear father! if you would speak plain!" Moya whispered nervously.
+
+"Certainly. There is nothing whatever to hide. We know now that on their
+last day's hunt they met with an accident which resulted in a division
+of the party. A fall of snow had covered the ice on the trails, and
+the guide's horse fell and rolled on him--nature of his injuries not
+described. This happened a day's journey from their camp at Ten-Mile
+cabin, and the retreat with the wounded man was slow and of course
+difficult over such a trail. They put together a sort of horse-litter
+made of pine poles and carried him on that, slung between two mules
+tandem. A beastly business, winding and twisting over fallen timber,
+hugging the canon wall, near a thousand feet down--'Impassable' the
+trail is marked, on the government military maps. This first day's march
+was so discouraging that at Ten Mile they called a council, and the
+packer spoke up like a man. He disposed of his own case in this way. If
+he were to live, they could send back help to fetch him out. If not,
+no help would be needed. The snows were upon them; there was danger in
+every hour's delay. It was insane to sacrifice four sound men for one,
+badly hurt, with not many hours perhaps to suffer."
+
+A murmur from the mother announced her appreciation of the packer's
+argument.
+
+"It was no more than a man should do; but as to taking him at his word,
+why, that's another question." The colonel paused and gustily cleared
+his throat. "They were up against it right then and there, and the party
+split upon it. Three of them went on,--for help, as they put it,--and
+Paul stayed behind with the wounded man."
+
+"Paul stayed--alone?" Mrs. Bogardus uttered with hoarse emphasis. "Was
+not that a very strange way to divide? Among them all, I should think
+they might have brought the man out with them."
+
+"Their story is that his injuries were such that he could not have borne
+the pain of the journey. Rather an unusual case," the colonel added
+dryly. "In my experience, a wounded man will stand anything sooner than
+be left on the field."
+
+"I cannot understand it," Mrs. Bogardus repeated, in a voice of
+indignant pain. "Such a strange division! One man left alone--to nurse,
+and hunt, and cook, and keep up fires! Suppose the guide should die!"
+
+"Paul was not _left_, you know," the colonel said emphatically. "He
+_stayed_. And I should be thankful in your place, madam, that my son was
+the man who made that choice. But setting conduct aside, for we are not
+prepared to judge, it is merely a matter of time our getting in there,
+now that we know where he is."
+
+"How much time?" Mrs. Bogardus opened her ashen lips to say.
+
+The colonel's face fell. "Mr. Winslow reports heavy snows for the past
+week,--soft, clogging snow,--too deep to wade through and too soft to
+bear. A little later, when the cold has formed a crust, our men can get
+in on snowshoes. There is nothing for it but patience, Mrs. Bogardus,
+and faith in the boy's endurance. The pluck that made him stay behind
+will help him to hold out."
+
+Moya gave a hurt sob; the colonel stepped to the desk and stood there a
+moment turning over his papers. Behind his back the mother sent a glance
+to Moya expressive of despair.
+
+"Do you know what happened to his father? Did he ever tell you?" she
+whispered.
+
+Moya assented; she could not speak.
+
+"Twice, twice in a lifetime!" said the older woman.
+
+With a gesture, Moya protested against this wild prophecy; but as Paul's
+mother left the room she rushed upon her father, crying: "Tell _me_ the
+truth! What do you think of it? Did you ever hear of such a dastardly
+thing?"
+
+"It was a rout," said the colonel coolly. "They were in full flight
+before the enemy."
+
+"What enemy? They deserted a wounded comrade, and a servant at that!"
+
+"The enemy was panic,--panic, my dear. In these woods I've seen strong
+men go half beside themselves with fear of something--the Lord knows
+what! Then, add the winter and what they had seen and heard of that.
+Anyway, you can afford to be easy on the other boys. The honors of the
+day are with Paul--and the old packer, though it's all in the day's work
+to him."
+
+"And you are satisfied with Paul, father?"
+
+"He didn't desert his command to save his own skin." The colonel smiled
+grimly.
+
+"When the men of the Fourth discovered those other fellows they had
+literally sat down in the snow to die. Not a man of them knew how to
+pack a mule. Their meat pack slipped, going along one of those high
+trails, and scared the mule, and in trying to kick himself free the
+beast fell off the trail--mule and meat both gone. They got tired of
+carrying their stuff and made a raft to float it down the river, and
+lost that! Paul has been much better off in camp than he would have been
+with them. So cheer up, my girl, and think how you'd like to have your
+bridegroom out on an Indian campaign!"
+
+"Ah, but that would be orders! It's the uselessness that hurts. There
+was nothing to do or to gain. He didn't want to go. Oh, daddy dear, I
+made fun of his shooting,--I did! I laughed at his way with firearms.
+Wretched fool and snob that I was! As if I cared! I thought of what
+other people would say. You remember,--he went shooting up the gulch
+with Mr. Lane, and when he hit but didn't kill he wouldn't--couldn't put
+the birds out of pain. Jephson had to do it for him, and he told it in
+barracks and the men laughed."
+
+"How did you know that! And what does it all amount to! Blame yourself
+all you like, dear, if it does you any good, but don't make him out a
+fool! There's not much that comes to us straight in this world--not
+even orders, you'll find. But we have to take it straight and leave the
+muddles and the blunders as they are. That's the brave man's courage and
+the brave woman's. Orders are mixed, but duty is clear. And the boy
+out there in the woods has found his duty and done it like a man. That
+should be enough for any soldier's daughter."
+
+An hour passed in suspense. Moya was disappointed in her expectation of
+sharing in whatever the letter from Fort Lemhi might contain. Christine
+was in bed with a headache, her mother dully gave out, with no apparent
+expectation that any one would accept this excuse for the girl's
+complete withdrawal. The letter, she told Moya, was from Banks Bowen.
+"There was nothing in it of consequence--to us," she added, and
+Moya took the words to mean "you and me" to the unhappy exclusion of
+Christine.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus's face had settled into lines of anxiety printed years
+before, as the creases in an old garment, smoothed and laid away, will
+reappear with fresh wear. Her plan was to go back to New York with
+Christine, who was plainly unfit to bear a long siege of suspense. There
+she could leave the girl with friends and learn what particulars could
+be gathered from the Bowens, who would have arrived. She would then
+return alone and wait for news at the garrison. That night, with Moya's
+help, she completed her packing, and on the following day the wedding
+party broke up.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+
+Fine, dry snowflakes were drifting past the upper square of a window
+set in a wall of logs. The lower half was obscured by a white bulk
+that shouldered up against the sash in the likeness of a muffled figure
+stooping to peer in.
+
+Lying in his bunk against the wall, the packer watched this sentinel
+snowdrift grow and become human and bold and familiar. His deep-lined
+visage was reduced to its bony structure. The hand was a claw with
+which he plucked at the ancient fever-crust shredding from his lips: an
+occupation at once so absorbing and so exhausting that often the hand
+would drop and the blankets rise upon the arch of the chest in a sigh of
+retarded respiration. The sigh would be followed by a cough, controlled,
+as in dread of the shock to a sore and shattered frame. The snow came
+faster and faster until the dim, wintry pane was a blur. Millions of
+atoms crossed the watcher's weary vision, whirling, wavering, driven
+with an aimless persistence, unable to pause or to stop. And the blind
+white snowdrift climbed, fed, like human circumstance, from disconnected
+atoms impelled by a common law.
+
+There were sounds in the cabin: wet wood sweating on hot coals; a step
+that went to and fro. Outside, a snow-weighted bough let go its load and
+sprang up, scraping against the logs. Some heavy soft thing slid off
+the roof and dropped with a _chug_. Then the door, that hung awry like a
+drooping eyelid, gave a disreputable wink, and the whole front gable of
+the cabin loomed a giant countenance with a silly forehead and an evil
+leer. Now it seemed that a hand was hurling snow against the door, as
+a sower scatters grain,--snow that lay like beach sand on the floor, or
+melted into a crawling pool--red in the firelight, red as blood!
+
+These and other phantasms had now for an unmeasured time been tenants
+of the packer's brain, sharing and often overpowering the reality of
+the human step that went to and fro. To-day the shapes and relations of
+things were more natural, and the step aroused a querulous curiosity.
+
+"Who's there?" the sick man imagined himself to have said. A croaking
+sound in his throat, which was all he could do by way of speech, brought
+the step to his bedside. A young face, lightly bearded, and gaunt almost
+as his own, bent over him. Large, black eyes rested on his; a hand with
+womanish nails placed its fingers on his wrist.
+
+"You are better to-day. Your pulse is down. I wouldn't try to talk."
+
+"Who's that--outside?"
+
+"There is no one outside," Paul answered, following the direction of his
+patient's eyes. "That? That is only a snowdrift. It grows faster than I
+can shovel it away."
+
+The packer had forgotten his own question. He dozed off, and presently
+roused again as suddenly as he had slept. His utterance was clearer, but
+not his meaning.
+
+"What--you want to fetch me back for?"
+
+"Back?" Paul repeated.
+
+"I was most gone, wa'n't I?"
+
+"Back to life, you mean? You came back of yourself. I hadn't much to do
+with it."
+
+"What's been the matter--gen'ly speaking?"
+
+"You were hurt, don't you remember? Something like wound fever set in.
+The altitude is bad for fevers. You have had a pretty close call."
+
+"Been here all the time?"
+
+"Have I been here?--yes."
+
+"'Lone?"
+
+"With you. How is your chest? Does it hurt you still when you breathe?"
+
+The sick man filled his lungs experimentally. "Something busted inside,
+I guess," he panted. "'Tain't no killing matter, though."
+
+Nourishment, in a tin cup, warm from the fire was offered him, refused
+with a gesture, and firmly urged upon him. This necessitated another
+rest. It was long before he spoke again--out of some remoter train of
+thought apparently.
+
+"Family all in New York?"
+
+"My family? They were at Bisuka when I left them."
+
+"You don't _live_ West!"
+
+"No. I was born in the West, though. Idaho is my native state."
+
+The patient fell to whimpering suddenly like a hurt child. He drew up
+the blanket to cover his face. Paul, interpreting this as a signal for
+more nourishment, brought the sad decoction,--rinds of dried beef cooked
+with rice in snow water.
+
+"Guess that'll do, thank ye. My tongue feels like an old buckskin
+glove."
+
+"When I was a little fellow," said the nurse, beguiling the patient
+while he tucked the spoonfuls down, "I was like you: I wouldn't take
+what the doctor ordered, and they used to pretend I must take it for
+the others of the family,--a kind of vicarious milk diet, or gruel, or
+whatever it was. 'Here's a spoonful for mother, poor mother,' they would
+say; and of course it couldn't be refused when mother needed it so much.
+'And now one for Chrissy'"--
+
+"Who?"
+
+"My sister, Christine. And then I'd take one for 'uncle' and one for
+each of the servants; and the cupful would go down to the health of the
+household, and I the dupe of my sympathies! Now you are taking this for
+me, because it's nicer to be shut up here with a live man than a dead
+one; and we haven't the conveniences for a first-class funeral."
+
+"You never took a spoonful for 'father,'--eh?"
+
+Paul answered the question with gravity. "No. We never used that name in
+common."
+
+"Dead was he?"
+
+"I will tell you some time. Better try to sleep now."
+
+Paul returned the saucepan to the fire, after piecing out its contents
+with water, and retired out of his patient's sight.
+
+Again came a murmur, chiefly unintelligible, from the bunk.
+
+"Did you ask for anything?"
+
+The sick man heaved a worried sigh. "See what a mis'rable presumptuous
+piece of work!" he muttered, addressing the logs overhead. "But that
+Clauson--he wa'n't no more fit to guide ye than to go to heaven!
+Couldn't 'a' done much worse than this, though!"
+
+"He has done worse!" Paul came over to the bunk-side to reason on this
+matter. "They started back from here, four strong men with all the
+animals and all the food they needed for a six weeks' trip. We came in
+in one. If they got through at all, where is the help they were to send
+us?"
+
+"Help!" The packer roused. "They helped themselves, and pretty frequent.
+I said to them more than once--they didn't like it any too well: 'We
+can't drink up here like they do down to the coast. The air is too
+light. What a man would take with his dinner down there would fit him
+out with a first-class jag up here, 'leven thousand above the sea!'"
+
+"It's a waste of breath to talk about them--breath burns up food and we
+haven't much to spare. We rushed into this trouble and we dragged you in
+after us. We have hurt you a good deal more than you have us."
+
+The sick man groaned. He flung one hand back against the logs,
+dislodging ancient dust that fell upon his corpse-like forehead. It was
+carefully wiped away. Helpless tears stole down the rigid face.
+
+"John," said Paul with animation, "your general appearance just now
+reminds me of those worked-out placer claims we passed in Ruby Gulch,
+the first day out. The fever and my cooking have ground-sluiced you to
+the bone."
+
+John smiled faintly. "Don't look very fat yourself. Where'd you git all
+that baird on your face?"
+
+"We have been here some time, you know--or you don't know; you have been
+living in places far away from here. I used to envy you sometimes. And
+other times I didn't."
+
+"You mean I was off my head?"
+
+"At times. But more of the time you were dreaming and talking in your
+dreams; seeing things out loud by the flash-light of fever."
+
+"Talking, was I? Guess there wa'n't much sense in any of it?" The hazard
+was a question.
+
+"A kind of sense,--out of focus, distorted. Some of it was opium. Didn't
+you coax a little of his favorite medicine out of the cook?"
+
+Packer John apologized sheepishly, "I cal'lated I was going to be left.
+You put it up on me--making out you were off with the rest. _That_ was
+all right. But I wa'n't going to suffer it out; why should I? A gunshot
+would have cured me quicker, perhaps. Then some critter might 'a' found
+me and called it murder. A word like that set going can hang a man. No,
+I just took a little to deaden the pain."
+
+"The whole discussion was rather nasty, right before the man we were
+talking about," said Paul. "I wanted to get them off and out of hearing.
+Then we had a few words."
+
+At intervals during that day and the next, Paul's patient expended his
+strength in questions, apparently trivial. His eyes, whenever they were
+open, followed his nurse with a shrinking intelligence. Paul was on his
+guard.
+
+"What day of the month do you make it out to be?"
+
+"The second of December."
+
+"December!" The packer lay still considering. "Game all gone down?"
+
+"I am not much of a pot-hunter," said Paul. "There may be game, but I
+can't seem to get it. The snow is pretty deep."
+
+"Wouldn't bear a man on snowshoes?"
+
+"He would go out of sight."
+
+"Snowing a little every day?"
+
+"Right along, quietly, for I don't know how many days! I think the sky
+is packed with it a mile deep."
+
+"How much grub have we got?"
+
+Paul gave a flattering estimate of their resources. The patient was not
+deceived.
+
+"Where's it all gone to? You ain't eat anything."
+
+"I've eaten a good deal more than you have."
+
+"I was livin' on fever."
+
+"You can't live on fever any longer. The fever has left you, and you'll
+go with it if you don't obey your doctor."
+
+"But where's all the stuff _gone_ to?"
+
+"There were four of them, and they allowed for some delay in getting
+out," Paul explained, with a sickly smile.
+
+"Well, they was hogs! I knew how they'd pan out! That was why"--He
+wearied of speech and left the point unfinished.
+
+On the evening following, when the two could no longer see each other's
+faces in the dusk, Paul spoke, controlling his voice:--
+
+"I need not ask you, John, what you think of our chances?"
+
+"I guess they ain't much worth thinking about." The fire hissed and
+crackled; the soft subsidence of the snow could be heard outside.
+
+"We are 'free among the dead,' how does it go? 'Like unto them that are
+wounded and lie in the grave.' What we say to each other here will stop
+here with our breath. Let us put our memories in order for the last
+reckoning. I think, John, you must, at some time in your life, have
+known my father, Adam Bogardus? He was lost on the Snake River plains,
+twenty-one years ago this autumn."
+
+Receiving no answer, the pale young inquisitor went on, choosing his
+words with intense deliberation as one feeling his way in the dark.
+
+"Most of us believe in some form of communication that we can't explain,
+between those who are separated in body, in this world, but closely
+united in thought. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+There was a sound of deep breathing from the bunk; it produced a similar
+conscious excitement in the speaker. He halted, recovered himself, and
+continued:--
+
+"After my father's disappearance, my mother had a distinct
+presentiment--it haunted her for years--that something had happened to
+him at a place called One Man Station. Did you ever know the place?"
+
+"I might have." The words came huskily.
+
+"Father had left her at this place, and to her knowledge he never came
+back. But she had this intimation--and suffered from it--that he did
+come back and was foully dealt with there--wronged in body or mind. The
+place had most evil associations for her; it was not strange she should
+have connected it with the great disaster of her life. As you lay
+talking to yourself in your fever, you took me back on that lost
+trail that ended, as we thought, in the grave. But we might have been
+mistaken. Is there anything it would not be safe for you and me to speak
+of now? Do you know any tie between men that should be closer than the
+tie between us? Any safer place where a man could lay off the secret
+burdens of his life and be himself for a little while--before the end
+answers all? I know you have a secret. I believe that a share of it
+belongs to me."
+
+"We are better off sometimes if we don't get all that belongs to us,"
+said John gratingly.
+
+"It doesn't seem to be a matter of choice, does it? If you were not
+meant to tell me--what you have partly told me already--where is there
+any meaning in our being here at all? Let us have some excuse for this
+senseless accident. Do you believe much in accidents? How foolish"--Paul
+sighed--"for you and me to be afraid of each other! Two men who have
+parted with everything but the privilege of speaking the truth!"
+
+The packer raised himself in his bunk slowly, like one in pain. He
+looked long at the listless figure crouching by the fire; then he sank
+back again with a low groan. "What was it you heared me say? Come!"
+
+"I can't give you the exact words. The words were nothing. Haven't you
+watched the sparks blow up, at night, when the wind goes searching over
+the ashes of an old camp-fire? It was the fever made you talk, and
+your words were the sparks that showed where there had been fire once.
+Perhaps I had no right to track you by your own words when you lay
+helpless, but I couldn't always leave you. Now I'd like to have my share
+of that--whatever it was--that hurt you so, at One Man Station."
+
+"You ought to been a lawyer," said the packer, releasing his breath.
+There was less strain in his voice. It broke with feeling. "You put up a
+mighty strong case for your way of looking at it. I don't say it's best.
+There, if you will have it! Sonny--my son! It--it's like startin' a
+snow-slide."
+
+The sick man broke down and sobbed childishly.
+
+"Take it quietly! Oh, take it quietly!" Paul shivered. "I have known it
+a long time."
+
+Hours later they were still awake, the packer in his bunk, Paul in his
+blankets by the winking brands. The pines were moving, and in pauses of
+the wind they could hear the incessant soft crowding of the snow.
+
+"When they find us here in the spring," said the packer humbly, "it
+won't matter much which on us was 'Mister' and which was 'John.'"
+
+"Are you thinking of that!" Paul answered with nervous irritation. "I
+thought you had lived in the woods long enough to have got rid of all
+that nonsense!"
+
+"I guess there was some of it where you've been living."
+
+"We are done with all that now. Go to sleep,--Father." He pronounced
+the word conscientiously to punish himself for dreading it. The darkness
+seemed to ring with it and give it back to him ironically. "Father!"
+muttered the pines outside, and the snow, listening, let fall the
+word in elfin whispers. Paul turned over desperately in his blankets.
+"Father!" he repeated out loud. "Do _you_ believe it? Does it do you any
+good?"
+
+"I wouldn't distress myself, one way or t' other, if it don't come
+natural," the packer spoke, out of his corner in the darkness. "Wait
+till you can feel to say it. The word ain't nothing."
+
+"But do you feel it? Is it any comfort to you at all?"
+
+"I ain't in any hurry to feel it. We'll get there. Don't worry. And
+s'pose we don't! We're men. Man to man is good enough for me."
+
+Paul spent some wakeful hours after that, trying not to think of Moya,
+of his mother and Christine. They were of another world,--a world that
+dies hard at twenty-four. Towards morning he slept, but not without
+dreams.
+
+He was in the pent-road at Stone Ridge. It was sunset and long shadows
+striped the lane. A man stood, back towards him, leaning both arms on
+the stone fence that bounds the lane to the eastward,--a plain farmer
+figure, gazing down across the misty fields as he might have stood a
+hundred times in that place at that hour. Paul could not see his face,
+but something told him who it must be. His heart stood still, for he saw
+his mother coming up the lane. She carried something in her hand covered
+with a napkin, and she smiled, walking carefully as if carrying a treat
+to a sick child. She passed the man at the fence, not appearing to have
+seen him.
+
+"Won't you speak to him, mother? Won't you speak to"--He could not utter
+the name. She looked at him bewildered. "Speak? who shall I speak to?"
+The man at the fence had turned and he watched her, or so Paul imagined.
+He felt himself choking, faint, with the effort to speak that one word.
+Too late! The moment passed. The man whom he knew was his father, the
+solemn, quiet figure, moved away up the road unquestioned. He never
+looked back. Paul grew dizzy with the lines of shadow; they stretched on
+and on, they became the ties of a railroad--interminable. He awoke,
+very faint and tired, with a lost feeling and the sense upon him of some
+great catastrophe. The old man was sleeping deeply in his bunk, a ray
+of white sunlight falling on his yellow features. He looked like one who
+would never wake again. But as Paul gazed at him he smiled, and sighed
+heavily. His lips formed a name; and all the blood in Paul's body dyed
+his face crimson. The name was his mother's.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+THE BLOOD-WITE
+
+A few hours seemed days, after the great disclosure. Both men had
+recoiled from it and were feeling the strain of the new relation. Three
+times since their first meeting the elder had adjusted himself quietly
+to a change in the younger's manner to him. First there had been
+respectful curiosity in the presence of a new type, combined with the
+deference due a leader and an expert in strange fields. Then indignant
+partisanship, pity, and the slight condescension of the nurse. This had
+hurt the packer, but he took it as he accepted his physical downfall.
+The last change was hardest to bear; for now the time was short, and, as
+Paul himself had said, they were in the presence of the final unveiling.
+
+So when Paul made artificial remarks to break the pauses, avoiding his
+father's eye and giving him neither name nor title, the latter became
+silent and lay staring at the logs and picking at his hands.
+
+"If I was hunting up a father," he said to himself aloud one day, "I'd
+try to find a better lookin' one. I wouldn't pa'm off on myself no such
+old warped stick as I be." The remark seemed a tentative one.
+
+"I had the choice, to take or leave you," Paul responded. "You were an
+unconscious witness. Why should I have opened the subject at all?"
+
+Both knew that this answer was an evasion. By forcing the tie they had
+merely marked the want of ease and confidence between them. As "Packer
+John" Paul could have enjoyed, nay, loved this man; as his father, the
+sum and finality of his filial dreams, the supplanter of that imaginary
+husband of his mother's youth, the thing was impossible. And the father
+knew it and did not resent it in the least, only pitied the boy for
+his needless struggle. He was curious about him, too. He wanted to
+understand him and the life he had come out of: his roundabout way of
+reaching the simplest conclusions; his courage in argument, and his
+personal shying away from the truth when found. More than all he longed
+for a little plain talk, the exile's hunger for news from home. It
+pleased him when Paul, rousing at this deliberate challenge, spoke up
+with animation, as if he had come to some conclusion in his own mind. It
+could not be expected he would express it simply. The packer had become
+used to his oddly elaborate way of putting things.
+
+"If we had food enough and time, we might afford to waste them
+discussing each other's personal appearance. _I_ propose we talk to some
+purpose."
+
+"Talking sure burns up the food." The packer waited.
+
+"I wish I knew what my father was doing with himself, all those years
+when his family were giving him the honors of the dead."
+
+"I warned ye about this pumping out old shafts. You can't tell what
+you'll find in the bottom. I suppose you know there are things in this
+world, Boy, a good deal worse than death?"
+
+"Desertion is worse. It is not my father's death I want explained, it
+is his life, your life, in secret, these twenty years! Can you explain
+that?"
+
+The packer doubled his bony fist and brought it down on the bunk-side.
+"Now you talk like a man! I been waiting to hear you say that. Yes, I
+can answer that question, if you ain't afeard of the answer!"
+
+"I am keeping alive to hear it!" said Paul in a guarded voice.
+
+"You might say you're keeping me alive to tell it. It's a good thing to
+git off of one's mind; but it's a poor thing to hand over to a son. All
+I've got to leave ye, though: the truth if you can stand it! Where do
+you want I should begin?"
+
+"At the night when you came back to One Man Station."
+
+"How'd you know I come back?"
+
+"You were back there in your fever, living over something that happened
+in that place. There was a wind blowing and the door wouldn't shut. And
+something had to be lifted,"--the old man's eyes, fixed upon his son,
+took a look of awful comprehensions,--"something heavy."
+
+"Yes; great Lord, it was heavy! And I been carrying it ever since!" His
+chest rose as if the weight of that load lay on it still, and his breath
+expired with a hoarse "haugh." "I got out of the way because it was _my_
+load. I didn't want no help from them." He paused and sat picking at his
+hands. "It's a dreadful ugly story. I'd most as soon live it over again
+as have to tell it in cold blood. I feel sometimes it _can't be!_"
+
+"You need not go back beyond that night. I know how my mother was left,
+and what sort of a man you were forced to leave her with. Was it--the
+keeper?"
+
+"That's what it was. That was the hard knot in my thread. Nothing
+wouldn't go past that. Some, when they git things in a tangle, they just
+reach for the shears an' cut the thread. I wa'n't brought up that way.
+I was taught to leave the shears alone. So I went on stringin' one year
+after another. But they wouldn't join on to them that went before. There
+was the knot."
+
+"It was between you and him--and the law?" said Paul.
+
+"You've got it! I was there alone with it,--witness an' judge an' jury;
+I worked up my own case. Manslaughter with extenuatin' circumstances,
+I made it--though he was more beast than man. I give myself the outside
+penalty,--imprisonment for life. And I been working out my sentence
+ever since. The Western country wa'n't home to me then--more like a big
+prison. It's been my prison these twenty-odd years, while your mother
+was enjoying what belonged to her, and making a splendid job of your
+education. If I had let things alone I might have finished my time out:
+but I didn't, and now the rest of it's commuted--for the life of my
+son!"
+
+"Don't put it that way! I am no lamb of sacrifice. Why, how can we let
+things alone in this world! Should I have stood off from this secret and
+never asked my father for his defense?"
+
+"Do you mean to say a boy like you can take hold of this thing and
+understand it?"
+
+"I can," said Paul. "I could almost tell the story myself."
+
+"Put it up then!" said the packer. The fascination of confession was
+strong upon him.
+
+"You had been out in the mountains--how long?"
+
+"Two days and three nights, just as I left camp."
+
+"You were crazed with anxiety for us. You came back to find your camp
+empty, the wife and baby gone. You had reason to distrust the keeper.
+Not for what he did--for what you knew he meant to do."
+
+"For what he meant and tried to do. I seen it in his eye. The devil that
+wanted him incited him to play with me and tell me lies about my wife.
+She scorned the brute and he took his mean revenge. He kep' back her
+letter, and he says to me, leerin' at me out of his wicked eyes, 'Your
+livestock seems to be the strayin' kind. The man she went off with
+give me that,'--he lugged a gold piece out of his clothes and showed
+me,--'give me that,' he says, 'to keep it quiet.' He kep' it quiet! Half
+starved and sick's I was, the strength was in me. But vengeance in the
+hand of a man, it cuts both ways, my son! His bunk had a sharp edge
+to it like this. He fell acrost it with my weight on top of him and he
+never raised up again. There wasn't a mark on him. His back was broke.
+He died slow, his eyes mocking me.
+
+"'You fool,' he says. 'Go look in that coat hangin' on the wall.' I
+found her letter there inside of one from Granger. He watched me read it
+and he laughed. 'Now, go tell her you've killed a man!' He knew I didn't
+come of a killin' breed. There was four hours to think it over. Four
+hours! I thought hard, I tell you! 'T was six of one and half a dozen of
+t' other 'twixt him and me, but I worked it back 'n' forth a good long
+while about her. First, taking her away from her father, an old man
+whose bread I'd eat. She was like a child of my own raising. I always
+had felt mean about that. We'd had bad luck from the start,--my
+luck,--and now disgrace to cap it all. Whether I hid it or told her and
+stood my trial, I'd never be a free man again. There he lay! And a sin
+done in secret, it's like a drop of nitric acid: it's going to eat its
+way out--and in!
+
+"I knew she'd have friends enough, once she was quit of me. That was the
+case between us. The thing that hurt me most was to put her letter
+back where I found it, and leave it, there with him. Her little cry to
+me--and I couldn't come! I read the words over and over, I've said 'em
+to myself ever since. I've lived on them. But I had to leave the letter
+there to show I'd never come back. I put it back after he was dead.
+
+"The sins of the parents shall be visited,--when it's in the blood! But
+I declare to the Almighty, murder wa'n't in my blood! It come on me like
+a stroke of lightning hits a tree, and I had a clear show to fall alone.
+
+"That's the answer. Maybe I didn't see all sides of it, but there never
+was no opening to do different, after that night. Now, you've had an
+education. I should be glad to hear your way of looking at it?"
+
+"I should think you might stand your trial, now, before any judge or
+jury, in this world or the next," Paul answered.
+
+"There is only one Judge." The packer smiled a beautiful quiet smile
+that covered a world of meanings. "What a man re'ly wants, if he'd own
+up it, is a leetle shade of partiality. Maybe that's what we're all
+going to need, before we git through."
+
+Paul was glad to be saved the necessity of speech, and he felt the swift
+discernment with which the packer resumed his usual manner. "Got any
+more of that stuff you call soup? Divide even! I won't be made no baby
+of."
+
+"We might as well finish it up. It's hardly worth making two bites of a
+cherry."
+
+"Call this 'cherry'! It's been a good while on the bough. What's it
+mostly made of?"
+
+"Rind of bacon, snow water,--plenty of water,--and a tablespoonful of
+rice."
+
+"Good work! Hungry folks can live on what the full bellies throw away."
+
+"Oh, I can save. But there comes a time when you can't live by saving
+what you haven't got."
+
+"That's right! Well, let's talk, then, before the bacon-rind fades out
+of us."
+
+The packer's face and voice, his whole manner, showed the joy of a soul
+that has found relief. Paul was not trying now to behave dutifully; they
+were man to man once more. The quaint, subdued humor asserted itself,
+and the narrator's speech flowed on in the homely dialect which
+expressed the man.
+
+"I stayed out all that winter, workin' towards the coast. One day, along
+in March, I fetched a charcoal burner's camp, and the critter took me in
+and nursed my frost-bites and didn't ask no questions, nor I of him. We
+struck up a trade, my drivin' stock, mostly skin and bone, for a show in
+his business. He wa'n't gettin' rich at it, that was as plain as the hip
+bones on my mules. I kep' in the woods, cuttin' timber and tendin' kiln,
+and he hauled and did the sellin'. Next year he went below to Portland
+and brought home smallpox with him. It broke out on him on the road. He
+was a terrible sick man. I buried him, and waited for my turn. It didn't
+come. I seemed kind o' insured. I've been in lots of trouble since then,
+but nothing ever touched me till now. I banked on it too strong, though.
+I sure did! My pardner was just such another lone bird like me. If
+he had any folks of his own he kep' still about them. So I took his
+name--whether it was his name there's no knowing. Guess I've took full
+as good care of it as he would. 'Hagar?' folk would say, sort o' lookin'
+me over. 'You ain't Jim Hagar.' No, but I was John, and they let it go
+at that.
+
+"I heard of your mother that summer, from a prospector who came up past
+my camp. He'd wintered in Mountain Home. He told me my own story, the
+way they had it down there, and what straits your mother was in. I had
+scraped up quite a few dollars by then, and was thinking how I'd shove
+it into a bank like an old debt coming to Adam Bogardus. I was studying
+how I was going to rig it. There wasn't any one who knew me down there,
+so I felt safe to ventur' a few inquiries. What I heard was that she'd
+gone home to her folks and was as well off as anybody need be. That
+broke me all up at first. I must have had a sneakin' notion that maybe
+some day I could see my way to go back to her, but that let me out
+completely. I quit then, and I've stayed quit. The only break I made was
+showin' up here at the 'leventh hour, thinking I could be some use to my
+son!"
+
+"It was to be," said Paul. "For years our lives have been shaping
+towards this meeting. There were a thousand chances against it. Yet here
+we are!"
+
+"Here we are!" the packer repeated soberly. "But don't think that I lay
+any of my foolishness on the Almighty! Maybe it was meant my son should
+close my eyes, but it's too dear at the price. Anybody would say so, I
+don't care who."
+
+"But aside from the 'price,' is it something to you?"
+
+"More--more than I've got words to say. And yet it grinds me, every
+breath I take! Not that I wish you'd done different--you couldn't and be
+a man. I knew it even when I was kickin' against it. Oh, well! It ain't
+no use to kick. I thought I'd learned something, but I ain't--learned--a
+thing!"
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+CURTAIN
+
+A greater freedom followed this confession, as was natural. It became
+the basis for lighter confidences and bits of autobiography that came to
+the surface easily after this tremendous effort at sincerity. Paul found
+that he could speak even of the family past, into which by degrees he
+began to fit the real man in place of that bucolic abstraction which
+had walked the fields of fancy. He had never dared to actuate the "hired
+man," his father, on a basis of fact. He knew the speech and manners of
+the class from which he came,--knew men of that class, and talked with
+them every summer at Stone Ridge; but he had brooded so deeply over the
+tragic and sentimental side of his father's fate as to have lost sight
+of the fact that he was a man.
+
+Reality has its own convincing charm, not inconsistent with plainness or
+even with commonness. To know it is to lose one's taste for toys of
+the imagination. Paul, at last, could look back almost with, a sense of
+humor at the doll-like progenitor he had played with so long. But when
+it came to placing the real man, Adam Bogardus, beside that real woman,
+once his wife, their son could but own with awe that there is mercy in
+extinction, after all; in the chance, however it may come to us, for
+slipping off those cruel disguises that life weaves around us.
+
+In the strange, wakeful nights, full of starvation dreams, he saw his
+mother as she would look on state occasions in the hostess's place at
+her luxurious table; the odor of flowers, the smell of meats and wines,
+tantalized and sickened him. Christine would come in her dancing frocks,
+always laughing, greedy in her mirth; but Moya, face to face, he could
+never see. It was torture to feel her near him, a disembodied embrace.
+Passionate panegyrics and hopeless adjurations he would pour out to
+that hovering loveliness just beyond his reach. The agony of
+frustration would waken him, if indeed it were sleep that dissolved his
+consciousness, and he would be irritable if spoken to.
+
+The packer broke in, one morning, on these unnerving dreams. "You
+wouldn't happen to have a picture of her along with you?"
+
+Paul stared at him.
+
+"No, of course you wouldn't! And I'd be 'most afeard to look at it, if
+you had. She must have changed considerable. Time hasn't stood still
+with her any more than the rest of us."
+
+"I have no picture of my mother," Paul replied.
+
+The packer saw that his question had jarred; he had waited weeks to ask
+it. He passed it off now with one of his homely similes. "If you was to
+break a cup clean in two, and put the halves together again while the
+break was fresh, they'd knit so you wouldn't hardly see a crack. But you
+take one half and set it in the chainy closet and chuck the other half
+out on the ash-heap,--them halves won't look much like pieces of the
+same cup, come a year or two. The edges won't jine no more than the lips
+of an old cut that's healed without stitches. No; married folks they
+grow together or they grow apart, and they're a-doing of the one or the
+other every minute of the time, breaks or no breaks. Does she go up to
+the old place summers?"
+
+"Not lately, except on business," said Paul. "A company was formed to
+open slate quarries on the upper farm, a good many years ago. They are
+worth more than all the land forty times over."
+
+"I always said so; always told the old man he had a gold mine in that
+ridge. Was this before he died?"
+
+"Long after. It was my mother's scheme mainly. She controls it now. She
+is a very strong business woman."
+
+"She got her training, likely, from that uncle in New York. He had the
+business head. The old man had no more contrivance than one of the bulls
+in his pastures. He could lock horns and stay there, but it wa'nt no
+trouble to outflank him. More than once his brother Jacob got to the
+windward of him in a bargain. He was made a good deal like his own land.
+Winters of frost it took to break up that ground, and sun and rain to
+meller it, and then't was a hatful of soil to a cartful of stone. The
+plough would jump the furrows if you drew it deep. My arms used to ache
+as if they'd been pounded, with the jar of them stones. They used to
+tell us children a story how Satan, he flew over the earth a-sowing
+it with rocks and stones, and as he was passing over our county a hole
+bu'st through his leather apron and he lost his whole load right slam
+there. I could 'a' p'inted out the very spot where the heft on it fell.
+Ten Stone meadow, so-called. Ten million stone! I was pickin' stone in
+that field all of one summer when I was fifteen year old. We built a
+mile of fence with it.
+
+"Them quarries must have brought a mint of money into the country.
+Different sort of labor, too. Well, the world grows richer and poorer
+every year. More difference every year between the way rich folks and
+poor folks live. I wouldn't know where I belonged, 't ain't likely, if
+I was to go back there. I'd be way off! One while I used to think a
+good deal about going back, just to take a look around. It comes over
+me lately like hunger and thirst. I think about the most curious things
+when I'm asleep--foolish, like a child! I can smell all the good home
+smells of a frosty morning: apple pomace, steaming in the barnyard;
+sausage frying; Becky scouring the brass furnace-kittle with salt and
+vinegar. Killin' time, you know--makes you think of boiling souse and
+head-cheese. You ever eat souse?" The packer sucked in his breath with a
+lean smile. "It ain't best to dwell on it. But you can't help yourself,
+at night. I can smell Becky's fresh bread, in my dreams, just out of the
+brick oven. Never eat bread cooked in a stove till I came out here. I
+never drunk any water like that spring on the ridge. Last night I was
+back there, and the maples were all yellow like sunshine. Once it
+was spring, and apple-blooms up in the hill orchard. And little Emmy,
+a-setting on the fence, with her bunnit throwed back on her neck.
+'Addy!' she called, way across the lot; 'Addy, come, help me down!' She
+was a master hand for venturin' up on places, but she didn't like the
+gettin' down.
+
+"Well, she 'a learned the ups and downs by this time. She don't need
+Addy to help her. I'd have helped a big sight more if I had kep' my
+distance. It's a thing so con-demned foolish and unnecessary--I can't be
+reconciled to it noway!"
+
+"You see only one side of it," said Paul. Unspeakable thoughts had kept
+pace with his father's words. "Nothing that happens, happens through
+us--or to us--alone. There was a girl I knew, outside. She was as happy,
+when I knew her first, as you say my mother used to be. Then she met
+some one--a man--and the shadow of his life crossed hers. He would have
+wrapped her up in it and put out her sunshine if he had stayed in the
+same world. Now she can be herself again, after a while. It cannot take
+long to forget a person you have known only a little over a year."
+
+The packer rose on one elbow. He reached across and shook his son.
+
+"Where is that girl? Answer me! Take your face out of your hands!"
+
+"At Bisuka Barracks. She is the commandant's daughter. I came out to
+marry her."
+
+"What possessed ye not to tell me?"
+
+"Why should I tell you? We buried the wedding-day months back, in the
+snow."
+
+"Boy, boy!" the packer groaned.
+
+"What difference can it make now?"
+
+"_All_ the difference--all the difference there is! I thought you were
+out here touring it with them fool boys and they were all the chance
+you had for help outside. You suppose her father is going to see her git
+left? _They_'ll get in here, if they have to crawl on their bellies or
+climb through the tree-limbs. They know how! And we've wasted the grub
+and talked like a couple of women!"
+
+"Oh, don't--don't torment me!" Paul groaned. "It was all over. Can't you
+leave the dead in peace!"
+
+"We are not the dead! I 'most wish we were. Boy, I've got a big word to
+say to you about that. Come closer!" The packer's speech hoarsened and
+failed. They could only hear each other breathe. Then it seemed to the
+packer that his was the only breath in the darkness. He listened. A
+faint cheer arose in the forest and a crashing of the dead underlimbs of
+the pines.
+
+He turned frantically upon his son, but no pledge could be extorted now.
+Paul's lips were closed. He had lost consciousness.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+KIND INQUIRIES
+
+The colonel's drawing-room was as hot as usual the first hour after
+dinner, and as usual it was full of kindly participant neighbors who had
+dropped in to repeat their congratulations on the good news, now almost
+a week old. Mrs. Bogardus had not come down, and, though asked after by
+all, the talk was noticeably freer for her absence.
+
+Mrs. Creve, in response to a telegram from her brother, had arrived from
+Fort Sherman on the day before, prepared for anything, from frozen feet
+to a wedding. She had spent the afternoon in town doing errands for
+Moya, and being late for dinner had not changed her dress. There never
+was such a "natural" person as aunt Annie. At present she was addressing
+the company at large, as if they were all her promising children.
+
+"Nobody talks about their star in these days. I used to have a star. I
+forget which it was. I know it was a pretty lucky one. Now I trust in
+Providence and the major and wear thick shoes." She exhibited the shoes,
+a particularly large and sensible kind which she imported from the East.
+Everybody laughed and longed to embrace her. "Has Moya got a star?" she
+asked seriously.
+
+"The whole galaxy!" a male voice replied. "Doesn't the luck prove it?"
+
+"Moya has got a 'temperament,'" said Doctor Fleming, the Post surgeon.
+"That's as good as having a star. You know there are persons who attract
+misfortune just as sickly children catch all the diseases that are
+going. I knew that boy was sure to be found. Anything of Moya's would
+be."
+
+"So you think it was Moya's 'temperament' that pulled him out of the
+snow?" said the colonel, wheeling his chair into the discussion.
+
+"How about Mr. Winslow's temperament? I prefer to leave a little of the
+credit to him," said Moya sweetly.
+
+A young officer, who had been suffering in the corner by the fire,
+jumped to his feet and bowed, then blushed and sat down again,
+regretting his rashness. Moya continued to look at him with steadfast
+friendliness. Winslow had led the rescue that brought her lover home.
+A glow of sympathy united these friends and neighbors; the air was
+electrical and full of emotion.
+
+"I suppose no date has been fixed for the wedding?" Mrs. Dawson, on the
+divan, murmured to Mrs. Creve. The latter smiled a non-committal assent.
+
+"I should think they would just put the doctor aside and be married
+anyhow. My husband says he ought to go to a warmer climate at once."
+
+"My dear, a young man can't be married in his dressing-gown and
+slippers!"
+
+"No! It's not as bad as that?"
+
+"Well, not quite. He's up and dressed and walks about, but he doesn't
+come down to his meals,--he can eat so very little at a time, and
+it tires him to sit through a dinner. It isn't one of those ravenous
+recoveries. It went too far with him for that."
+
+"His mother was perfectly magnificent through it all, they say."
+
+"Have you seen much of Mrs. Bogardus?"
+
+"No; we left them alone, poor things, when the pinch came. But I used to
+see her walking the porch, up and down, up and down. Moya would go off
+on the hills. They couldn't walk together! That was after Miss Chrissy
+went home. Her mother took her back, you know, and then returned alone.
+Perfectly heroic! They say she dressed every evening for dinner as
+carefully as if she were in New York, and led the conversation. She used
+to make Moya read aloud to her--history, novels--anything to pretend
+they were not thinking. The strain must have begun before any of us
+knew. The colonel kept it so quiet. What is the dear man doing with your
+bonnet?"
+
+The colonel had plucked his sister's walking-hat, a pert piece of
+millinery froward in feathers, from the trunk of the headless Victory,
+where she had reposed it in her haste before dinner.
+
+"Mustn't be disrespectful to the household Lar," he kindly reminded her.
+
+"Where am I to put my hats, then? I shall wear them on my head and come
+down to breakfast in them. Moya, dear, will you please rescue my hat?
+Put it anywhere, dear,--under your chair. There is not really a place
+in this house to put a thing. A wedding that goes off on time is bad
+enough, but one that hangs on from month to month--and doesn't even take
+care of its clothes! Forgive me, dear! The clothes are very pretty.
+I open a bureau-drawer to put away my middle-aged bonnet--a puff of
+violets! A pile of something white, and, behold, a wedding veil! There
+isn't a hook in the closet that doesn't say, 'Standing-room only,' and
+the standing-room is all stood on by a regiment of new shoes."
+
+"My dear woman, go light on our sore spots. We are only just out of the
+woods."
+
+"Isn't it bad to coddle your sore spots, Doctor? Like a saddle-gall,
+ride them down!" Mrs. Creve and Dr. Fleming exchanged a friendly smile
+on the strength of this nonsense. On the doctor's side it covered a
+suspicion: "'The lady, methinks, protests too much'!" The colonel, too,
+was restless, and Moya's sweet color came and went. She appeared to be
+listening for steps or sounds from some other part of the house.
+
+The men all rose now as Mrs. Bogardus entered; one or two of the ladies
+rose also, compelled by something in her look certainly not intended.
+She was careful to greet everybody; she even crossed the room and gave
+her hand to Lieutenant Winslow, whom she had not seen since the night of
+his return. The doctor she casually passed over with a bow; they had met
+before that day. It was in the mind of each person present not of the
+family, and excepting the doctor, to ask her: 'How is your son this
+evening?' But for some reason the inquiry did not come off.
+
+The company began suddenly to feel itself _de trop_. Mrs. Dawson, who
+had come under the doctor's escort, glanced at him, awaiting the moment
+when it would do to make the first move.
+
+"I hear you lost a patient from the hospital yesterday?" said Lieutenant
+Winslow, at the doctor's side.
+
+"_From_, did you say? That's right! He was to have been operated on
+to-day." The doctor shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"What!"
+
+"Two broken ribs. One grown fast to the lung."
+
+"Wh-ew!"
+
+"He just walked out. Said I had ordered him to have fresh air. There was
+a new hall-boy, a greenhorn."
+
+"He can't go far in that shape, can he?"
+
+"Oh, there's no telling. The constitution of those men is beyond
+anything. You can't kill him. He'll suffer of course, suffer like an
+animal, and die like one--away from the herd. Maybe not this time,
+though."
+
+"Was he afraid of the operation?"
+
+"I can't say. He did not seem to be either afraid or anxious for help.
+Not used to being helped. He would be taken to the Sisters' Hospital.
+Wouldn't come up here as the guest of the Post, not a bit! I believe
+from the first he meant to give us the slip, and take his chance in his
+own way."
+
+"Did you hear,"--Mrs. Creve spoke up from the opposite side of the room
+under that hypnotic influence by which a dangerous topic spreads,--"did
+you hear about the poor guide who ran away from the hospital to escape
+from our wicked doctor here? What a reputation you must have, Doctor!"
+
+"All talk, my dear; town gossip," said the colonel. "You gave him his
+discharge, didn't you, Doctor?" The colonel looked hard at the medical
+officer; he had prepared the way for a statement suited to a mixed
+company, including ladies. But Doctor Fleming stated things usually to
+suit himself.
+
+"There was a man who left the Sisters' Hospital rather informally
+yesterday. I won't say he is not just as well off to-day as if he had
+stayed."
+
+"Who was it? Was it our man, father?"
+
+"The doctor has more than one patient at the hospital." Colonel
+Middleton looked reproachfully at the doctor, who continued to put aside
+as childish these clumsy subterfuges. "I think you ladies frightened him
+away with your attentions. He knew he was under heavy liabilities for
+all your flowers and fancy cookery."
+
+"Attentions! Are we going to let him die on the road somewhere?" cried
+Moya.
+
+"Miss Moya?" Lieutenant Winslow spoke up with a mixture of embarrassment
+and resolution to be heard, though every voice in the room conspired
+against him. "Those men are a big fraternity. They have their outfitting
+places where they put in for repairs. Packer John had his blankets sent
+to the Green Meadow corral. They know him there. They say he had money
+at one of the stores. They all have a little money cached here and
+there. And they _can't_ get lost, you know!"
+
+Moya's eyes shone with a suspicious brightness.
+
+ "'When the forest shall mislead me;
+ When the night and morning lie.'"
+
+She turned her swimming eyes upon Paul's mother, who would be sure to
+remember the quotation.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus remained perfectly still, her lips slightly parted. She
+grew very pale. Then she rose and walked quickly to the door.
+
+"Just a breath of cold air!" she panted. The doctor, Moya, and Mrs.
+Creve had followed her into the hall. Moya placed herself on the settle
+beside her and leaned to support her, but she sat back rigidly with her
+eyes closed. Mrs. Creve looked on in quiet concern. "Let me take you
+into the study, Mrs. Bogardus!" the doctor commanded. "A glass of water,
+Moya, please."
+
+"How is she? What is it? Can we do anything?" The company crowded
+around Mrs. Creve on her return to the drawing-room. She glanced at
+her brother. There was no clue there. He stood looking embarrassed and
+mystified. "It is only the warm welcome we give our friends," she said
+aloud, smiling calmly. "Mrs. Bogardus found the room too hot. I think I
+should have succumbed myself but for that little recess in the hall."
+
+The colonel attacked his fire. He thought he was being played with.
+Things were not right in the house, and no one, not the doctor, or even
+Annie, was frank with him. His kind face flushed as he straightened up
+to bid his guests good-night.
+
+"Well, if it's not anything serious, you think. But you'll be sure
+to let us know?" said Mrs. Dawson. "Well, good-night, Mrs. Creve.
+_Good_-night, Colonel! You'll say good-night to Moya? Do let us know if
+there is anything we can do."
+
+Dr. Fleming was in the hall looking for his cape. The colonel touched
+him on the shoulder. "Don't be in a hurry, Doctor. Mrs. Dawson will
+excuse you."
+
+"I don't think you need me any more to-night. Moya is with Mrs.
+Bogardus. She is not ill. The room was a little close."
+
+"Never mind the _room_! Come in here. I want a word with you."
+
+The doctor laughed oddly, and obeyed.
+
+"Annie, you needn't leave us."
+
+"Why, thank you, dear boy! It's awfully good of you," Annie mocked him.
+"But I must go and relieve Moya."
+
+"I don't believe you are wanted in there," said Doctor Fleming.
+
+"It's more than obvious that I'm not in here."
+
+"Oh, do sit down," said the teased colonel.
+
+The fire sulked and smoked a trifle with its brands apart. Doctor
+Fleming leaned forward upon his knees and regarded it thoughtfully. The
+colonel sat fondling the tongs. In a deep chair Mrs. Creve lay back and
+shaded her face with the end of her lace scarf. By her manner she might
+have been alone in the room, yet she was keenly observant of the men,
+for she felt that developments were taking place.
+
+"What is the matter with your patient upstairs, Doctor?" the colonel
+began his cross-examination. Doctor Fleming raised his eyebrows.
+
+"He's had nothing to eat to speak of for six weeks, at an altitude"--
+
+"Yes; we know all that. But he's twenty-four years old. They made an
+easy trip back, and he has been here a week, nearly. He's not as strong
+as he was when they brought him in, is he?"
+
+"That was excitement. You have to allow for the reaction. He has had
+a shock to the entire system,--nerves, digestion,--must give him time.
+Very nervous temperament too much controlled."
+
+"Make it as you like. But I'm disappointed in his rallying powers,
+unless you are keeping something back. A boy with the grit to do what he
+did, and stand it as he did--why isn't he standing it better now?"
+
+"We are all suffering from reaction, I think," said Mrs. Creve
+diplomatically; "and we show it by making too much of little things.
+Tom, we oughtn't to keep the doctor up here talking nonsense. He wants
+to go to bed."
+
+"_I_'m not talking nonsense," said the doctor. "I should be if I
+pretended there was anything mysterious about that boy's case upstairs.
+He has had a tremendous experience, say what you will; and it's pulled
+him down nervously, and every other way. He isn't ready or able to
+talk of it yet. And he knows as soon as he comes down there'll be forty
+people waiting to congratulate him and ask him how it was. I don't
+wonder he fights shy. If he could take his bride by the hand and walk
+out of the house with her I believe he could start to-morrow; but if
+there must be a wedding and a lot of fuss"--
+
+Mrs. Creve nodded her head approvingly. The three had risen and stood
+around the hearth, while the colonel put the brands delicately together
+with the skill of an old campaigner. The flames breathed again.
+
+"I don't offer this as a professional opinion," said the doctor. "But a
+case like his is not a disease, it's a condition"--
+
+"Of the mind, perhaps?" the colonel added significantly. He glanced at
+Mrs. Creve. "You've thought about that, Doctor? The letter his mother
+consulted you about?"
+
+"Have you been worrying about that, Colonel? Why didn't you say so?
+There is nothing in it whatever. Why, it's so plain a case the other
+way--any one can see where the animus comes from!"
+
+"Now you _are_ getting mysterious, and I'm going to bed!" said Mrs.
+Creve.
+
+"No; we're coming to the point now," said the colonel.
+
+"What is it you want Bogardus to do?" asked Doctor Fleming. "Want him to
+get up and walk out of the house as my patient did at the hospital? Dare
+say he could do it, but what then? Will you let me speak out, Colonel?
+No regard to anybody's feelings? Now, this may be gossip, but I think
+it has a bearing on the case upstairs. I'm going to have it off my mind
+anyhow! When Mrs. Bogardus came to see the guide,--Packer John,--day
+before yesterday, was it?--he asked to see her alone. Said he had
+something particular to say to her about her son. We thought it a queer
+start, but she was willing to humor him. Well, she wasn't in there above
+ten minutes, but in that time something passed between them that hit
+her very hard, no doubt of that! Now, Bogardus holds his tongue like
+a gentleman as to what happened in the woods. He doesn't mention
+his comrades' names. And the packer has disappeared; so he can't be
+questioned. Seems to me a little bird told me there was an attachment
+between one of those Bowen boys and Miss Christine?
+
+"Now we, who know what brutes brute fear will make of men, are not going
+to deny that those boys behaved badly. There are some things that can't
+be acknowledged among men, you know, if there is a hole to crawl out of.
+Cowardice is one of them. Well then, they lied, that's the whole of
+it. The little boys lied. They wrote Mrs. Bogardus a long letter from
+Lemhi,"--the doctor was reviewing now for Mrs. Creve's benefit,--"when
+they first got out. They probably judged, by the time they had had,
+that Paul and the packer would never tell their own story. Very well: it
+couldn't hurt Paul, it might be the saving of them, if they could show
+that something had queered him in the woods. They asked his mother
+if she had heard of the effects of altitude upon highly sensitive
+organizations. They recounted some instances--I will mention them later.
+One of the boys is a lawyer, isn't he? They are a pair of ingenious
+youths. Bogardus, they claim, avoided them almost from the time they
+entered the woods,--almost lived with the packer, behaved like a crank
+about the shooting. Whereas they had gone there to kill things, he made
+it a personal matter whenever they pursued this intention in a natural
+and undisguised manner. He had pangs, like a girl, when the creatures
+expired. He hated the carcases, the blood--forgive me, Mrs. Creve. In
+short, he called the whole business butchery."
+
+"Do you make _that_ a sign of lunacy?" Mrs. Creve flung in.
+
+"I am quoting, you know." The doctor smiled indulgently. "They declare
+that they offered--even begged--to stay behind with him, one of them, at
+least, but he rejected their company in a manner so unpleasant that they
+saw it would only be courting a quarrel to remain. And so, treating him
+perforce like a child _or_ a lunatic _pro tem._, and having but little
+time to decide in, they cut loose and hurried back for help. This is the
+tale, composed on reflection. They said nothing of this to Winslow--to
+save publicity, of course! Mrs. Bogardus's lips are doubly sealed, for
+her son's sake and for the sake of the young scamp who is to be her
+son, by and by! I saw she winced at my opinion, which I gave her
+plainly--brutally, perhaps. And she asked me particularly to say
+nothing, which I am particularly not doing.
+
+"This, I think, you will find is the bitter drop in the cup of rejoicing
+upstairs. And they are swallowing it in silence, those two, for the sake
+of the little girl and the old friends in New York. Of course she has
+kept from Paul that last shot in the back from those sweet boys! The
+packer had some unruly testimony he was bursting with, which he had
+sense enough to keep for her alone, and she doesn't want the case to
+spread. It is singular how a man in his condition could get out of
+the way as suddenly as he did. You might think he'd been taken up in a
+cloud."
+
+"Doctor, what do you mean by such an insinuation as that?"
+
+"Colonel, have I insinuated anything? Did I say she had oiled the wheels
+of his departure?"
+
+"Come, come! You go too far!"
+
+"Not at all. That's your own construction. I merely say that I am not
+concerned about that man's disappearance. I think he'll be looked after,
+as a valuable witness should be."
+
+"Well," the colonel grumbled uneasily, "I don't like mysteries myself,
+and I don't like family quarrels nor skeletons at the feasts of old
+friends. But I suppose there must be a drop in every cup. What were your
+altitude cases, Doctor?"
+
+"The same old ones; poor Addison, you know. All those stories they tell
+an Easterner. As I pointed out to Mrs. Bogardus, in every case there was
+some predisposing cause. Addison had been too long in the mountains, and
+he was frightfully overworked; short of company officers. He came to me
+about an insect he said had got into his ear; buzzed, and bothered him
+day and night. The story got to the men's quarters. They joked about the
+colonel's 'bug.' I knew it was no joke. I condemned him for duty, but
+the Sioux were out. They thought at Washington no one but Addison could
+handle an Indian campaign. He was on the ground, too. So they sent him
+up higher where it was dry, with a thousand men in his hands. I knew
+he'd be a madman or a dead man in a month! There were a good many of the
+dead! By Jove! The boys who took his orders and loved the old fellow and
+knew he was sending them to their death! Well for him that he'll never
+know."
+
+"The 'altitude of heartbreak,'" sighed Mrs. Creve. The phrase was her
+own, for many a reason deeply known unto herself, but she gave it the
+effect of a quotation before the men.
+
+"Then you think there is no 'altitude' in ours?"
+
+"No; nor 'heartbreak' either," said the doctor, helping himself to one
+of the colonel's cigars. "But I don't say there isn't enough to keep a
+woman awake nights, and to make those young men avoid the sight of each
+other for a time. Thanks, I won't smoke now. I'm going to take a look at
+Mrs. Bogardus as I go out."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+
+The doctor had taken his look, feeling a trifle guilty under his
+patient's counter gaze, yet glad to have relieved the good colonel's
+anxiety. If he loved to gossip, at least he was particular as to whom he
+gossiped with.
+
+Moya closed the door after him and silently resumed her seat. Mrs.
+Bogardus helped herself to a sip of water. She was struggling with a
+dry constriction of the throat, and Moya protested a little, seeing the
+effort that it cost her to speak, even in the hoarse, unnatural tone
+which was all the voice she had left.
+
+"I want to finish now," she said, "and never speak of this again. It was
+I who accused them first--and then I asked him:--if there was anything
+he could say in their defense, to say it, for Chrissy's sake! 'I will
+never break bread with them again,' said he,--'either Banks or Horace.
+I will not eat with them, or drink with them, or speak with them again!'
+Think of it! How are we to live? How are they to inhabit the same
+city? He thinks I have been weak. I am weak! The only power I have is
+through--the property. Banks will never marry a poor girl. But that
+would be a dear-bought victory. Let her keep what faith in him she can.
+No; in families, the ones who can control themselves have to give in--to
+those who can't. If you argue with Christine she simply gives way, and
+then she gets hysterical, and then she is ill. It's a disease. Mothers
+know how their children--Christine was marked--marked with trouble! I
+am thankful she has any mind at all. She needs me more than Paul does. I
+cannot be parted from my power to help her--such as it is."
+
+"When she is Banks Bowen's wife she will need you more than ever!" said
+Moya.
+
+"She will. I could prevent the marriage, but I am afraid to. I am
+afraid! So, as the family is cut in two--in three, for I--" Mrs. Bogardus
+stopped and moistened her lips again. "So--I think you and Paul had
+better make your arrangements and go as soon as you can wherever it
+suits you, without minding about the rest of us."
+
+Moya gave a little sobbing laugh. "You don't expect me to make the first
+move!"
+
+"Doesn't he say anything to you--anything at all?"
+
+"He is too ill."
+
+"He is not ill!" Mrs. Bogardus denied it fiercely. "Who says he is ill?
+He is starved and frozen. He is just out of the grave. You must be good
+to him, Moya. Warm him, comfort him! You can give him the life he needs.
+Your hands are as soft as little birds. They comfort even me. Oh, don't
+you understand!"
+
+"Of course I understand!" Moya answered, her face aflame. "But I cannot
+marry Paul. He has got to marry me."
+
+"What nonsense that is! People say to a girl: 'You can't be too cold
+before you are married or too kind after!' That does not mean you and
+Paul. If you are not kind to him _now_, you will make a great mistake."
+
+"He is not thinking of marriage," said Moya. "Something weighs on him
+all the time. I cannot ask him questions. If he wanted to tell me he
+would. That is why I come downstairs and leave him. But he won't come
+down! Is it not strange? If we could believe such things I would say a
+Presence came with, him out of that place. It is with him when I find
+him alone. It is in his eyes when he looks at me. It is not something
+past and done with, it is here--now--in this house! _What_ is it? What
+do _you_ believe?"
+
+The eyes she sought to question hardened under her gaze. Here, too, was
+a veil. Mrs. Bogardus sat with her hands clasped in her lap. She was
+motionless, but the creaking of her silks could be heard as her bosom
+rose and fell. After a moment she said: "Paul's tray is on the table in
+the dining-room. Will you take it when you go up?"
+
+Moya altered her own manner instantly. "But you?" she hesitated. "I must
+not crowd you out of all your mother privileges. You have handed over
+everything to me."
+
+"A mother's privilege is to see herself no longer needed. I can do
+nothing more for my son"--her smile was hard--"except take care of his
+money."
+
+"Paul's mother!"
+
+"My dear, do you suppose we mind? It is a very great privilege to be
+allowed to step aside when your work is done."
+
+"Paul's _mother!_" Moya insisted.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose. "You don't remember your own mother, my dear. You
+have an exaggerated idea of the--the importance of mothers. They are
+only a temporary arrangement." She put out her hands and the girl's
+cheek touched hers for an instant; then she straightened herself and
+walked calmly out of the room. Moya remained a little longer, afraid
+to follow her. "If she would not smile! If she would do anything but
+smile!"
+
+Paul was walking about his room, half an hour later, when Moya stopped
+outside his door. She placed the tray on a table in the hall. The door
+was opened from within. Paul had heard his mother go up before, heard
+her pause at the stairs, and, after a silence, enter her own room.
+
+"She knows that I know," he said to himself. "That knowledge will be
+always between us; we can never look each other in the face again." To
+Moya he endeavored to speak lightly.
+
+"It sounded very gay downstairs to-night. You must have had a houseful."
+
+"I have been with your mother the last hour," answered Moya, vaguely on
+the defensive. Since Paul's return there had been little of the old free
+intercourse in words between them, and without this outlet their mutual
+consciousness became acute. Often as they saw each other during the day,
+the keenest emotion attached to the first meeting of their eyes.
+
+Paul was unnerved by his sudden recall from death to life. Its contrasts
+were overwhelming to his starved senses: from the dirt and dearth and
+grimy despair of his burial hutch in the snow to this softly lighted,
+close-curtained room, warm and sweet with flowers; from the gaunt,
+unshaven spectre of the packer and his ghostly revelations, to Moya,
+meekly beautiful, her bright eyes lowered as she trailed her soft skirts
+across the carpet; Moya seated opposite, silent, conscious of him
+in every look and movement. Her lovely hands lay in her lap, and the
+thought of holding them in his made him tremble; and when he recalled
+the last time he had kissed her he grew faint. He longed to throw
+off this exhausting self-restraint, but feared to betray his helpless
+passion which he deemed an insult to his soul's worship of her.
+
+And she was thinking: "Is this all it is going to mean--his coming
+home--our being together? And I was almost his wife!"
+
+"So it was my mother you were talking to in the study? I thought I heard
+a man's voice."
+
+"It was the doctor. Your mother was not quite herself this evening. He
+came in to see her, but he does not think she is ill. 'Rest and change,'
+he says she needs."
+
+Paul gave the words a certain depth of consideration. "Are you as well
+as usual, Moya?"
+
+"Oh, I am always well," she answered cheerlessly. "I seem to thrive on
+anything--everything," she corrected herself, and blushed.
+
+The blush made him gasp. "You are more beautiful than ever. I had
+forgotten that beauty is a physical fact. The sight of you confuses me."
+
+"I always told you you were morbid." Moya's happy audacity returned.
+"Now, how long are you going to sit and think about that?"
+
+"Do I sit and think about things?" His reluctant, boyish smile, which
+all women loved, captured his features for a moment. "It is very rude of
+me."
+
+"Suppose I should ask you what you are thinking about?"
+
+"Ah! I am afraid you would say 'morbid' again."
+
+"Try me! You ought to let me know at once if you are going to break out
+in any new form of morbidness."
+
+"I wish it might amuse you, but it wouldn't. Let me put you a
+case--seriously."
+
+Moya smiled. "Once we were serious--ages ago. Do you remember?"
+
+"Do I remember!"
+
+"Well? You are you, and I am I, still."
+
+"Yes; and as full of fateful surprises for each other."
+
+"I bar 'fateful'! That word has the true taint of morbidness."
+
+"But you can't 'bar' fate. Listen: this is a supposing, you know.
+Suppose that an accident had happened to our leader on the way home--to
+your Lieutenant Winslow, we'll say"--
+
+"_My_ lieutenant!"
+
+"Your father's--the regiment's--Lieutenant Winslow 'of ours.' Suppose we
+had brought him back in a state to need a surgeon's help; and without a
+word to any one he should get up and walk out of the hospital with his
+hurts not healed, and no one knew why, or where he had gone? There would
+be a stir about it, would there not? And if such a poor spectre of a
+bridegroom as I were allowed to join the search, no one would think it
+strange, or call it a slight to his bride if the fellow went?"
+
+"I take your case," said Moya with a beaming look. "You want to go after
+that poor man who suffered with you."
+
+"Who went with us to save us from our own headstrong folly, and would
+have died there alone"--
+
+"Yes; oh, yes!--before you begin to think about yourself, or me. Because
+he is nobody 'of ours,' and no one seems to feel responsible, and we go
+on talking and laughing just the same!"
+
+"Do they talk of this downstairs?"
+
+"To-night they were talking--oh, with such philosophy! But how came you
+to know it?"
+
+Paul did not answer this question. "Then"--he drew a long breath,--"then
+you could bear it, dear?--the comment, even if they called it a slight
+to you and a piece of quixotic lunacy? Others will not take my case,
+remember."
+
+"What others?"
+
+"They will say: 'Why doesn't he send a better man? He is no trailer.' It
+is true. Money might find him and bring him back, but all the money
+in the world could not teach him to trust his friends. There is a
+misunderstanding here which is too bitter to be borne. It is hard to
+explain,--the intimacy that grows up between men placed as we were. But
+as soon as help reached us, the old lines were drawn. I belonged with
+the officers, he with the men. We could starve together, but we could
+not eat together. He accepted it--put himself on that basis at once.
+He would not come up here as the guest of the Post. He is done with us
+because he thinks we are done with him. And he knows that I must know
+his occupation is gone. He will never guide nor pack a mule again."
+
+"Your mother and my father, they will understand. What do the others
+matter?"
+
+"I must tell you, dear, that I do not propose to tell them--especially
+them--why I go. For I am going. I must go! There are reasons I cannot
+explain." He sighed, and looked wildly at Moya, whose smile was becoming
+mechanical. "I hate the excuse, but it will have to be said that I go
+for a change--for my health. My health! Great God! But it's 'orders,'
+dear."
+
+"Your orders are my orders. You are never going anywhere again without
+me," said Moya slowly. Her smile was gone. She stood up and faced him,
+pale and beautiful. He rose, too, and stooped above her, taking her
+hands and gazing into her full blue eyes arched like the eyes of angels.
+
+"I thought she was a girl! But she is a woman," he said in a voice of
+caressing wonder. "A woman, and not afraid!"
+
+"I am afraid. I will not be left--I will not be left again! Oh, you
+won't take me, even when I offer myself to you!"
+
+"Don't--don't tempt me!" Paul caught her to him with a groan. "You don't
+know me well enough to be afraid of _me!_"
+
+"You! You will not let me know you."
+
+"Oh, hush, dear--hush, my darling! This isn't thinking. We must think
+for our lives. I must take care of you, precious. We don't know where
+this search may take us, or where it will end, or what the end will be."
+He kissed the sleeve of her dress, and put her gently from him, so that
+he could look her in the eyes. She gave him her full pure gaze.
+
+"It is the poor man again. You said he would spoil our lives."
+
+"He is _our_ poor man. You didn't go out of your way to find him. And
+your way is mine."
+
+"It is so heavenly to be convinced! Who taught you to see things at a
+glance,--things I have toiled and bungled over and don't know now if I
+am right! _Who_ taught you?"
+
+"Do you think I stood still while you were away! Oh, my heart was sifted
+out by little pieces."
+
+"You shall sift mine. You shall tell me what to do. For I know nothing!
+Not even if I may dare to take this angel at her word!"
+
+"I knew you would not take me!" the girl whispered wildly. "But I shall
+go."
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+
+"Your tray! It is after ten o'clock. Your 'angel' is a bad nurse." Moya
+brought the tray and set it on a little stand beside Paul's chair. He
+watched her shy, excited preparations as she moved about, conscious of
+his eyes. The saucepan staggered upon the coals and they both sprang
+to save the broth, and pouring it she burnt her thumb a little, and he
+behaved quite like any ordinary young man. They were ecstatic to find
+themselves at ease with each other once more. Moya became disrespectful
+to her charge; such sweet daring looked from her eyes into his as made
+him riotous with joy.
+
+"Won't you take some with me?" He turned the cup towards her and watched
+her as she sipped.
+
+"'It was roast with fire,'" he pronounced softly and dreamily, 'because
+of the dreadful pains. It was to be eaten with bitter herbs'"--
+
+"What _are_ you saying?"--
+
+"'To remind them of their bondage.'"
+
+"I object to your talking about bondage and bitter herbs when you are
+eating aunt Annie's delicious consomme."
+
+He gravely sipped in turn, still with his eyes in hers. "Can you
+remember what you were doing on the second of November?"
+
+"Can I remember!"
+
+"Yes; tell me. I have a reason for asking."
+
+"Tell _me_ the reason first."
+
+"May we have a little more fire, darling? It gives me chills to think of
+that day. It was the last of my wretched pot-hunting. There was nothing
+to hunt for--the game had all gone down, but I did not know that.
+Somewhere in the woods, a long way from the cabin, it began to occur to
+me that I should not make shelter that night. A fool and his strength
+are soon parted. It was a little hollow with trees all around so deep
+that in the distance their trunks closed in like a wall. Snow can make
+a wonderful silence in the woods. I seemed to hear the thoughts of
+everybody I loved in the world outside. There had been a dullness over
+me for weeks. I could not make it true that I had ever been happy--that
+you really loved me. All that part of my life was a dream. Now, in that
+silence suddenly I felt you! I knew that you cared. It was cruel to
+die so if you did love me! It brought the 'pang and spur'! I fought the
+drowsiness that was taking away my pain. I had begun to lean on it as
+a comfortable breast. I woke up and tore myself away from that siren
+sleep. It was my darling,--her love that saved me. Without that thought
+of you, I never would have stirred again. Where were you, what were you
+thinking that brought you so close to me?"
+
+"Ah," said Moya in a whisper. "I was in that room across the hall,
+alone. They were good to me that day; they made excuses and left me to
+myself. In the afternoon a box came,--from poor father,--white roses,
+oh, sweet and cold as snow! I took them up to that room and forced
+myself to go in. It was where my things were kept, the trunks half
+packed, all the drawers and closets full. And my wedding dress laid
+out on the bed. We girls used to go up there at first and look at the
+things, and there was laughing and joking. Sometimes I went up alone and
+tried on my hats before the glass, and thought where I should be when
+I wore them, and--Well! all that stopped. I dreaded to pass the door.
+Everything was left just as it was; the shutters open, the poor dress
+covered with a sheet on the bed. The room was a death-chamber. I went
+in. I carried the roses to my dead. I drew down the sheet and put my
+face in that empty dress. It was my selfish self laid out there--the
+girl who knew just what she wanted and was going to get it if she could.
+Happiness I dared not even pray for--only remembrance--everlasting
+remembrance. That we might know each other again when no more life
+was left to part us--_my_ life. It seemed long to wait, but that was
+my--marriage vow. I gave you all I could, remembrance, faith till
+death."
+
+"Then you are my own!" said Paul, his face transformed. "God was our
+witness. Life of my life--for life and death!" Solemnly he took a
+bridegroom's kiss from her lips.
+
+"How do _you_ know that it is life that parts?"
+
+"Speak so I can understand you!" Moya cried. "Ah, if I might! A man
+must not have secrets from his wife. Secrets are destruction, don't you
+think?"
+
+Moya waited in silence.
+
+"Now we come to this bondage!" He let the words fall like a load from
+his breast. "This is a hideous thing to tell you, but it will cut us
+apart unless you know it. It compels me to do things." He paused, and
+they heard a door down the passage open,--the door of his mother's room.
+A step came forward a few paces. Silence; it retreated, and the door
+closed again stealthily.
+
+"She has not slept," Paul murmured. "Poor soul, poor soul! Now, in what
+I am going to say, please listen to the facts, Moya dear. Try not to
+infer anything from my way of putting things. I shall contradict myself,
+but the facts do that.
+
+"The--the guide--John, we will call him, had a long fever in the woods.
+It would come on worse at night, and then--he talked--words, of a
+shocking intimacy. They say that nothing the mind has come in contact
+with under strong emotion is ever lost, no matter how long in the past.
+It will return under similar excitement. This man had kept stored away
+in his mind, under some such pressure, the words of a woman's message,
+a woman in great distress. Over and over, as his pulse rose, countless
+times he would repeat that message. I went out of the hut at night and
+stood outside in the snow not to hear it, but I knew it as well as he
+did before we got through. Now, this was what he said, word for word.
+
+"'Do not blame me, my dear husband. I have held out in this place as
+long as I can. Don't wait for anything. Don't worry about anything. Come
+back to me with your bare hands. Come!--to your loving Emmy!'
+
+"'Come, come!' he would shout out loud. Then in another voice he would
+whisper, 'Come back to me with your bare hands!' And he would stare at
+his hands and his face would grow awful."
+
+Moya drew a long sigh of scared attention.
+
+"Those words were all over the cabin walls. I heard them and saw them
+everywhere. There was no rest from them. I could have torn the roof down
+to stop his talking, but the words it was not possible to forget. And
+where was the horror of it? Was not this what we had asked, for years,
+to know?"
+
+"You need not explain to me," said Moya, shuddering.
+
+"Yes; but all one's meanest motives were unearthed in a place like that.
+Would I have felt so with a different man? Some one less uncouth? Was it
+the man himself, or his"--
+
+"Paul, if anything could make you a snob, it would be your deadly fear
+of being one!"
+
+"Well, if they had found us then, God knows how that fight would have
+ended. But I won it--when there was nothing left to fight for. I owned
+him--in the grave. We owned each other and took a bashful sort of
+comfort in it, after we had shuffled off the 'Mister' and 'John.' I grew
+quite fond of him, when we were so near death that his English didn't
+matter, or his way of eating. I thought him a very remarkable man,
+you remember, when he was just material for description. He was, he is
+remarkable. Most remarkable in this, he was not ashamed of his son."
+
+"Do please let that part alone. I want to know what he was doing, hiding
+away by himself all these years? I believe he is an impostor!"
+
+"We came to that, of course; though somehow I forgave him before he
+could answer the question. In the long watch beside him I got very close
+to him. It was not possible to believe him a deserter, a sneak. Can you
+take my word for his answer? It was given as a death-bed confession and
+he is living."
+
+"I would take your word for anything except yourself!" Moya did not
+smile, or think what she was saying.
+
+"That answer cleared him, in my mind, with something over to the credit
+of blind, stupid heroism. He is not a clever man. But, speaking as one
+who has teen face to face with the end of things, I can say that I know
+of no act of his that should prevent his returning to his family--if he
+had a family--not even his deserting them for twenty years. _If_, I say!
+
+"When the soldiers found us we were too far gone to realize the issue
+that was upon us. He was the first to take it in. It was on the march
+home, at night, he touched me and began speaking low in our corner of
+the tent. 'As we came in here, so we go out again, and so we stay,' he
+said. I told him it could not be. To suppress what I had learned would
+make the whole of life a lie, a coward's lie. That knowledge belonged to
+my mother. I must render it up to her. To do otherwise would be to treat
+her like a child and to meddle with the purposes of God. 'No honest man
+robs another of his secrets,' he said. He was very much excited. She
+was the only one now to be considered--and what did I know about God's
+purposes? He refused to take my scruples into consideration, except such
+as concerned her. But, after a long argument, very painful, weak as we
+were and whispering in the dark, he yielded this much. If I were bent on
+digging up the dead, as he called it, it must be done in such a way as
+to leave her free. Free she was in law, and she must be given a chance
+to claim her freedom without talk or publicity. Absolute secrecy he
+demanded of me in the mean time. I begged him to see how unfair it was
+to her to bring her face to face with such a discovery without one word
+of preparation, of excuse for him. She would condemn him on the very
+fact of his being alive. So she would, he said, if she were going
+to judge him; not if she felt towards him as--as a wife feels to her
+husband. It was that he wanted to know. It was that or nothing he would
+have from her. 'Bring me face to face with her alone, and as sudden as
+you like. If she knows me, I am the man. And if she wants me back, she
+will know me--and that way I'll come and no other way.' Was not that
+wonderful? A gentleman could hardly have improved on that. Whatever
+feeling he might be supposed to have towards her in the matter we
+could never touch upon. But I think he had his hopes. That decision was
+hanging over us--and I trembled for her. Day before yesterday, was it, I
+persuaded her to see the sick guide. She wondered why I was faint as
+she kissed me good-by. I ought to have prepared her. It was a horrible
+snare. And yet he meant it all in delicacy, a passionate consideration
+for her. Poor fool. How could I prepare _him!_ How could he keep
+pace with the changes in her! After all, it is externals that make
+us,--habits, clothes. Great God! Things you could not speak of to a
+naked soul like him. But he would have it 'straight,' he said--and
+straight he got it. And he is gone; broke away like an animal out of
+a trap. And I am going to find him, to see at least that he has a roof
+over his head. God knows, he may not die for years!"
+
+"She has got years before her too."
+
+"She!--What am I saying! We have plunged into those damnable inferences
+and I haven't given you the facts. Wait. I shall contradict all this in
+a moment. I thought, she must have done this for her children. She
+must be given another chance. And I approached the thing on my very
+knees--not to let her know that I knew, only to hint that I was not
+unprepared, had guessed--could meet it, and help her to meet the
+problems it would bring into our lives. Help her! She stood and faced
+me as if I had insulted her. 'I have been your father's widow for
+twenty-two years. If that fact is not sacred to you, it is to me. Never
+dare to speak of this to me again!'"
+
+"Ah," said Moya in a long-drawn sigh, "then she did not"--
+
+"Oh, she did, explicitly! For I went on to speak of it. It was my last
+chance. I asked her how she--we--could possibly go through with it; how
+with this knowledge between us we could look each other in the face--and
+go on living.
+
+"'Put this hallucination out of your mind,' she said. 'That man and I
+are strangers.'"
+
+"Was that--would you call that a lie?" asked Moya fearfully.
+
+"You can see your answer in her face. I do not say that hers was the
+first lie. It must always be foolish, I think, to evade the facts of
+life as we make them for ourselves. He refused to meet his facts, from
+the noblest motives;--but now I'm tangling you all up again! Rest your
+head here, darling. This is such a business! It is a pity I cannot tell
+you his whole story. Half the meaning of all this is lost. But--here is
+a solemn declaration in writing, signed John Hagar, in which this man we
+are speaking of says that Adam Bogardus was his partner, who died in the
+woods and was buried by his hand; that he knew his story, all the scenes
+and circumstances of his life in many a long talk they had together, as
+well as he knew his own. In his delirium he must have confused himself
+with his old partner, and half in dreams, he said, half in the crazy
+satisfaction of pretending to himself he had a son, he allowed the
+delusion to go on; saw it work upon me, and half feared it, half
+encouraged it. Afterwards he was frightened at the thought of meeting
+my mother, who would know him for an impostor. His seeming scruples were
+fear of exposure, not consideration for her. This was why he guarded
+their interview so carefully. 'No harm's been done,' he says, 'if you'll
+act now like a sensible man. I'll be disappointed in you if you make
+your mother any trouble about this. You've treated me as square as any
+man could treat another. Remember, I say so, and think as kindly as
+you can of a harmless, loony old impostor'--and he signs himself 'John
+Hagar,'--which shows again how one lie leads to another. We go to find
+'John Hagar.'"
+
+"Have you shown your mother this letter? You have not? Paul, you will
+not rob her of her just defense!"
+
+"I will not heap coals of fire on her head! This letter simply completes
+his renunciation, and he meant it for her defense. But when a man signs
+himself 'John Hagar' in the handwriting of my father, it shows that
+somebody is not telling the truth. I used to pore over the old farm
+records in my father's hand at Stone Ridge in the old account books
+stowed away in places where a boy loves to poke and pry. I know it as
+well as I know yours. Do you suppose she would not know it? When a man
+writes as few letters as he does, the handwriting does not change." Paul
+laid the letter upon the coals. "It is the only witness against her, but
+it loses the case."
+
+"She never could have loved him. I never believed she did!" said Moya.
+
+"She thinks she can live out this deep-down, deliberate--But it will
+kill her, Moya. Her life is ended from this on. How could I have
+driven her to that excruciating choice! I ought to have listened to him
+altogether or not at all. There is a hell for meddlers, and the ones who
+meddle for conscience' sake are the deepest damned, I think."
+
+Moya came and wreathed her arm in his, and they paced the room in
+silence. At length she said, "If we go to find John Hagar, shall we not
+be meddling again? A man who respects a woman's freedom must love his
+own. It is the last thing left him. Don't hunt him down. I believe
+nothing could hurt him now like seeing you again."
+
+"He shall not see me unless he wants to, but he shall know where I stand
+on this question of the Impostor. It shall be managed so that even he
+can see I am protecting her. No, call himself what he will, the tie
+between him and me is another of those facts."
+
+"But do you love him, Paul?"
+
+"Oh--I cannot forget him! He is--just as he used to be--'poor father out
+there in the cold.' We must find him and comfort him somehow."
+
+"For our own peace of mind? Forgive me for arguing when everything is so
+difficult. But he is a man--a brave man who would rather be forever out
+in the cold than be a burden. Do not rob him of his right to _be_ John
+Hagar if he wants to, for the sake of those he loves. You do not tell me
+it was love, but I am sure it was, in some mistaken way, that drove him
+into exile. Only love as pure as his can be our excuse for dragging him
+back. He did not want shelter and comfort from her. Only one thing. Have
+we got that to give him?"
+
+"Well then, I go for my own sake--it is a physical necessity; and I go
+for hers. She has put it out of her own power to help him. It will ease
+her a little to know I am trying to reach him in his forlorn disguise."
+
+"But you were not going to tell her?"
+
+"In words, no. But she will understand. There is a strange clairvoyance
+between us, as if we were accomplices in a crime!"
+
+Moya reflected silently. This search which Paul had set his heart upon
+would equally work his own cure, she saw. Nor could she now imagine for
+themselves any lover's paradise inseparable from this moral tragedy,
+which she saw would be fibre of their fibre, life of their life. A
+family is an organism; one part may think to deny or defy another, but
+with strange pains the subtle union exerts itself; distance cannot break
+the thread.
+
+They kissed each other solemnly like little children on the eve of a
+long journey full of awed expectancy.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stood holding her door ajar as Moya passed on her way
+downstairs. "You are very late," she uttered hoarsely. "Is nothing
+settled yet?"
+
+"Everything!" Moya hesitated and forced a smile, "everything but where
+we shall go. We will start--and decide afterwards."
+
+"You go together? That is right. Moya, you have a genius for happiness!"
+
+"I wish I had a genius for making people sleep who lie awake hours in
+the night thinking about other people!"
+
+"If you mean me, people of my age need very little sleep."
+
+"May I kiss you good-night, Paul's mother?"
+
+"You may kiss me because I am Paul's mother, not because I do not
+sleep."
+
+Moya's lips touched a cheek as white and almost as cold as the frosted
+window-panes through which the moon was glimmering. She thought of the
+icy roses on her wedding dress.
+
+Downstairs her father was smoking his bedtime cigar. Mrs. Creve, very
+sleepy and cosy and flushed, leaned over the smouldering bed of coals.
+She held out her plump, soft hand to Moya.
+
+"Come here and be scolded! We have been scolding you steadily for the
+last hour."
+
+"If you want that young man to get his strength back, you'd better not
+keep him up talking half the night," the colonel growled softly. "Do you
+see what time it is?"
+
+Moya knelt and leaned her head against her father. She reached one hand
+to Mrs. Creve. They did not speak again till her weak moment had passed.
+"It will be very soon," she said, pressing the warm hand that stroked
+her own. "You will help me pack, aunt Annie; and then you'll stay--with
+father? I know you are glad to have me out of the way at last!"
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+
+Because they had set forth on a grim and sorrowful quest, it need not
+be supposed that Paul and Moya were a pair of sorrowful pilgrims. It was
+their wedding journey. At the outset Moya had said: "We are doing the
+best we know. For what we don't know, let us leave it and not brood."
+
+They did not enter at once upon the more eccentric stages of the search.
+They went by way of the Great Northern to Portland, descending from snow
+to roses and drenching rains. At Pendleton, which is at the junction
+of three great roads, Paul sent tracers out through express agents
+and train officials along the remotest slender feeders of these lines.
+Through the same agents it was made known that for any service rendered
+or expense incurred on behalf of the person described, his friends would
+hold themselves gratefully responsible.
+
+At Portland, Paul searched the steamer lists and left confidential
+orders in the different transportation offices; and Moya wrote to his
+mother--a woman's letter, every page shining with happiness and as free
+from apparent forethought as a running brook.
+
+They returned by the Great Northern and Lake Coeur d'Alene, stopping
+over at Fort Sherman to visit Mrs. Creve, who was giddy with joy
+over the wholesome change in Paul. She, too, wrote a woman's letter
+concerning that visit, to the colonel, which cleared a crowd of shadows
+from his lonely hearth.
+
+Thence again to Pendleton came the seekers, and Paul gathered in his
+lines, but found nothing; so cast them forth again. But through all
+these distant elaborations of the search, in his own mind he saw the
+old man creeping away by some near, familiar trail and lying hid in some
+warm valley in the hills, his prison and his home.
+
+It was now the last week in March. The travelers' bags were in the
+office, the carriage at the door, when a letter--pigeon-holed and
+forgotten since received some three weeks before--was put into Paul's
+hand.
+
+I run up against your ad. in the Silver City Times [the communication
+began]. If you haven't found your man yet, maybe I can put you onto
+the right lead. I'm driving a jerky on the road from Mountain Home to
+Oriana, but me and the old man we don't jibe any too well. I've got
+a sort of disgust on me. Think I'll quit soon and go to mining. Jimmy
+Breen he runs the Ferry, he can tell you all I know. Fifty miles from
+Mountain Home good road can make it in one day. Yours Respecfully,
+
+J. STRATTON.
+
+It was in following up this belated clue that the pilgrims had come to
+the Ferry inn, crossing by team from valley to valley, cutting off a
+great bend of the Oregon Short Line as it traverses the Snake River
+desert; those bare high plains escarped with basalt bluffs that
+open every fifty miles or so to let a road crawl down to some little
+rope-ferry supported by sheep-herders, ditch contractors, miners,
+emigrants, ranchmen, all the wild industries of a country in the dawn of
+enterprise.
+
+Business at the Ferry had shrunk since the railroad went through. The
+house-staff consisted of Jimmy Breen, a Chinese cook of the bony, tartar
+breed, sundry dogs, and a large bachelor cat that mooned about the empty
+piazzas. In a young farming country, hungry for capital, Jimmy could not
+do a cash business, but everything was grist that came to his mill; and
+he was quick to distinguish the perennial dead beat from a genuine case
+of hard luck.
+
+"That's a good axe ye have there," pointing suggestively to a new one
+sticking out of the rear baggage of an emigrant outfit. "Ye better l'ave
+that with me for the dollar that's owing me. If ye have money to buy
+new axes ye can't be broke entirely." Or: "Slip the halter on that calf
+behind there. The mother hasn't enough to keep it alive. There's har'ly
+a dollar's wort' of hide on its bones, but I'll take it to save it
+droppin' on the road." Or, he would try sarcasm: "Well, we'll be
+shuttin' her down in the spring. Then ye can go round be Walter's Ferry
+and see if they'll trust ye there." Or: "Why wasn't ye workin' on the
+Ditch last winter? Settin' smokin' your poipe in the tules, the wife and
+young ones packin' sagebrush to kape ye warm!"
+
+On the morning after their distinguished arrival, Jimmy's guests came
+down late to a devastated breakfast-table. Little heaps of crumbs here
+and there showed where earlier appetites had had their destined hour and
+gone their way. At an impartial distance from the top and the foot of
+the table stood the familiar group of sauce and pickle bottles, every
+brand dear to the cowboy, including the "surrup-jug" adhering to its
+saucer. There was a fresh-gathered bunch of wild phlox by Moya's plate
+in a tumbler printed round the edge with impressions of a large moist
+male thumb.
+
+"Catchee plenty," the Chinaman grinned, pointing to the plain outside
+where the pale sage-brush quivered stiffly in the wind. "Bymbye plenty
+come. Pretty col' now."
+
+"You'll be getting a large hump on yourself, Han, me boy. 'T is a cash
+crowd we have here--and a lady, by me sowl!" Thus Jimmy exhorted his
+household. Times were looking up. They would be a summer resort before
+the Ditch went through; it should be mentioned in the Ditch company's
+prospectus. Jimmy had put his savings into land-office fees and had a
+hopeful interest in the Ditch.
+
+A spur in the head is worth two in the heel. Without a word from "the
+boss" Han had found time to shave and powder and polish his brown
+forehead and put on his whitest raiment over his baggiest trousers.
+There was loud panic among the fowls in the corral. The cat had
+disappeared; the jealous dogs hung about the doors and were pushed out
+of the way by friends of other days.
+
+Seated by the office fire, Paul was conferring with Jimmy, who was
+happy with a fresh pipe and a long story to tell to a patient and paying
+listener. He rubbed the red curls back from his shining forehead,
+took the pipe from his teeth, and guided a puff of smoke away from his
+auditor.
+
+"I seen him settin' over there on his blankets,"--he pointed with
+his pipe to the opposite shore plainly visible through the office
+windows,--"but he niver hailed me, so I knowed he was broke. Some, whin
+they're broke, they holler all the louder. Ye would think they had an
+appointment wit' the Governor and he sint his car'iage to meet them. But
+he was as humble, he was, as a yaller dog.--Out! Git out from here--the
+pack of yez! Han, shut the dure an' drive thim bloody curs off the
+piazzy. They're trackin' up the whole place.--As I was sayin', sor,
+there he stayed hunched up in the wind, waitin' on the chanst of a team
+comin', and I seen he was an ould daddy. I stud the sight of him as long
+as I cud, me comin' and goin'. He fair wore me out. So I tuk the boat
+over for 'im. One of his arrums he couldn't lift from the shoulder, and
+I give him a h'ist wit' his bundle. Faith, it was light! 'Twinty years
+a-getherin',' he cackles, slappin' it. 'Ye've had harrud luck,' I says.
+''T is not much of a sheaf ye are packin' home.' 'That's as ye look at
+it,' he says.
+
+"I axed him what way was he goin'. He was thinking to get a lift as far
+as Oriana, if the stages was runnin' on that road. 'Then ye 'll have to
+bide here till morning,' I says, 'for ye must have met the stage
+goin' the other way.' 'I met nothing,' says he; 'I come be way of the
+bluffs,'--which is a strange way for one man travelin' afoot.
+
+"The grub was on the table, and I says, 'Sit by and fill yourself up.'
+His cheeks was fallin' in wit' the hunger. With that his poor ould eye
+begun to water. 'Twas one weak eye he had that was weepin' all the time.
+'I've got out of the habit of reg'lar aitin',' he says. 'It don't take
+much to kape me goin'.' 'Niver desave yourself, sor! 'T is betther feed
+three hungry men than wan "no occasion."' His appetite it grew on him
+wit' every mouthful. There was a boundless emptiness to him. He lay
+there on the bench and slep' the rest of the evening, and I left him
+there wit' a big fire at night. And the next day at noon we h'isted him
+up beside of Joe Stratton. A rip-snorter of a wind was blowin' off the
+Silver City peaks. His face was drawed like a winter apple, but he wint
+off happy. I think he was warm inside of himself."
+
+"Did you ask him his name?"
+
+"Sure. Why not? John Treagar he called himself."
+
+"Treagar? Hagar, you mean!"
+
+"It was Treagar he said."
+
+"John Hagar is the man I am looking for."
+
+"Treagar--Hagar? 'T is comin' pretty close to it."
+
+"About what height and build was he?"
+
+"He was not to say a tall man; and he wasn't so turrible short neither.
+His back was as round as a Bible. A kind of pepper and saltish beard he
+had, and his hair was blacker than his beard but white in streaks."
+
+"A _dark_ man, was he?"
+
+"He would be a _dark_ man if he was younger."
+
+"The man I want is blue-eyed."
+
+"His eyes was blue--a kind of washed-out gray that maybe was blue wanst;
+and one of them always weepin' wit' the cold."
+
+"And light brown hair mixed with gray, like sand and ashes--mostly
+ashes; and a thin straggling beard, thinner on the cheeks? A high head
+and a tall stooping figure--six feet at least; hands with large joints
+and a habit of picking at them when"--
+
+"Ye are goin' too fast for me now, sor. He was not that description of
+a man, nayther the height nor the hair of him. Sure't is a pity for ye
+comin' this far, and him not the man at all. Faith, I wish I was the man
+meself! I wonder at Joe Stratton anyhow! He's a very hasty man, is Joe.
+He jumps in wit' both feet, so he does. I could have told ye that."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Moya, always helplessly natural, and now very tired as well, when Paul
+described with his usual gravity this anti-climax, fell below all the
+dignities at once in a burst of childish giggling. Paul looked on
+with an embarrassed smile, like a puzzled affectionate dog at the
+incomprehensible mirth of humans. Paul was certainly deficient in humor
+and therefore in breadth. But what woman ever loved her lover the less
+for having discovered his limitations? Humor runs in families of the
+intenser cultivation. The son of the soil remains serious in the face of
+life's and nature's ironies.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+THE STAR IN THE EAST
+
+So the search paused, while the searchers rested and revised their
+plans. Spring opened in the valley as if for them alone. There were
+mornings "proud and sweet," when the humblest imagination could have
+pictured Aurora and her train in the jocund clouds that trooped along
+the sky,--wind-built processions which the wind dispersed. Wild flowers
+spread so fast they might have been spilled from the rainbow scarf of
+Iris fleeting overhead. The river was in flood, digging its elbows into
+its muddy banks. The willow and wild-rose thickets stooped and washed
+their spring garments in its tide.
+
+Primeval life and love were all around them. Meadow larks flung their
+brief jets of song into the sunlight; the copses rustled with wings;
+wood-doves cooed from the warm sunny hollows, and the soft booming of
+their throaty call was like a beating in the air,--the pulse of spring.
+They had found their Garden. Humanity in the valley passed before them
+in forms as interesting and as alien as the brother beasts to Adam:
+the handsome driver of the jerky, Joe Stratton's successor, who sat at
+dinner opposite and combed his flowing mustache with his fork in a lazy,
+dandified way; the darkened faces of sheep-herders enameled by sun and
+wind, their hair like the winter coats of animals; the slow-eyed farmers
+with the appetites of horses; the spring recruits for the ranks of labor
+footing it to distant ranches, each with his back-load of bedding, and
+the dust of three counties on his garments.
+
+The sweet forces of Nature shut out, for a season, Paul's _cri du
+coeur_. One may keep a chamber sacred to one's sadder obligations and
+yet the house be filled with joy. Further ramifications of the search
+were mapped out with Jimmy's indifferent assistance. For good reasons of
+his own, Jimmy did little to encourage an early start. He would explain
+that his maps were of ancient date and full of misinformation as to
+stage routes. "See that now! The stages was pulled off that line five
+year ago, on account of the railroad cuttin' in on them. Ye couldn't
+make it wid'out ye took a camp outfit. There's ne'er a station left, and
+when ye come to it, it's ruins ye'll find. A chimbly and a few rails,
+if the mule-skinners hasn't burned them. 'Tis a country very devoid
+of fuel; sagebrush and grease-wood, and a wind, bedad! that blows the
+grass-seeds into the next county."
+
+When these camping-trips were proposed to Moya, she hesitated and
+responded languidly; but when Paul suggested leaving her even for a day,
+her fears fluttered across his path and wiled him another way. Vaguely
+he felt that she was unlike herself--less buoyant, though often
+restless; and sometimes he fancied she was pale underneath her
+sun-burned color like that of rose-hips in October. Various causes kept
+him inert, while strength mounted in his veins, and life seemed made for
+the pure joy of living.
+
+The moon of May in that valley is the moon of roses, for the heats once
+due come on apace. The young people gave up their all-day horseback
+rides and took morning walks instead, following the shore-paths lazily
+to shaded coverts dedicated to those happy silences which it takes two
+to make. Or, they climbed the bluffs and gazed at the impenetrable
+vast horizon, and thought perhaps of their errand with that pang
+of self-reproach which, when shared, becomes a subtler form of
+self-indulgence.
+
+But at night, all the teeming life of the plain rushed up into the sky
+and blazed there in a million friendly stars. After the languor of the
+sleepy afternoons, it was like a fresh awakening--the dawn of those
+white May nights. The wide plain stirred softly through all its miles
+of sage. The river's cadenced roar paused beyond the bend and outbroke
+again. All that was eerie and furtive in the wild dark found a curdling
+voice in the coyote's hunting-call.
+
+In a hollow concealed by sage, not ten minutes' walk from the Ferry inn,
+unknown to the map-maker and innocent of all use, lay a perfect floor
+for evening pacing with one's eyes upon the stars. It was the death mask
+of an ancient lake, done in purest alkali silt, and needing only the
+shadows cast by a low moon to make the illusion almost unbelievable.
+Slow precipitation, season after season, as the water dried, had left
+the lake bed smooth as a cast in plaster. Subsequent warpings had lifted
+the alkali crust into thin-lipped wavelets. But once upon the floor
+itself the resemblance to water vanished. The warpings and Grumblings
+took the shape of earth as made by water and baked by fire. Moya
+compared it to a bit of the dead moon fallen to show us what we are
+coming to. They paced it soft-footed in tennis shoes lest they should
+crumble its talc-like whiteness. But they read no horoscopes, for they
+were shy of the future in speaking to each other,--and they made no
+plans.
+
+One evening Moya had said to Paul: "I can understand your mother so much
+better now that I am a wife. I think most women have a tendency towards
+the state of being _un_married. And if one had--children, it would
+increase upon one very fast. A widow and a mother--for twenty years. How
+could she be a wife again?"
+
+Paul made no reply to this speech which long continued to haunt him;
+especially as Moya wrote more frequently to his mother and did not offer
+to show him her letters. In their evening walks she seemed distrait, and
+during the day more restless.
+
+One night of their nightly pacings she stopped and stood long, her head
+thrown back, her eyes fixed upon the dizzy star-deeps. Paul waited a
+step behind her, touching her shoulders with his hands. Suddenly she
+reeled and sank backwards into his arms. He held her, watching her
+lovely face grow whiter; her eyelids closed. She breathed slowly,
+leaning her whole weight upon him.
+
+Coming to herself, she smiled and said it was nothing. She had been that
+way before. "But--we must go home. We must have a home--somewhere.
+I want to see your mother. Paul, be good to her--forgive her--for my
+sake!"
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+
+Aunt Polly Lewis was disappointed in the latest of her beneficiaries.
+It was nine years since her husband had locked up his savings in the
+Mud Springs ranch, a neglected little health-plant at the mouth of the
+Bruneau. If you were troubled with rheumatism, or a crick in the back,
+or your "pancrees" didn't act or your blood was "out o' fix, why, you'd
+better go up to Looanders' for a spell and soak yourself in that blue
+mud and let aunt Polly diet ye and dost ye with yerb tea."
+
+When Leander courted aunt Polly in the interests of his sanitarium, she
+was reputed the best nurse in Ada County. The widow--by desertion--of a
+notorious quack doctor of those parts: it was an open question whether
+his medicine had killed or her nursing had cured the greater number of
+confiding sick folk. Leander drove fifty miles to catechise this notable
+woman, and finding her sound on the theory of packs hot and cold, and
+skilled in the practice of rubbing,--and having made the incidental
+discovery that she was a person not without magnetism,--he decided on
+the spot to add her to the other attractions of Mud Springs ranch; and
+she drove home with him next day, her trunk in the back of his wagon.
+
+The place was no sinecure. Bricks without straw were a child's pastime
+to the cures aunt Polly and the Springs effected without a pretense
+to the comforts of life in health, to say nothing of sickness. Modern
+conveniences are costly, and how are you to get the facilities for "pay
+patients" when you have no patients that pay! Prosperity had overlooked
+the Bruneau, or had made false starts there, through detrimental schemes
+that gave the valley a bad name with investors. The railroad was still
+fifty miles away, and the invalid public would not seek life itself,
+in these days of luxurious travel, at the cost of a twelve hours'
+stage-ride. However, as long as the couple had a roof over their
+heads and the Springs continued to plop and vomit their strange,
+chameleon-colored slime, Leander would continue to bring home the sick
+and the suffering for Polly and the Springs to practice on. Health
+became his hobby, and in time, with isolation thrown in, it began to
+invade his common sense. He tried in succession all the diet fads of the
+day and wound up a convert to the "Ralston" school of eating. Aunt Polly
+had clung a little longer to the flesh-pots, but the charms of a system
+that abolished half the labor of cooking prevailed with her at last, and
+in the end she kept a sharper eye upon Leander at mealtime than ever he
+had upon her.
+
+The ignorant gorgings of their neighbors were a head-shaking and a
+warning to them, and more than once Leander's person was in jeopardy
+through his zealous but unappreciated concern for the brother who eats
+in darkness.
+
+He had started out one winter morning from Bisuka, a virtuous man. His
+team had breakfasted, but not he. A Ralstonite does not load up his
+stomach at dawn after the manner of cattle, and such pious substitutes
+for a cup of coffee as are permitted the faithful cannot always be had
+for a price. At Indian Creek he hauled up to water his team, and to
+make for himself a cinnamon-colored decoction by boiling in hot water
+a preparation of parched grains which he carried with him. This he
+accomplished in an angle of the old corral fence out of the wind. There
+is no comfort nor even virtue in eating cold dust with one's sandwiches.
+Leander sunk his great white tushes through the thick slices of
+whole-wheat bread and tasted the paste of peanut meal with which they
+were spread. He ate standing and slapped his leg to warm his driving
+hand.
+
+A flutter of something colored, as a garment, caught his eye, directing
+it to the shape of a man, rolled in an old blue blanket, lying
+motionless in a corner of the tumble-down wall. "Drunk, drunk as a hog!"
+pronounced Leander. For no man in command of himself would lie down to
+sleep in such a place. As if to refute this accusation, the wind
+turned a corner of the blanket quietly off a white face with closed
+eyelids,--an old, worn, gentle face, appealing in its homeliness, though
+stamped now with the dignity of death. Leander knelt and handled the
+body tenderly. It was long before he satisfied himself that life was
+still there. Another case for Polly and the Springs. A man worth saving,
+if Leander knew a man; one of the trustful, trustworthy sort. His heart
+went out to him on the instant as to a friend from home.
+
+It was closing in for dusk when he reached the Ferry. Jimmy was away,
+and Han, in high dudgeon, brought the boat over in answer to Leander's
+hail. He had grouse to dress for supper, inconsiderately flung in upon
+him at the last moment by the stage, four hours late.
+
+"Huh! Why you no come one hour ago? All time 'Hullo, hullo'! Je' Cli'!
+me no dam felly-man--me dam cook! Too much man say 'Hullo'!"
+
+The prospect was not good for help at the Ferry inn, so, putting his
+trust in Polly and the Springs, Leander pushed on up the valley.
+
+When Aunt Polly's patients were of the right sort, they stayed on after
+their recovery and helped Leander with the ranch work. But for the most
+part they "hit the trail" again as soon as their ills were healed,
+not forgetting to advertise the Springs to other patients of their own
+class. The only limit to this unenviable popularity was the size of the
+house. Leander saw no present advantage in building.
+
+But in case they ever did build--and the time was surely coming!--here
+was the very person they had been looking for. Cast your bread upon the
+waters. The winter's bread and care and shelter so ungrudgingly bestowed
+had returned to them many-fold in the comfortable sense of dependence
+and unity they felt in this last beneficiary, the old man of Indian
+Creek whom they called "Uncle John."
+
+"The kindest old creetur' ever lived! Some forgitful, but everybody's
+liable to forgit. Only tell him one thing at once, and don't confuse
+him, and he'll git through an amazin' sight of chores in a day."
+
+"Just the very one we'll want to wait on the men patients," Aunt Polly
+chimed in. "He can carry up meals and keep the bathrooms clean, and wash
+out the towels, and he's the best hand with poultry. He takes such good
+care of the old hens they're re'lly ashamed not to lay!"
+
+It was spring again; old hopes were putting forth new leaves. Leander
+had heard of a capitalist in the valley; a young one, too, more prone to
+enthusiasm if shown the right thing.
+
+"I'm going down to Jimmy's to fetch them up here!" Leander announced.
+
+"Are there two of them?"
+
+"He has brought his wife out with him. They are a young couple. He's the
+only son of a rich widow in New York, and Jimmy says they've got money
+to burn. Jimmy don't take much stock in this 'ere 'wounded guide'
+story--thinks it's more or less of a blind. He's feeling around for
+a good investment--desert land or mining claims. Jimmy thinks he
+represents big interests back East."
+
+Aunt Polly considered, and the corners of her mouth moistened as she
+thought of the dinner she would snatch from the jaws of the system on
+the day these young strangers should visit the ranch.
+
+"By Gum!" Leander shouted. "I wonder if Uncle John wouldn't know
+something about the party they're advertising for. That'd be the way
+to find out if they're really on the scent. I'll take him down with
+me--that's what I'll _do_--and let him have a talk with the young man
+himself. It'll make a good opening. Are you listening, Polly?" She was
+not. "I wish you'd git him to fix himself up a little. Layout one o'
+my clean shirts for him, and I'll take him down with me day after
+to-morrow."
+
+"I'll have a fresh churning to-morrow," Aunt Polly mused. "You can take
+a little pat of it with you. I won't put no salt in it, and I'll send
+along a glass or two of my wild strawberry jam. It takes an awful time
+to pick the berries, but I guess it'll be appreciated after the table
+Jimmy sets. I don't believe Jimmy'll be offended?"
+
+"Bogardus is their name," continued Leander. "Mr. and Mrs. Bogardus,
+from New York. Jimmy's got it down in his hotel book and he's showing
+it to everybody. Jimmy's reel childish about it. I tell him one swallow
+don't make a summer."
+
+Uncle John had come into the room and sat listening, while a yellow
+pallor crept over his forehead and cheeks. He moved to get up once, and
+then sat down again weakly.
+
+"What's the matter, Uncle?" Aunt Polly eyed him sharply. "You been out
+there chopping wood too long in this hot sun. What did I tell you?"
+
+She cleared the decks for action. Paler and paler the old man grew. He
+was not able to withstand her vigorous sympathies. She had him tucked up
+on the calico lounge and his shoes off and a hot iron at his feet; but
+while she was hurrying up the kettle to make him a drink of something
+hot, he rose and slipped up the outside stairs to his bedroom in the
+attic. There he seated himself on the side of his neat bed which he
+always made himself camp fashion,--the blankets folded lengthwise with
+just room for one quiet sleeper to crawl inside; and there he sat,
+opening and clinching his hands, a deep perplexity upon his features.
+
+Aunt Polly called to him and began to read the riot act, but Leander
+said: "Let him be! He gits tired o' being fussed over. You're at him
+about something or other the whole blessed time."
+
+"Well, I have to! My gracious! He'd forgit to come in to his meals if I
+didn't keep him on my mind."
+
+"It just strikes me--what am I going to call him when I introduce him to
+those folks? Did he ever tell you what his last name is?"
+
+"I wouldn't be surprised," Aunt Polly lowered her voice, "if he couldn't
+remember it himself! I've heard of such cases. Whenever I try to draw
+him out to talk about himself and what happened to him before you found
+him, it breaks him all up; seemingly gives him a back-set every time.
+He sort of slinks into himself in that queer, lost way--just like he was
+when he first come to."
+
+"He's had a powerful jar to his constitution, and his mind is taking a
+rest." Leander was fond of a diagnosis. "There wasn't enough life left
+in him to keep his faculties and his bod'ly organs all a-going at once.
+The upper story's to let."
+
+"I wish you'd go upstairs, and see what he is doing up there."
+
+"Aw, no! Let him be. He likes to go off by himself and do his thinking.
+I notice it rattles him to be talked to much. He sets out there on the
+choppin'-block, looking at the bluffs--ever notice? He looks and
+don't see nothin', and his lips keep moving like he was learning a
+spellin'-lesson. If I speak to him sharp, he hauls himself together and
+smiles uneasy, but he don't know what I said. I tell you he's waking up;
+coming to his memories, and trying to sort 'em out."
+
+"That's just what _I_ say," Aunt Polly retorted, "but he's got to eat
+his meals. He can't live on memories."
+
+Uncle John was restless that evening, and appeared to be excited. He
+waited upon Aunt Polly after supper with a feverish eagerness to be of
+use. When all was in order for bedtime, and Leander rose to wind the
+clock, he spoke. It was getting about time to roll up his blankets
+and pull out, he said. Leander felt for the ledge where the clock-key
+belonged, and made no answer.
+
+"I was saying--I guess it's about time for me to be moving on. The grass
+is starting"--
+
+"Are you cal'latin' to live on grass?" Leander drawled with cutting
+irony. "Gettin' tired of the old woman's cooking? Well, she ain't much
+of a cook!"
+
+Uncle John remained silent, working at his hands. His mouth, trembled
+under his thin straggling beard. "I never was better treated in my life,
+and you know it. It ain't handsome of you, Lewis, to talk that way!"
+
+"He don't mean nothing, Uncle John! What makes you so foolish, Looander!
+He just wants you to know there's no begrudgers around here. You're
+welcome, and more than welcome, to settle down and camp right along with
+us."
+
+"Winter and summer!" Leander put in, "if you're satisfied. There's
+nobody in a hurry to see the last of ye."
+
+Uncle John's mild but determined resistance was a keen disappointment
+to his friends. Leander thought himself offended. "What fly's stung you,
+anyhow! Heard from any of your folks lately?"
+
+The old man smiled.
+
+"Got any money salted down that needs turning?"
+
+"Looander! Quit teasing of him!"
+
+"Let him have his fun, ma'am. It's all he's likely to get out of me. I
+have got a little money," he pursued. "'T would be an insult to name it
+in the same breath with what you've done for me. I'd like to leave it
+here, though. You could pass it on. You'll have chances enough. 'T ain't
+likely I'll be the last one you'll take in and do for, and never git
+nothing out of it in return."
+
+There was a mild sensation, as the speaker, fumbling in his loose
+trousers, appeared to be seeking for that money. Aunt Polly's eyes
+flamed indignation behind her tears. She was a foolish, warm-hearted
+creature, and her eyes watered on the least excuse.
+
+"Looander, you shouldn't have taunted him," she admonished her husband,
+who felt he had been a little rough.
+
+"Look here, Uncle John, d'you ever know anybody who wasn't by way of
+needing help some time in their lives? We don't ask any one who comes
+here"--
+
+"He didn't come!" Aunt Polly corrected.
+
+"Well, who was brought, then! We don't ask for their character, nor
+their private history, nor their bank account. I don't know but you're
+the first one for years I've ever took a real personal shine to, and
+we've h'isted a good many up them stairs that wasn't able to walk much
+further. I'd like you to stay as a favor to us, dang it!"
+
+Leander delivered this invitation as if it were a threat. His
+straight-cut mustache stiffened and projected itself by the pressure of
+his big lips; his dark red throat showed as many obstinate creases as an
+old snapping-turtle's.
+
+"I'm much obliged to you both. I want you to remember that. We--I--I'll
+talk with ye in the morning."
+
+"That means he's going all the same," said Leander, after Uncle John had
+closed the outside door.
+
+Sure enough, next morning he had made up his little pack, oiled his
+boots, and by breakfast-time was ready for the road. They argued the
+point long and fiercely with him whether he should set out on foot or
+wait a day and ride with Leander to the Ferry. It was not supposed he
+could be thinking of any other road. By to-morrow, if he would but wait,
+Aunt Polly would have comfortably outfitted him after the custom of the
+house; given his clothes a final "going over" to see everything taut
+for the journey, shoved a week's rations into a corn-sack, choosing such
+condensed forms of nourishment as the system allowed--nay, straining a
+point and smuggling in a nefarious pound or two of real miner's coffee.
+
+Aunt Polly's distress so weighed with her patient that he consented
+to remain overnight and ride with Leander as far as the dam across the
+Bruneau, at its junction with the Snake. There he would cross and take
+the trail down the river, cutting off several miles of the road to the
+Ferry. As for going on to see Jimmy or Jimmy's "folks," the nervous
+resistance which this plan excited warned the good couple not to press
+the old man too far, or he might give them the slip altogether.
+
+A strangeness in his manner which this last discussion had brought out,
+lay heavy on aunt Polly's mind all day after the departure of the team
+for the Ferry. She watched the two men drive off in silence, Leander's
+bush beard reddening in the sun, his big body filling more than his half
+of the seat.
+
+"Well, by Gum! If he ain't the blamedest, most per-sistent old fool!"
+he complained to his wife that night. Their first words were of the old
+man, already missed like one of the family from the humble place he had
+made for himself. Leander was still irritable over his loss. "I set him
+down with his grub and blankets, and I watched him footing it acrost the
+dam. He done it real handsome, steady on his pins. Then he set down
+and waited, kind o' dreaming, like he used to, settin' on the
+choppin'-block. I hailed him. 'What's the matter?' I says. 'Left
+anything?' No: every time I hailed he took off his hat and waved to me
+real pleasant. Nothing the matter. There he set. Well, thinks I, I can't
+stay here all day watching ye take root. So I drove on a piece. And, by
+Gum! when I looked back going around the bend, there he went a-pikin'
+off up the bluffs--just a-humping himself for all he was worth. I
+wouldn't like to think he was cunning, but it looked that way for
+sure,--turning me off the scent and then taking to the bluffs like he
+was sent for! Where in thunder is he making for? He knows just as well
+as I do--you have heard me tell him a dozen times--the stages were
+hauled off that Wood River road five year and more ago. He won't git
+nowhere! And he won't meet up with a team in a week's walking."
+
+"His food will last him a week if he's careful; he's no great eater. I
+ain't afraid his feet will get lost; he's to home out of doors almost
+anywhere;--it's his head I'm afraid of. He's got some sort of a skew on
+him. I used to notice if he went out for a little walk anywhere, he'd
+always slope for the East."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+A STATION IN THE DESERT
+
+That forsworn identity which Adam Bogardus had submitted to be clothed
+in as a burial garment was now become a thing for the living to flee
+from. He had seen a woman in full health whiten and cower before
+it;--she who stood beside his bed and looked at him with dreadful eyes,
+eyes of his girl-wife growing old in the likeness of her father. Hard,
+reluctant eyes forced to own the truth which the ashen lips denied.
+Are we responsible for our silences? He had not spoken to her. Nay, the
+living must speak first, or the ghostly dead depart unquestioned. He
+asked only that he might forget her and be himself forgotten. If it were
+that woman's right to call herself Emily Bogardus, then was there no
+Adam her husband. Better the old disguise which left him free to work
+out his own sentence and pay his forfeit to the law. He had never
+desired that one breath of it should be commuted, or wished to accept an
+enslaving pardon from those for whose sake he had put himself out of the
+way. If he could have taken his own comparative spiritual measurement,
+he might have smiled at the humor of that forgiveness promised him in
+the name of the Highest by his son.
+
+For many peaceful years solitude had been the habit of his soul. Gently
+as he bore with human obligations, he escaped from them with a sense of
+relief which shamed him somewhat when he thought of the good friends to
+whom he owed this very blessed power to flee. It was quite as
+Leander had surmised. He could not command his faculties--memory
+especially--when a noise of many words and questions bruised his brain.
+
+The stillness of the desert closed about him with delicious healing.
+He was a world-weary child returned to the womb of Nature. His old
+camp-craft came back; his eye for distance, his sense of the trail, his
+little pet economies with food and fire. There was no one to tell him
+what to eat and when to eat it. He was invisible to men. Each day's
+march built up his muscle, and every night's deep sleep under the great
+high stars steadied his nerves and tightened his resolve.
+
+He thought of the young man--his son--with a mixture of pain and
+tenderness. But Paul was not the baby-boy he had put out of his arms
+with a father's smile at One Man station. Paul was himself a man now; he
+had coerced him at the last, neither did he understand.
+
+The blind instinct of flight began after a while to shape its own
+direction. It was no new leaning with the packer. As many times as he
+had crossed this trail he never had failed to experience the same pull.
+He resisted no longer. He gave way to strange fancies and made them his
+guides.
+
+At some time during his flight from the hospital, in one of those blanks
+that overtook him, he knew not how, he had met with a great loss. The
+words had slipped from his memory--of that message which had kept him in
+fancied touch with his wife all these many deluding years. Without them
+he was like a drunkard deprived of his habitual stimulant. The craving
+to connect and hold them--for they came to him sometimes in tantalizing
+freaks of memory, and slipped away again like beads rolling off a
+broken thread--was almost the only form of mental suffering he was now
+conscious of. What had become of the message itself? Had they left it
+exposed to every heartless desecration in that abandoned spot?--a scrap
+of paper driven like a bit of tumble-weed before the wind, snatched at
+by spikes of sage, trampled into the mire of cattle, nuzzled by wild
+beasts? Or, had they put it away with that other beast where he lay with
+the scoff on his dead face? Out of dreams and visions of the night that
+place of the parting ways called to him, and the time was now come when
+he must go.
+
+He approached it by one of those desert trails that circle for miles
+on the track of water and pounce as a bird drops upon its prey into the
+trampled hollow at One Man station--a place for the gathering of hoofs
+in the midst of the plain.
+
+He could trace what might have been the foundation of a house, a few
+blackened stones, a hearthstone showing where a chimney perhaps had
+stood, but these evidences of habitation would never have been marked
+except by one who knew where to look. He searched the ground over for
+signs of the tragedy that bound him to that spot--a smiling desolation,
+a sunny nothingness. The effect of this careless obliteration was
+quieting. Nature had played here once with two men and a woman. One of
+the toy men was lost, the other broken. She had forgotten where she
+put the broken one. There were mounds which looked like graves, but the
+seeker knew that artificial mounds in a place like this soon sink into
+hollows; and there were hollows like open graves, filled with unsightly
+human rubbish, washed in by the yearly rains.
+
+He spent three days in the hollow, doing nothing, steeped in sunshine,
+lying down to rest broad awake in the tender twilight, making his peace
+with this place of bitter memory before bidding it good-by. His thoughts
+turned eastward as the planets rose. Time he was working back towards
+home. He would hardly get there if he started now, before his day was
+done. He saw his mother's grave beside his father's, in the southeast
+corner of the burying-ground, where the trees were thin. All who drove
+in through the big gate of funerals could see the tall white shafts of
+the Beviers and Brodericks and Van Eltens, but only those who came on
+foot could approach his people in the gravelly side-hill plots. "I'd
+like to be put there alongside the old folks in that warm south corner."
+He could see their names on the plain gray slate stones, rain-stained
+and green with moss.
+
+On the third May evening of his stay the horizon became a dust-cloud,
+the setting sun a ball of fire. Loomed the figure of a rider topping
+the heaving backs of his herd. All together they came lumbering down
+the slopes, all heading fiercely for the water. The rider plunged down
+a side-draw out of the main cloud. Clanking bells, shuffling hoofs, the
+"Whoop-ee-youp!" came fainter up the gulch. The cowboy was not pleased
+as he dashed by to see an earlier camp-fire smoking in the hollow. But
+he was less displeased, being half French, than if he had been pure-bred
+American.
+
+The old man, squatting by his cooking-fire, gave him a civil nod, and
+he responded with a flourish of his quirt. The reek of sage smoke, the
+smell of dust and cattle rose rank on the cooling air. It was good to
+Boniface, son of the desert; it meant supper and bed, or supper and
+talk, for "Bonny" Maupin ("Bonny Moppin," it went in the vernacular)
+would talk every other man to sleep, full or empty, with songs thrown
+in. To-night, however, he must talk on an empty stomach, for his chuck
+wagon was not in sight.
+
+"W'ich way you travelin'?" he began, lighting up after a long pull at
+his flask. The old man had declined, though he looked as if he needed a
+drink.
+
+"East about," was the answer.
+
+"Goin' far?"
+
+"Well; summer's before us. I cal'late to keep moving till snow falls."
+
+"Shucks! You ain' pressed for time. Maybe you got some friend back
+there. Goin' back to git married?" He winked genially to point the jest
+and the old man smiled indulgently.
+
+"Won't you set up and take a bite with me? You don't look to have much
+of a show for supper along."
+
+"Thanks, very much! I had bully breakfast at Rock Spring middlin' late
+this morning. They butcherin' at that place. Five fat hog. My chuck
+wagon he stay behin' for chunk of fresh pig. I won' spoil my appetide
+for that tenderloin. Hol' on yourself an' take supper wis me. No?--That
+fellah be 'long 'bout Chris'mas if he don' git los'! He always behin',
+pig or no pig!"
+
+Bonny strolled away collecting fire-wood. Presently he called back,
+pointing dramatically with his small-toed boot. "Who's been coyotin'
+round here?" The hard ground was freshly disturbed in spots as by the
+paws of some small inquisitive animal. There was no answer.
+
+"What you say? Whose surface diggin's is these? I never know anybody do
+some mining here."
+
+"That was me"--Bonny backed a little nearer to catch the old man's
+words. "I was looking round here for something I lost."
+
+"What luck you have? You fin' him?"
+
+"Well, now, doos it reely matter to you, sonny?"
+
+"Pardner, it don' matter to me a d--n, if you say so! I was jus' askin'
+myself what a man _would_ look for if he los' it here. Since I strike
+this 'ell of a place the very groun' been chewed up and spit out
+reg'lar, one hundred times a year. 'T'is a gris' mill!"
+
+"I didn't gretly expect to find what I was lookin' for. I was just
+foolin' around to satisfy myself."
+
+"That satisfy me!" said Bonny pleasantly; and yet he was a trifle
+discomfited. He strolled away again and began to sing with a boyish show
+of indifference to having been called "sonny."
+
+"Oh, Sally is the gal for me! Oh, Sally's the gal for me! On moonlight
+night when the star is bright--Oh"--
+
+"Halloa! This some more your work, oncle? You ain' got no chicken wing
+for arm if you lif' this.--Ah, be dam! I see what you lif' him with.
+All same stove-lid." Talking and swearing to himself cheerfully, Bonny
+applied the end of a broken whiffletree to the blunt lip of the old
+hearthstone which marked the stage-house chimney. He had tried a
+step-dance on it and found it hollow. More fresh digging, and marks upon
+the stone where some prying tool had taken hold and slipped, showed he
+was not the first who had been curious.
+
+"There you go, over on you' back, like snap' turtle; I see where you lay
+there before. What the dev'! I say!" Bonny, much excited with his find,
+extracted a rusty tin tobacco-box from the hole, pried open the spring
+lid and drew forth its contents: a discolored canvas bag bulging with
+coin and whipped around the neck with a leather whang. The canvas was
+rotten; Bonny supported its contents tenderly as he brought it over to
+the old man.
+
+"Oncle, I ask you' pardon for tappin' that safe. Pretty good lil'
+nest-egg, eh? But now you got to find her some other place."
+
+"That don't belong to me," said the old man indifferently.
+
+"Aw--don't be bashful! I onderstan' now what you los'. You dig
+here--there--migs up the scent. I just happen to step on that
+stone--ring him, so, with my boot-heel!"
+
+"That ain't my pile," the other persisted. "I started to build a fire
+on that stone two nights ago. It rung hollow like you say. I looked and
+found what you found--"
+
+"And put her back! My soul to God! An' you here all by you'self!"
+
+"Why not? The stuff ain't mine."
+
+"Who _is_ she? How long since anybody live here?"
+
+"I don't know,--good while, I guess."
+
+"Well, sar! Look here! I open that bag. I count two hondre' thirteen
+dolla'--make it twelve for luck, an' call it you' divvee! You strike her
+first. What you say: we go snac'?"
+
+"I haven't got any use for that money. You needn't talk to me about it."
+
+"Got no h'use!--are you a reech man? Got you' private car waitin' for
+you out in d' sagebrush? Sol' a mine lately?"
+
+"I don't know why it strikes you so funny. It's no concern of mine if a
+man puts his money in the ground and goes off and leaves it."
+
+"Goes off and die! There was one man live here by himself--he die, they
+say, 'with his boots on.' He, I think, mus' be that man belong to this
+money. What an old stiff want with two hondre' thirteen dolla'? That
+money goin' into a live man's clothes." Bonny slapped his chappereros,
+and the dust flew.
+
+"I've no objection to its going into _your_ clothes," said the old man.
+
+"You thing I ain' particular, me? Well, eef the party underground was
+my frien', and I knew his fam'ly, and was sure the money was belong to
+him--I'd do differend--perhaps. Mais,--it is going--going--gone! You
+won' go snac'?"
+
+The old man smiled and looked steadily away.
+
+"Blas' me to h--l! but you aire the firs' man ever I strike that jib at
+the sight of col' coin. She don' frighten me!"
+
+Bonny always swore when he felt embarrassed.
+
+"Well, sar! Look here! You fin' you'self so blame indifferend--s'pose
+you _so_ indifferend not to say nothing 'bout this, when my swamper
+fellah git in. I don' wish to go snac' wis him. I don' feel oblige'.
+See?"
+
+"What you want to pester me about this money for!" The old man was
+weary. "I didn't come here, lookin' for money, and I don't expect to
+take none away with me. So I'll say good-night to ye."
+
+"Hol' on, hol' on! Don' git mad. What time you goin' off in the
+morning?"
+
+"Before you do, I shouldn't wonder."
+
+"But hol'! One fine idea--blazin' good idea--just hit me now in the
+head! Wan' to come on to Chicago wis me? I drop this fellah at Felton.
+He take the team back, and I get some one to help me on the treep. Why
+not you? Ever tek' care of stock?"
+
+"Some consid'able years ago I used to look after stock. Guess I'd know
+an ox from a heifer."
+
+"Ever handle 'em on cattle-car?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Well, all there is, you feed 'em, and water 'em, and keep 'em on their
+feets. If one fall down, all the others they have too much play. They
+rock"--Bonny exhibited--"and fall over and pile up in heap. I like to
+do one turn for you. We goin' the same way--you bring me the good luck,
+like a bird in the han'. This is my clean-up, you understand. You bring
+me the beautiful luck. You turn me up right bower first slap. Now it's
+goin' be my deal. I like to do by you!"
+
+The packer turned over and looked up at the cool sky, pricked through
+with early stars. He was silent a long time. His pale old face was like
+a fine bit of carving in the dusk.
+
+"What you think?" asked Moppin, almost tenderly. "I thing you better
+come wis me. You too hold a man to go like so--alone."
+
+"I'll have to think about it first;--let you know in the morning."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+
+A Rush of wheels and a spatter of hoofs coming up the drive sent
+Mrs. Dunlop to the sitting-room window. She tried to see out through
+streaming showers that darkened the panes.
+
+"Isn't that Mrs. Bogardus? Why, it is! Put on your shoes, Chauncey,
+quick! Help her in 'n' take her horse to the shed. Take an umbrella with
+you." Chauncey the younger, meekly drying his shoes by the kitchen
+fire, put them on, not stopping to lace them, and slumped down the
+porch steps, pursued by his mother's orders. She watched him a moment
+struggling with a cranky umbrella, and then turned her attention to
+herself and the room.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus made her calls in the morning, and always plainly on
+business. She had not seen the inside of Cerissa's parlor for ten years.
+This was a grievance which Cerissa referred to spasmodically, being
+seized with it when she was otherwise low in her mind.
+
+"My sakes! Can't I remember my mother telling how _her_ mother used
+to drive over and spend the afternoon, and bring her sewing and the
+baby--whichever one was the baby. They called each other Chrissy and
+Angevine, and now she don't even speak of her own children to us by
+their first names. It's 'Mrs. Bowen' and 'Mr. Paul;' just as if she was
+talking to her servants."
+
+"What's that to us? We've got a good home here for as long as we want to
+stay. She's easy to work for, if you do what she says."
+
+Chauncey respected Mrs. Bogardus's judgment and her straightforward
+business habits. Other matters he left alone. But Cerissa was ambitious
+and emotional, and she stayed indoors, doing little things and thinking
+small thoughts. She resented her commanding neighbor's casual manners.
+There was something puzzling and difficult to meet in her plainness of
+speech, which excluded the personal relation. It was like the cut and
+finish of her clothes--mysterious in their simplicity, and not to be
+imitated cheaply.
+
+When the two met, Cerissa was immediately reduced to a state of
+flimsy apology which she made up for by being particularly hot and
+self-assertive in speaking of the lady afterward.
+
+"There is the parlor, in perfect order," she fretted, as she stood
+waiting to open the front door; "but of course she wouldn't let me take
+her in there--that would be too much like visiting."
+
+The next moment she had corrected her facial expression, and was
+offering smiling condolences to Mrs. Bogardus on the state of her
+attire.
+
+"It is only my jacket. You might put that somewhere to dry," said the
+lady curtly. Raindrops sparkled on the wave of thick iron-gray hair that
+lifted itself, with a slight turn to one side, from her square low brow.
+Her eyes shone dark against the fresh wind color in her cheeks. She had
+the straight, hard, ophidian line concealing the eyelid, which gives
+such a peculiar strength to the direct gaze of a pair of dark eyes. If
+one suspects the least touch of tenderness, possibly of pain, behind
+that iron fold, it lends a fascination equal to the strength. There was
+some excitement in Mrs. Bogardus's manner, but Cerissa did not know her
+well enough to perceive it. She merely thought her looking handsomer,
+and, if possible, more formidable than usual.
+
+She sat by the fire, folding her skirts across her knees, and showing
+the edges of the most discouragingly beautiful petticoats,--a taste
+perhaps inherited from her wide-hipped Dutch progenitresses. Mrs.
+Bogardus reveled in costly petticoats, and had an unnecessary number of
+them.
+
+"How nice it is in here!" she said, looking about her. Cerissa, with the
+usual apologies, had taken her into the kitchen to dry her skirts.
+There was a slight taint of steaming shoe leather, left by Chauncey when
+driven forth. Otherwise the kitchen was perfection,--the family room
+of an old Dutch farmhouse, built when stone and hardwood lumber were
+cheap,--thick walls; deep, low window-seats; beams showing on the
+ceiling; a modern cooking-stove, where Emily Bogardus could remember
+the wrought brass andirons and iron backlog, for this room had been her
+father's dining-room. The brick tiled hearth remained, and the color of
+those century and a half old bricks made a pitiful thing of Cerissa's
+new oil-cloth. The woodwork had been painted--by Mrs. Bogardus's orders,
+and much to Cerissa's disgust--a dark kitchen green,--not that she liked
+the color herself, but it was the artistic demand of the moment,--and
+the place was filled with a green golden light from the cherry-trees
+close to the window, which a break in the clouds had suddenly illumined.
+
+"You keep it beautifully," said Mrs. Bogardus, her eyes shedding
+compliments as she looked around. "I should not dare go in my own
+kitchen at this time of day. There are no women nowadays who know how to
+work in the way ladies used to work. If I could have such a housekeeper
+as you, Cerissa."
+
+Cerissa flushed and bridled. "What would Chauncey do!"
+
+"I don't expect you to be my housekeeper," Mrs. Bogardus smiled. "But I
+envy Chauncey."
+
+"She has come to ask a favor," thought Cerissa. "I never knew her
+so pleasant, for nothing. She wants me to do up her fruit, I guess."
+Cerissa was mistaken. Mrs. Bogardus simply was happy--or almost
+happy--and deeply stirred over a piece of news which had come to her in
+that morning's mail.
+
+"I have telephoned Bradley not to send his men over on Monday. My son is
+bringing his wife home. They may be here all summer. The place belongs
+to them now. Did Chauncey tell you? Mr. Paul writes that he has some
+building plans of his own, and he wishes everything left as it is for
+the present, especially this house. He wants his wife to see it first
+just as it is."
+
+"Well, to be sure! They've been traveling a long time, haven't they? And
+how is his health now?"
+
+"Oh, he is very well indeed. You will be glad not to have the trouble of
+those carpenters, Cerissa? Pulling down old houses is dirty work."
+
+"Oh, dear! I wouldn't mind the dirt. Anything to get rid of that old
+rat's nest on top of the kitchen chamber. I hate to have such out of the
+way places on my mind. I can't get around to do every single thing,
+and it's years--years, Mrs. Bogardus, since I could get a woman to do a
+half-day's cleaning up there in broad daylight!"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus stared. What was the woman talking about!
+
+"I call it a regular eyesore on the looks of the house besides. And it
+keeps all the old stories alive."
+
+"What stories?"
+
+"Why, of course your father wasn't out of his head--we all know
+that--when he built that upstairs room and slep' there and locked
+himself in every night of his life. It was only on one point he was a
+little warped: the fear of bein' robbed. A natural fear, too,--an old
+man over eighty livin' in such a lonesome place and known to be well
+off. But--you'll excuse my repeating the talk--but the story goes now
+that he re'ly went insane and was confined up there all the last years
+of his life. And that's why the windows have got bars acrost them.
+Everybody notices it, and they ask questions. It's real embarrassin',
+for of course I don't want to discuss the family."
+
+"Who asks questions?" Mrs. Bogardus's eyes were hard to meet when her
+voice took that tone.
+
+"Why, the city folks out driving. They often drive in the big gate and
+make the circle through the grounds, and they're always struck when they
+see that tower bedroom with windows like a prison. They say, 'What's the
+story about that room, up there?'"
+
+"When people ask you questions about the house, you can say you did
+not live here in the owner's time and you don't know. That's perfectly
+simple, isn't it?"
+
+"But I do know! Everybody knows," said Cerissa hotly. "It was the talk
+of the whole neighborhood when that room was put up; and I remember how
+scared I used to be when mother sent me over here of an errand."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus rose and shook out her skirts. "Will Chauncey bring my
+horse when it stops raining? By the way, did you get the furniture down
+that was in that room, Cerissa?--the old secretary? I am going to have
+it put in order for Mr. Paul's room. Old furniture is the fashion now,
+you know."
+
+Cerissa caught her breath nervously. "Mrs. Bogardus--I couldn't do a
+thing about it! I wanted Chauncey to tell you. All last week I tried
+to get a woman, or a man, to come and help me clear out that place,
+but just as soon as they find out what's wanted--'You'll have to get
+somebody else for that job,' they say."
+
+"What is the matter with them?"
+
+"It's the room, Mrs. Bogardus; if I was you--I'm doing now just as I'd
+be done by--I would not take Mrs. Paul Bogardus up into that room--not
+even in broad daylight; not if it was my son's wife, in the third month
+of her being a wife."
+
+"Well, upon my word!" said Mrs. Bogardus, smiling coldly. "Do you mean
+to say these women are afraid to go up there?"
+
+"It was old Mary Hornbeck who started the talk. She got what she called
+her 'warning' up there. And the fact is, she was a corpse within six
+months from that day. Chauncey and me, we used to hear noises, but old
+houses are full of noises. We never thought much about it; only, I must
+say I never had any use for that part of the house. Chauncey keeps his
+seeds and tools in the lower room, and some of the winter vegetables,
+and we store the parlor stove in there in summer."
+
+"Well, about this 'warning'?" Mrs. Bogardus interrupted.
+
+"Yes! It was three years ago in May, and I remember it was some such a
+day as this--showery and broken overhead, and Mary disappointed me; but
+she came about noon, and said she'd put in half a day anyhow. She got
+her pail and house-cloths; but she wasn't gone not half an hour when
+down she come white as a sheet, and her mouth as dry as chalk. She set
+down all of a shake, and I give her a drink of tea, and she said: 'I
+wouldn't go up there again, not for a thousand dollars.' She unlocked
+the door, she said, and stepped inside without thinkin'. Your father's
+old rocker with the green moreen cushions stood over by the east window,
+where he used to sit. She heard a creak like a heavy step on the floor,
+and that empty chair across the room, as far as from here to the window,
+begun to rock as if somebody had just rose up from them cushions. She
+watched it till it stopped. Then she took another step, and the step she
+couldn't see answered her, and the chair begun to rock again."
+
+"Was that all?"
+
+"No, ma'am; that wasn't all. I don't know if you remember an old wall
+clock with a brass ball on top and brass scrolls down the sides and a
+painted glass door in front of the pendulum with a picture of a castle
+and a lake? The paint's been wore off the glass with cleaning, so the
+pendulum shows plain. That clock has not been wound since we come to
+live here. I don't believe a hand has touched it since the night he was
+carried feet foremost out of that room. But Mary said she could count
+the strokes go tick, tick, tick! She listened till she could have
+counted fifty, for she was struck dumb, and just as plain as the clock
+before her face she could see the minute-hand and the pendulum, both of
+'em dead still. Now, how do you account for that!
+
+"I told Chauncey about it, and he said it was all foolishness. Do all I
+could he would go up there himself, that same evening. But he come down
+again after a while, and he was almost as white as Mary. 'Did you see
+anything?' I says. 'I saw what Mary said she saw,' says he, 'and I heard
+what she heard.' But no one can make Chauncey own up that he believes it
+was anything supernatural. 'There is a reason for everything,' he says.
+'The miracles and ghosts of one generation are just school-book learning
+to the next; and more of a miracle than the miracles themselves.'"
+
+"Chauncey shows his sense," Mrs. Bogardus observed.
+
+"He was real disturbed, though, I could see; and he told me particular
+not to make any talk about it. I never have opened the subject to a
+living soul. But when Mary died, within six months, folks repeated what
+she had been saying about her 'warning.' The 'death watch' she called
+it. We can't all of us control our feelings about such things, and she
+was a lonely widow woman."
+
+"Well, do you believe that ticking is going on up there now?" asked Mrs.
+Bogardus.
+
+Cerissa looked uneasy.
+
+"Is the door locked?"
+
+"I re'ly couldn't say," she confessed.
+
+"Do you mean to say that all you sensible people in this house have
+avoided that room for three years? And you don't even know if the door
+is locked?"
+
+"I--I don't use that part for anything, and cleaning is wasted on a
+place that's never used, and I can't _get_ anybody"--
+
+"I am not criticising your housekeeping. Will you go up there with me
+now, Cerissa? I want to understand about this."
+
+"What, just now, do you mean? I'm afraid I haven't got the time this
+morning, Mrs. Bogardus. Dinner's at half-past twelve. It's a quarter to
+eleven"--
+
+"Very well. You think the door is not locked?"
+
+"If it is, the key must be in the door. Oh, don't go, please, Mrs.
+Bogardus. Wait till Chauncey conies in"--
+
+"I wish you'd send Chauncey up when he does come in. Ask him to bring a
+screw-driver." Mrs. Bogardus rose and examined her jacket. It was still
+damp. She asked for a cape, or some sort of wrap, as her waist was thin,
+and the rain had chilled the morning air.
+
+For the sake of decency, Cerissa escorted her visitor across the hall
+passage into the loom-room--a loom-room in name only for upwards of
+three generations. Becky had devoted it to the rough work of the
+house, and to certain special uses, such as the care of the butchering
+products, the making of soft soap and root beer. Here the churning was
+done, by hand, with a wooden dasher, which spread a circle of white
+drops, later to become grease-spots. The floor of the loom-room was
+laid in large brick tiles, more or less loose in their sockets, with
+an occasional earthy depression marking the grave of a missing tile.
+Becky's method of cleaning was to sluice it out and scrub it with an old
+broom. The seepage of generations before her time had thus added their
+constant quota to the old well's sum of iniquity.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus had not visited this part of the old house for many years.
+After her father's death she had shrunk from its painful associations.
+Later she grew indifferent; but as she passed now into the gloomy
+place--doubly dark with the deep foliage of June on a rainy morning--she
+was afraid of her own thoughts. Henceforth she was a woman with a
+diseased consciousness. "What can't be cured must be _seared_," flashed
+over her as she set her face to the stairway.
+
+These stairs, leading up into the back attic or "kitchen chamber," being
+somewhat crowded for space, advanced two steps into the room below. As
+the stair door opened outward, and the stairs were exceedingly steep
+and dark, every child of the house, in turn, had suffered a bad fall in
+consequence; but the arrangement remained in all its natural depravity,
+for "children must learn."
+
+Little Emmy of the old days had loved to sit upon these steps, a trifle
+raised above the kitchen traffic, yet cognizant of all that was going
+on, and ready to descend promptly if she smelled fresh crullers frying,
+or baked sweet apples steaming hot from the oven. If Becky's foot were
+heard upon the stairs above, she would jump quick enough; but if the
+step had a clumping, boyish precipitancy, she sat still and laughed,
+and planted her back against the door. Often she had teased Adam in this
+way, keeping him prisoner from his duties, helpless in his good nature
+either to scold her or push her off. But once he circumvented her,
+slipping off his shoes and creeping up the stairs again, and making his
+escape by the roof and the boughs of the old maple. Then it was Emmy who
+was teased, who sat a foolish half hour on the stairs alone and missed a
+beautiful ride to the wood lot; but she would not speak to Adam for two
+days afterward.
+
+Becky's had been the larger of the two bedrooms in the attic, Adam's the
+smaller--tucked low under the eaves, and entered by crawling around the
+big chimney that came bulking up to the light like a great tree caught
+between house walls. The stairs hugged the chimney and made use of
+its support. Adam would warm his hands upon it coming down on bitter
+mornings. From force of habit, Emily Bogardus laid her smooth white hand
+upon the clammy bricks. No tombstone could be colder than that heart of
+house warmth now.
+
+The roof of the kitchen chamber had been raised a story higher, and the
+chimney as it went up contracted to quite a modern size. This elevation
+gave room for the incongruous tower bedroom that had hurt the symmetry
+of the old house, spoiled its noble sweep of roof, and given rise to so
+much unpleasant conjecture as to its use. It was this excrescence, the
+record of those last unloved and unloving years of her father's life,
+which Mrs. Bogardus would have removed, but was prevented by her son.
+
+"You go back now, Cerissa," she said to the panting woman behind her. "I
+see the key is in the lock. You may send Chauncey after a while; there
+is no hurry."
+
+"Oh!" gasped Cerissa. "Do you see _that!_"
+
+"What?"
+
+"I thought there was something--something behind that slit."
+
+"There isn't. Step this way. There, can't you see the light?"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus grasped Cerissa by the shoulders and held her firmly in
+front of a narrow loophole that pierced the partition close beside
+the door. Light from the room within showed plainly; but it gave an
+unpleasantly human expression to the entrance, like a furtive eye on the
+watch.
+
+"He would always be there," Cerissa whispered.
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Your father. If anybody wanted to see him after he shut himself in
+there for the night, they had to stand to be questioned through that
+wall-slit before he opened the door. Yes, ma'am! He was on the watch in
+there the whole time like a thing in a trap."
+
+"Are you afraid to go back alone?" Mrs. Bogardus spoke with chilling
+irony.
+
+Cerissa backed away in silence, her heart thumping. "She's putting it
+on," she said to herself. "I never see her turn so pale. Don't tell _me_
+she ain't afraid!"
+
+There was a hanging shelf against the chimney on which a bundle of dry
+herbs had been left to turn into dust. Old Becky might have put them
+there the autumn before she died; or some successor of hers in the years
+that were blank to the daughter of the house. As she pushed open the
+door a sighing draught swept past her and seemed to draw her inward.
+It shook the sere bundle. Its skeleton leaves, dissolving into motes,
+flickered an instant athwart the light. They sifted down like ashes on
+the woman's dark head as she passed in. Her color had faded, but not
+through fear of ghost clocks. It was the searing process she had to
+face. And any room where she sat alone with certain memories of her
+youth was to her a torture chamber.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She's been up there an awful long time. I wouldn't wonder if she's
+fainted away."
+
+"What would she faint at? I guess it's pretty cold, though. Give me some
+more tea; put plenty of milk so I can drink it quick."
+
+Chauncey's matter of fact tone always comforted Cerissa when she was
+nervous. She did not mind that he jeered or that his words were often
+rude; no man of her acquaintance could say things nicely to women, or
+ever tried. A certain amount of roughness passed for household wit.
+Chauncey put the screw-driver in his pocket, his wife and son watching
+him with respectful anxiety. He thought rather well of his own courage
+privately. But the familiar details of the loom-room cheered him on his
+way, the homely tools of his every-day work were like friendly faces
+nodding at him. He knocked loudly on the door above, and was answered by
+Mrs. Bogardus in her natural voice.
+
+"Bosh--every bit of it bosh!" he repeated courageously.
+
+She was seated by the window in the chair with the green cushions. Her
+face was turned towards the view outside. "What a pity those cherries
+were not picked before the rain," she observed. "The fruit is bursting
+ripe; I'm afraid you'll lose the crop."
+
+Chauncey moved forward awkwardly without answering.
+
+"Stop there one moment, will you?" Mrs. Bogardus rose and demonstrated.
+"You notice those two boards are loose. Now, I put this chair
+here,"--she laid her hand on the back to still its motion. "Step this
+way. You see? The chair rocks of itself. So would any chair with a
+spring board under it. That accounts for _that_, I think. Now come over
+here." Chauncey placed himself as she directed in front of the high
+mantel with the clock above it. She stood at his side and they listened
+in silence to that sound which Mary Hornbeck, deceased, had deemed a
+spiritual warning.
+
+"Would you call that a 'ticking'? Is that like any sound an insect could
+make?" the mistress asked.
+
+"I should call it more like a 'ting,'" said Chauncey. "It comes kind o'
+muffled like through the chimbly--a person might be mistaken if they was
+upset in their nerves considerable."
+
+"What old people call the 'death-watch' is supposed to be an insect that
+lives in the walls of old houses, isn't it? and gives warning with a
+ticking sound when somebody is going to be called away? Now to me that
+sounds like a soft blow struck regularly on a piece of hollow iron--say
+the end of a stove-pipe sticking in the chimney. When I first came up
+here, there was only a steady murmur of wind and rain. Then the clouds
+thinned and the sun came out and drops began to fall--distinctly. Your
+wife says the ticking was heard on a day like this, broken and showery.
+Now, if you will unscrew that clock, I think you will find there's a
+stove-pipe hole behind it; and a piece of pipe shoved into the chimney
+just far enough to catch the drops as they gather and fall."
+
+Chauncey went to work. He sweated in the airless room. The powerful
+screws blunted the lips of his tool but would not start.
+
+"I guess I'll have to give it up for to-day. The screws are rusted in
+solid. Want I should pry her out of the woodwork?"
+
+"No, don't do that," said Mrs. Bogardus. "Why should we spoil the panel?
+This seems a very comfortable room. My son is right. It would be foolish
+to tear it down. Such a place as this might be very useful if you people
+would get over your notions about it."
+
+"I never had no notions," Chauncey asserted. "When the women git talkin'
+they like to make out a good story, and whichever one sees the most and
+hears the most makes the biggest sensation."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus waited till he had finished without appearing to have
+heard what he was saying.
+
+"Where is the key to this door?" she laid her hand over a knob to the
+right of the stairs.
+
+"I guess if there is one it's on the other side. Yes, it's in the
+key-hole." Chauncey turned the knob and shoved and lifted. The door
+yielded to his full strength, and he allowed Mrs. Bogardus to precede
+him. She stepped into a room hardly bigger than a closet with one
+window, barred like those in the outer room. It was fitted up with
+toilet conveniences according to the best advices of its day. Over all
+the neat personal arrangements there was the slur of neglect, a sad
+squalor which even a king's palace wears with time.
+
+Chauncey tested the plumbing with a noise that was plainly offensive
+to his companion, but she bore with it--also with his reminiscences
+gathered from neighborhood gossip. "He wa'n't fond of spending money,
+but he didn't spare it here: this was his ship cabin when he started
+on his last voyage. It looked funny--a man with all his land and houses
+cooped up in a place like this; but he wanted to be independent of the
+women. He hated to have 'em fussin' around him. He had a woman to come
+and cook up stuff for him to help himself to; but she wouldn't stay here
+overnight, nor he wouldn't let her. As for a man in the house,--most
+men were thieves, he thought, or waiting their chance to be. It was real
+pitiful the way he made his end."
+
+"Open that window and shut the door when you come out," said Mrs.
+Bogardus. "I will send some one to help you down with that secretary.
+Cerissa knows about it. It is to be sent up on the Hill."
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+THE CASE STRIKES IN
+
+Christine's marriage took place while Paul and Moya were lingering in
+the Bruneau, for Paul's health ostensibly. Banks and Horace had been
+left to the smiling irony of justice. They never had a straight chance
+to define their conduct in the woods; for no one accused them. No
+awkward questions were asked in the city drawing-rooms or at the clubs.
+For a tough half hour or so at Fort Lemhi they had realized how they
+stood in the eyes of those unbiased military judges. The shock had a
+bracing effect for a time. Both boys were said to be much improved
+by their Western trip and by the hardships of that frightful homeward
+march.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus had matched her gift of Stone Ridge to her son, which
+was a gift of sentiment, with one of more substantial value to her
+daughter,--the income from certain securities settled upon her and her
+heirs. Banks was carefully unprovided for. The big house in town was
+full of ghosts--the ghosts that haunt such homes, made desolate by a
+breach of hearts. The city itself was crowded with opportunities for
+giving and receiving pain between mother and daughter. Christine had
+developed all the latent hardness of her mother's race with a sickly
+frivolity of her own. She made a great show of faith in her marriage
+venture. She boomed it in her occasional letters, which were full of
+scarce concealed bravado as graceful as snapping her fingers in her
+mother's face.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus leased her house in town, and retired before the ghosts,
+but not escaping them; Stone Ridge must be put in order for its new
+master and mistress, and Stone Ridge had its own ghosts. She informed
+her absentees that, before their return, she should have left for
+Southern California to look after some investments which she had
+neglected there of late. It was then she spoke of her plan for restoring
+the old house by pulling down that addition which disfigured it; and
+Paul had objected to this erasure. It would take from the house's
+veracity, he said. The words carried their unintentional sting.
+
+But it was Moya's six lines at the bottom of his page that changed
+and softened everything. Moya--always blessed when she took the
+initiative--contrived, as swiftly as she could set them down, to say the
+very words that made the home-coming a coming home indeed.
+
+"Will Madam Bogardus be pleased to keep her place as the head of her
+son's house?" she wrote. "This foolish person he has married wants to be
+anything rather than the mistress of Stone Ridge. She wants to be always
+out of doors, and she needs to be. Oh, must you go away now--now when we
+need you so much? It cannot be said here on paper how much _I_ need you!
+Am I not your motherless daughter? Please be there when we come, and
+please stay there!"
+
+"For a little while then," said the lonely woman, smiling at the image
+of that sweet, foolish person in her thoughts. "For a little while, till
+she learns her mistake." Such mistakes are the cornerstone of family
+friendship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was an uneventful summer on the Hill, but one of rather wearing
+intensity in the inner relations of the household, one with another; for
+nothing could be quite natural with a pit of concealment to be avoided
+by all, and an air of unconsciousness to be carefully preserved in
+avoiding it. Moya's success in this way was so remarkable that Paul half
+hated it. How was it possible for her to speak to his mother so lightly;
+never the least apparent premeditation or fear of tripping; how look at
+her with such sweet surface looks that never questioned or saw beneath?
+He could not meet his mother's eyes at all when they were alone
+together, or endure a silence in her company.
+
+Both women were of the type called elemental. They understood each other
+without knowing why. Moya felt the desperate truth contained in the
+mother's falsehood, and broke forth into passionate defense of her as
+against her husband's silence.
+
+He answered her one day by looking up a little green book of fairy tales
+and reading aloud this fragment of "The Golden Key."
+
+"'I never tell lies, even in fun.' (The mysterious Grandmother speaks.)
+
+"'How good of you!' (says the Child in the Wood.)
+
+"'I couldn't if I tried. It would come true if I said it, and then I
+should be punished enough.'"
+
+Moya's eyes narrowed reflectively.
+
+"How constantly you are thinking of this! I think of it only when I
+am with you. As if a woman like your mother, who has done _one thing_,
+should be all that thing, and nothing more to us, her children!"
+
+Moya was giving herself up, almost immorally, Paul sometimes thought,
+to the fascination Mrs. Bogardus's personality had for her. In a keenly
+susceptible state herself, at that time, there was something calming and
+strengthening in the older woman's perfected beauty, her physical poise,
+and the fitness of everything she did and said and wore to the given
+occasion. As a dark woman she was particularly striking in summer
+clothing. Her white effects were tremendous. She did not pretend to
+study these matters herself, but in years of experience, with money to
+spend, she had learned well in whom to confide. When women are shut up
+together in country houses for the summer, they can irritate each other
+in the most foolish ways. Mrs. Bogardus never got upon your nerves.
+
+But, for Paul, there was a poison in his mother's beauty, a dread in
+her influence over his impressionable young wife, thrilled with the
+awakening forces of her consonant being. Moya would drink deep of every
+cup that life presented. Motherhood was her lesson for the day. "She is
+a queen of mothers!" she would exclaim with an abandon that was painful
+to Paul; he saw deformity where Moya was ready to kneel. "I love her
+perfect love for you--for me, even! She is above all jealousy. She
+doesn't even ask to be understood."
+
+Paul was silent.
+
+"And oh, she knows, she knows! She has been through it all--in such
+despair and misery--all that is before me, with everything in the world
+to make it easy and all the beautiful care she gives me. She is the
+supreme mother. And I never had a mother to speak to before. Don't,
+don't, please, keep putting that dreadful thing between us now!"
+
+So Paul took the dreadful thing away with him and was alone with it, and
+knew that his mother saw it in his eyes when their eyes met and avoided.
+When, after a brief household absence, he would see her again he
+wondered, "Has she been alone with it? Has it passed into another
+phase?"--as of an incurable disease that must take its time and course.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus did not spare her conscience in social ways all this time.
+It was a part of her life to remember that she had neighbors--certain
+neighbors. She included Paul without particularly consulting him
+whenever it was proper for him to support her in her introduction of his
+wife to the country-house folk, many of whom they knew in town.
+
+All his mother's friends liked Paul and supposed him to be very clever,
+but they had never taken him seriously. "Now, at last," they said, "he
+has done something like other people. He is coming out." Experienced
+matrons were pleased to flatter him on his choice of a bride. The
+daughters studied Moya, and decided that she was "different," but "all
+right." She had a careless distinction of her own. Some of her "things"
+were surprisingly lovely--probably heirlooms; and army women are so
+clever about clothes.
+
+Would they spend the winter in town?
+
+Paul replied absently: they had not decided. Probably they would not go
+down till after the holidays.
+
+What an attractive plan? What an ideal family Christmas they would have
+all together in the country! Christine had not been up all summer,
+had she? Here Moya came to her husband's relief, through a wife's dual
+consciousness in company, and covered his want of spirits with a flood
+of foolish chatter.
+
+The smiling way in which women the most sincere can posture and prance
+on the brink of dissimulation was particularly sickening to Paul at this
+time. Why need they put themselves in situations where it was required?
+The situations were of his mother's creation. He imagined she must
+suffer, but had little sympathy with that side of her martyrdom. Moya
+seemed a trifle feverish in her acceptance of these affairs of which
+she was naturally the life and centre. A day of entertaining often faded
+into an evening of subtle sadness.
+
+Paul would take her out into the moonlight of that deep inland country.
+The trees were dark with leaves and brooded close above them; old
+water-fences and milldams cast inky shadows on the still, shallow ponds
+clasped in wooded hills. No region could have offered a more striking
+contrast to the empty plains. Moya felt shut in with old histories. The
+very ground was but moulding sand in which generations of human lives
+had been poured, and the sand swept over to be reshaped for them.
+
+"We are not living our own life yet," Paul would say; not adding, "We
+are protecting her." Here was the beginning of punishment helplessly
+meted out to this proud woman whose sole desire was towards her
+children--to give, and not to receive.
+
+"But this is our Garden?" Moya would muse. "We are as nearly two alone
+as any two could be."
+
+"If you include the Snake. We can't leave out the Snake, you know."
+
+"Snake or Seraph--I don't believe I know the difference. Paul, I cannot
+have you thinking things."
+
+"I?--what do I think?"
+
+"You are thinking it is bad for me to be so much with her. You, as a man
+and a husband, resent what she, as a woman and a wife, has dared to do.
+And I, as another woman and wife, I say she could do nothing else and be
+true. For, don't you see? She never loved him. The wifehood in her has
+never been reached. She was a girl, then a mother, then a widow. How
+could she"--
+
+"Do you think he would have claimed her as his wife? Oh, you do not know
+him;--she has never known him. If we could be brave and face our duty
+to the whole truth, and leave the rest to those sequences, never dreamed
+of, that wait upon great acts. Such surprises come straight from God.
+Now we can never know how he would have risen to meet a nobler choice
+in her. He had not far to rise! Well, we have our share of blessings,
+including piazza teas; but as a family we have missed one of the
+greatest spiritual opportunities,--such as come but once in a lifetime."
+
+"Ah, if she was not ready for it, it was not _her_ opportunity. God is
+very patient with us, I believe."
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+RESTIVENESS
+
+Mothers and sons are rarely very personal in their intimacy after
+the son has taken to himself a wife. Apart from certain moments
+not appropriate to piazza teas, Paul and his mother were perhaps as
+comfortable together as the relation averages. It was much that they
+never talked emotionally. Private judgments which we have refrained from
+putting into words may die unfruitful and many a bitter crop be spared.
+
+"This is Paul's apology for being happy in spite of himself--and of
+us!" Moya teased, as she admired the beautifully drawn plans for the
+quarrymen's club-house.
+
+"It doesn't need any apology; it's a very good thing," said Mrs.
+Bogardus, ignoring double meanings. No caps that were flying around ever
+fitted her head. Paul's dreams and his mother's practical experience
+had met once more on a common ground of philanthropy. This time it was
+a workingmen's club in which the interests of social and mental
+improvement were conjoined with facilities for outdoor sport. Up to date
+philanthropy is an expensive toy. Paul, though now a landowner, was far
+from rich in his own right. His mother financed this as she had many
+another scheme for him. She was more openhanded than heretofore, but all
+was done with that ennuyed air which she ever wore as of an older
+child who has outgrown the game. It was in Moya and Moya's prospective
+maternity that her pride reinstated itself. Her own history and
+generation she trod underfoot. Mistakes, humiliations, whichever way she
+turned. Paul had never satisfied her entirely in anything he did until
+he chose this girl for the mother of his children. Now their house might
+come to something. Moya moved before her eyes crowned in the light of
+the future. And that this noble and innocent girl, with her perfect
+intuitions, should turn to _her_ now with such impetuous affection was
+perhaps the sweetest pain the blighted woman had ever known. She lay
+awake many a night thinking mute blessings on the mother and the child
+to be. Yet she resisted that generous initiative so dear to herself,
+aware with a subtle agony of the pain it gave her son.
+
+One day she said to Paul (they were driving home together through a
+bit of woodland, the horses stepping softly on the mould of fallen
+leaves)--"I don't expect you to account for every dollar of mine you
+spend in helping those who can be helped that way. You have a free
+hand."
+
+"I understand," said Paul. "I have used your money freely--for a purpose
+that I never have accounted for."
+
+"Don't you need more?"
+
+"No; there is no need now."
+
+"Why is there not?"
+
+Paul was silent. "I cannot go into particulars. It is a long story."
+
+"Does the purpose still exist?" his mother asked sharply.
+
+"It does; but not as a claim--for that sort of help."
+
+"Let me know if such a claim should ever return."
+
+"I will, mother," said Paul.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There came a day when mother and son reaped the reward of their mutual
+forbearance. There was a night and a day when Paul became a boy again in
+his mother's hands, and she took the place that was hers in Nature. She
+was the priestess acquainted with mysteries. He followed her, and hung
+upon her words. The expression of her face meant life and death to him.
+The dreadful consciousness passed out of his eyes; tears washed it out
+as he rose from his knees by Moya's bed, and his mother kissed him, and
+laid his son in his arms.
+
+The following summer saw the club-house and all its affiliations in
+working order. The beneficiaries took to it most kindly, but were
+disposed to manage it in their own way: not in all respects the way of
+the founder's intention.
+
+"To make a gift complete, you must keep yourself out of it," Mrs.
+Bogardus advised. "You have done your part; now let them have it and run
+it themselves."
+
+Paul was not hungry for leadership, but he had hoped that his interest
+in the men's amusements would bring him closer to them and equalize the
+difference between the Hill and the quarry.
+
+"You have never worked with them; how can you expect to play with them?"
+was another of his mother's cool aphorisms. Alas! Paul, the son of the
+poor man, had no work, and hence no play.
+
+It was time to be making winter plans again. Mrs. Bogardus knew that
+her son's young family was now complete without her presence. Moya had
+gained confidence in the care of her child; she no longer brought every
+new symptom to the grandmother. Yet Mrs. Bogardus put off discussing the
+change, dreading to expose her own isolation, a point on which she was
+as sensitive as if it were a crime. Paul was never entirely frank with
+her: she knew he would not be frank in this. They never expressed their
+wills or their won'ts to each other with the careless rudeness of a
+sound family faith, and always she felt the burden of his unrelenting
+pity. She began to take long drives alone, coming in late and excusing
+herself for dinner. At such times she would send for her grandson in
+his nurse's arms to bid him good-night. The mother would put off her
+own good-night, not to intrude at these sessions. One evening, going up
+later to kiss her little son, she found his crib empty, the nurse gone
+to her dinner. He was fast asleep in his grandmother's arms, where she
+had held him for an hour in front of the open fire in her bedroom. She
+looked up guiltily. "He was so comfortable! And his crib is cold. Will
+he take cold when Ellen puts him back?"
+
+"I am sure he won't," Moya whispered, gathering up the rosy sleeper. But
+she was disturbed by the breach of bedtime rules.
+
+In the drawing-room a few nights later she said energetically to Paul.
+
+"One might as well be dead as to live with a grudge."
+
+"A good grudge?"
+
+"There are no good grudges."
+
+"There are some honest ones--honestly come by."
+
+"I don't care how they are come by. Grudges 'is p'ison.'" She laughed,
+but her cheeks were hot.
+
+"Do you know that Christine has been at death's door? Your mother heard
+of it--through Mrs. Bowen! Was that why you didn't show me her letter?"
+
+"It was not in my letter from Mrs. Bowen."
+
+"I think she has known it some time," said Moya, "and kept it to
+herself."
+
+"Mrs. Bowen!"
+
+"Your mother. Isn't it terrible? Think how Chrissy must have needed her.
+They need each other so! Christine was her constant thought. How can
+all that change in one year! But she cannot go to Banks Bowen's house
+without an invitation. We must go to New York and make her come with
+us--we must open the way."
+
+"Yes," said Paul, "I have seen it was coming. In the end we always do
+the thing we have forsworn."
+
+"_I_ was the one. I take it back. Your work is there. I know it calls
+you. Was not Mrs. Bowen's letter an appeal?"
+
+Paul was silent.
+
+"She must think you a deserter. And there is bigger work for you, too!
+Here is a great political fight on, and my husband is not in it. Every
+man must slay his dragon. There is a whole city of dragons!"
+
+"Yes," smiled Paul; "I see. You want me to put my legs under the same
+cloth with Banks and ask him about his golf score."
+
+"If you want to fight him, have it out on public grounds; fight him in
+politics."
+
+"We are on the same side!"
+
+Moya laughed, but she looked a little dashed.
+
+"Banks comes of gentlemen. He inherited his opinions," said Paul.
+
+"He may have inherited a few other things, if we could have patience
+with him."
+
+"Are you sorry for Banks?"
+
+"I shall be sorry for him--when he meets you. He has been spared that
+too long."
+
+"Dispenser of destinies, I bow as I always do!"
+
+"You will speak to your mother at once?"
+
+"I will."
+
+"And do it beautifully?"
+
+"As well as I know how."
+
+"Ah, you have had such practice! How good it would be if we could only
+dare to quarrel in this family! You and I--of course!"
+
+"_We_ quarrel, of course!" laughed Paul.
+
+"I _love_ to quarrel with you!"
+
+"You do it beautifully. You have had such practice!"
+
+"I am so happy! It is clear to me now that we shall live down this
+misery. Christine will love to see me again; I know she will. A wife is
+a very different thing from a girl--a haughty girl!"
+
+"I should think the wife of Banks Bowen might be."
+
+"And we'll part with our ancient and honorable grudge! We are getting
+too big for it. _We_ are parents!"
+
+Paul made the proposition to his mother and she agreed to it in every
+particular save the one. She would remain at Stone Ridge. It was
+impossible to move her. Moya was in despair. She had cultivated an
+overweening conscience in her relations with Mrs. Bogardus. It turned
+upon her now and showed her the true state of her own mind at the
+thought of being Two once more and alone with the child God had given
+them. Mrs. Bogardus appeared to see nothing but her own interests in
+the matter. She had made up her mind. And in spite of the conscientious
+scruples on all sides, the hedging and pleading and explaining, all were
+happier in the end for her decision. She herself was softened by it, and
+she yielded one point in return. Paul had steadily opposed his mother's
+plan of housekeeping, alone with one maid and a man who slept at the
+stables. The Dunlops, as it happened, were childless for the winter,
+young Chauncey attending a "commercial college" in a neighboring town.
+After many interviews and a good deal of self-importance on Cerissa's
+part, the pair were persuaded to close the old house and occupy the
+servants' wing on the Hill, as a distinct family, yet at hand in case
+of need. It was late autumn before all these arrangements could be made.
+Paul and Moya, leaving the young scion aged nineteen months in the care
+of his nurse and his grandmother, went down the river to open the New
+York house.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+INDIAN SUMMER
+
+The upper fields of Stone Ridge, so the farmers said, were infested that
+autumn by a shy and solitary vagrant, who never could be met with face
+to face, but numbers of times had been seen across the width of a lot,
+climbing the bars, or closing a gate, or vanishing up some crooked lane
+that quickly shut him from view.
+
+"I would look after that old chap if I was you, Chauncey. He'll be
+smoking in your hay barns, and burn you out some o' these cold nights."
+
+Chauncey took these neighborly warnings with good-humored indifference.
+"I haven't seen no signs of his doin' any harm," he said. "Anybody's at
+liberty to walk in the fields if there ain't a 'No Trespass' posted.
+I rather guess he makes his bed among the corn stouks. I see prints of
+someone's feet, goin' and comin'."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus was more herself in those days than she had been at
+any time since the great North-western wilderness sent her its second
+message of fear. Old memories were losing their sting. She could bear to
+review her decision with a certain shrinking hardihood. Had the choice
+been given her to repeat, her action had been the same. In so far as she
+had perjured herself for the sake of peace in the family, she owned the
+sacrifice was vain; but her own personality was the true reason for what
+she had done. She was free in her unimpeachable widowhood--a mother who
+had never been at heart a wife. She feared no ghosts this keen autumn
+weather, at the summit of her conscious powers. Her dark eye unsheathed
+its glance of authority. It was an eye that went everywhere, and
+everywhere was met with signs that praised its oversight. Here was
+an out-worn inheritance which one woman, in less than a third of her
+lifetime, had developed into a competence for her son. He could afford
+to dream dreams of beneficence with his mother to make them good. Yes,
+he needed her still. His child was in her keeping; and, though brief the
+lease, that trust was no accident. It was the surest proof he could have
+given her of his vital allegiance. In the step which Paul and Moya were
+taking, she saw the first promise of that wisdom she had despaired of in
+her son. In the course of years he would understand her. And Christine?
+She rested bitterly secure in her daughter's inevitable physical need
+of her. Christine was a born parasite. She had no true pride; she was
+capable merely of pique which would wear itself out and pass into other
+forms of selfishness.
+
+This woman had been governed all her life by a habit of decision, and
+a strong personality rooted in the powers of nature. Therefore she
+was seldom mistaken in her conclusions when they dealt with material
+results. Occasionally she left out the spirit; but the spirit leaves out
+no one.
+
+Her long dark skirts were sweeping the autumn grass at sunset as she
+paced back and forth under the red-gold tents of the maples. It was a
+row of young trees she had planted to grace a certain turf walk at the
+top of the low wall that divided, by a drop of a few feet, the west
+lawn at Stone Ridge from the meadow where the beautiful Alderneys were
+pastured. The maples turned purple as the light faded out of their tops
+and struck flat across the meadow, making the grass vivid as in spring.
+Two spots of color moved across it slowly--a young woman capped and
+aproned, urging along a little trotting child. Down the path of their
+united shadows they came, and the shadows had reached already the
+dividing wall. The waiting smile was sweet upon the grandmother's
+features; her face was transformed like the meadow into a memory of
+spring. The child saw her, and waved to her with something scarlet which
+he held in his free hand. She admired the stride of his brown legs above
+their crumpled socks, the imperishable look of health on his broad,
+sweet glowing face. She lifted him high in her embrace and bore him up
+the hill, his dusty shoes dangling against her silk front breadths,
+his knees pressed tight against her waist, and over her shoulder he
+flourished the scarlet cardinal flower.
+
+"Where have you been with him so long?" she asked the nursemaid.
+
+"Only up in the lane, as far as the three gates, ma'am."
+
+"Then where did he get this flower?"
+
+"Oh," said the pretty Irish girl, half scared by her tone, and tempted
+to prevaricate. "Why--he must have picked it, I guess."
+
+"Not in the lane. It's a swamp-flower. It doesn't grow anywhere within
+four miles of the lane!"
+
+"It must have been the old man gev it him then," said the maid. "Is it
+unhealthy, ma'am? I tried to get it from him, but he screamed and fussed
+so."
+
+"What old man do you mean?"
+
+"Why, him that was passin' up the lane. I didn't see him till he was
+clean by--and Middy had the flower. I don't know where in the world he
+could have got it, else, for we wasn't one step out of the lane, was we,
+Middy! That's the very truth."
+
+"But where were you when strangers were giving him flowers?"
+
+"Why, sure, ma'am, I was only just a step away be the fence, having a
+word with one o' the boys. I was lookin' in the field, speakin' to him
+and he was lookin' at me with me back to the lane. 'There's the old man
+again,' he says, shiftin' his eye. I turned me round and there, so he
+was, but he was by and walkin' on up the lane. And Middy had the flower.
+He wouldn't be parted from it and squeezed it so tight I thought the
+juice might be bad on his hands, and he promised he'd not put it to his
+mouth. I kep' my eye on him. Ah, the nasty, na-asty flower! Give it here
+to Katy till I throw it!"
+
+"There's no harm in the flower. But there is harm in strangers making up
+to him when your back is turned. Don't you know the dreadful things we
+read in the papers?"
+
+Mrs. Bogardus said no more. It was Middy's supper-time. But later she
+questioned Katy particularly concerning this old man who was spoken of
+quite as if his appearance were taken for granted in the heart of the
+farm. Katy recalled one other day when she had seen him asleep as she
+thought in a corner of the fence by the big chestnut tree when she and
+the boy were nutting. They had moved away to the other side of the tree,
+but while she was busy hunting for nuts Middy had strayed off a bit and
+foregathered with the old man, who was not asleep at all, but stood with
+his back to her pouring a handful of big fat chestnuts into the child's
+little skirt, which he held up. She called to him and the old man had
+stepped back, and the nuts were spilled. Middy had cried and made her
+pick them up, and when that was done the stranger was gone quite out of
+sight.
+
+Chauncey, too, was questioned, and testified that the old man of the
+fields was no myth. But he deprecated all this exaggerated alarm. The
+stranger was some simple-minded old work-house candidate putting off the
+evil day. In a few weeks he would have to make for shelter in one of the
+neighboring towns. Chauncey could not see what legal hold they had upon
+him even if they could catch him. He hardly came under the vagrancy law,
+since he had neither begged, nor helped himself appreciably to the means
+of subsistence.
+
+"That is just the point," Mrs. Bogardus insisted. "He has the
+means--from somewhere--to lurk around here and make friends with that
+child. There may be a gang of kidnappers behind him. He is the harmless
+looking decoy. I insist that you keep a sharp lookout, Chauncey. There
+shall be a hold upon him, law or no law, if we catch him on our ground."
+
+A cold rain set in. Paul and Moya wrote of delays in the house
+preparations, and hoped the grandmother was not growing tired of her
+charge. On the last of the rainy days, in a burst of dubious sunshine,
+came a young girl on horseback to have tea with Mrs. Bogardus. She was
+one of that lady's discoverers, so she claimed, Miss Sallie Remsen, very
+pretty and full of fantastic little affectations founded on her intense
+appreciation of the picturesque. She called Mrs. Bogardus "Madam," and
+likened her to various female personages in history more celebrated for
+strength of purpose than for the Christian virtues. Mrs. Bogardus, in
+her restful ignorance of such futilities, went no deeper into these
+allusions than their intention, which she took to be complimentary. Miss
+Sallie hugged herself with joy when the rain came down in torrents for
+a clear-up shower. Her groom was sent home with a note to inform her
+mother that Mrs. Bogardus wished to keep her overnight. All the mothers
+were flattered when Mrs. Bogardus took notice of their daughters,--even
+much grander dames than she herself could pretend to be.
+
+They had a charming little dinner by themselves to the tune of the rain
+outside, and were having their coffee by the drawing-room fire; and Miss
+Sallie was thinking by what phrase one could do justice to the massive,
+crass ugliness of that self-satisfied apartment, furnished in the
+hideous sixties, when the word was sent in that Mrs. Dunlop wished to
+speak with Mrs. Bogardus. Something of Cerissa's injured importance
+survived the transmission of the message, causing Mrs. Bogardus to smile
+to herself as she rose. Cerissa was waiting in the dining-room. She kept
+her seat as Mrs. Bogardus entered. Her eyes did not rise higher than the
+lady's dress, which she examined with a fierce intentness of comparison
+while she opened her errand.
+
+"I thought you'd like to know you've got a strange lodger down to the
+old house. I don't seem to ever get moved!" she enlarged. "I'm always
+runnin' down there after first one thing 'n' another we've forgot. This
+morning 't was my stone batter-pot. Chauncey said he thought it was
+getting cold enough for buckwheat cakes. I don't suppose you want to
+have stray tramps in there in the old house, building fires in the
+loom-room, where, if a spark got loose, it would blaze up them draughty
+stairs, and the whole house would go in a minute." Cerissa stopped to
+gain breath.
+
+"Making fires? Are you sure of that? Has any smoke been seen coming out
+of that chimney?"
+
+"Why, it's been raining so! And the trees have got so tall! But I could
+show you the shucks an' shells he's left there. I know how we left it!"
+
+"You had better speak--No; I will see Chauncey in the morning." Mrs.
+Bogardus never, if she could avoid it, gave an order through a third
+person.
+
+"Well, I thought I'd just step in. Chauncey said 't was no use
+disturbing you to-night, but he's just that way--so easy about
+everything! I thought you wouldn't want to be harboring tramps this wet
+weather when most anybody would be tempted to build a fire. I'm more
+concerned about what goes on down there now we're _out_ of the house! I
+seem to have it on my mind the whole time. A house is just like a child:
+the more you don't see it the more you worry about it."
+
+"I'm glad you have such a home feeling about the place," said Mrs.
+Bogardus, avoiding the onset of words. "Well, good-evening, Cerissa.
+Thank you for your trouble. I will see about it in the morning."
+
+Mrs. Bogardus mentioned what she had just heard to Miss Sallie, who
+remarked, with her keen sense of antithesis, what a contrast _that_
+fireside must be to _this_.
+
+"Which fireside?"
+
+"Oh, your lodger upon the cold ground,--making his little bit of a
+stolen blaze in that cavern of a chimney in the midst of the wet trees!
+What a nice thing to have an unwatched place like that where a poor
+bird of passage can creep in and make his nest, and not trouble any one.
+Think what Jean Valjeans one might shelter"--
+
+"Who?"
+
+"What 'angels unawares.'"
+
+"It will be unawares, my dear,--very much unawares,--when I shelter any
+angels of that sort."
+
+"Oh, you wouldn't turn him out, such weather as this?"
+
+"The house is not mine, in the first place," Mrs. Bogardus explained
+as to a child. "I can't entertain tramps or even angels on my son's
+premises, when he's away."
+
+"Oh, he! He would build the fires himself, and make up their beds,"
+laughed Miss Sallie. "If he were here, I believe he would start down
+there now, and stock the place with everything you've got in the house
+to eat."
+
+"I hope he'd leave us a little something for breakfast," said Mrs.
+Bogardus a trifle coldly. But she did not mention the cause of her
+uneasiness about this particular visitor. She never defended herself.
+
+Miss Sallie was delighted with her callousness to the sentimental rebuke
+which had been rather rubbed in. It was so unmodern; one got so weary
+of fashionable philanthropy, women who talked of their social sympathies
+and their principles in life. She almost hoped that Mrs. Bogardus had
+neither. Certainly she never mentioned them.
+
+"What did she say? Did she tell you what I said to her last night?"
+Cerissa questioned her husband feverishly after his interview with Mrs.
+Bogardus.
+
+"She didn't mention your name," Chauncey took some pleasure in stating.
+"If you hadn't told me yourself, I shouldn't have known you'd meddled in
+it at all."
+
+"What's she going to do about it?"
+
+"How crazy you women are! 'Cause some poor old Sooner-die-than-work
+warms his bones by a bit of fire that wouldn't scare a chimbly swaller
+out of its nest! Don't you s'pose if there'd been any fire there to
+speak of, I'd 'a' seen it? What am I here for? Now I've got to drop
+everything, and git a padlock on that door, and lock it up every night,
+and search the whole place from top to bottom for fear there's some one
+in there hidin' in a rathole!"
+
+"Chauncey! If you've got to do that I don't want you to go in there
+alone. You take one of the men with you; and you better have a pistol or
+one of the dogs anyhow. Suppose you was to ketch some one in there, and
+corner him! He might turn on you, and shoot you!"
+
+"I wish you wouldn't work yourself up so about nothin' at all! Want
+me to make a blame jackass of myself raisin' the whole place about a
+potato-peel or a bacon-rind!"
+
+"I think you might have some little regard for my feelings," Cerissa
+whimpered. "If you ain't afraid, I'm afraid for you; and I don't see
+anything to be ashamed of either. I wish you _wouldn't_ go _alone_
+searching through that spooky old place. It just puts me beside myself
+to think of it!"
+
+"Well, well! That's enough about it anyhow. I ain't going to do anything
+foolish, and you needn't think no more about it."
+
+Whether it was the effect of his wife's fears, or his promise to her,
+or the inhospitable nature of his errand founded on suspicion, certainly
+Chauncey showed no spirit of rashness in conducting his search. He
+knocked the mud off his boots loudly on the doorsill before proceeding
+to attach the padlock to the outer door. He searched the loom-room,
+lighting a candle and peering into all its cobwebbed corners. He
+examined the rooms lately inhabited, unlocking and locking doors
+behind him noisily with increasing confidence in the good old house's
+emptiness. Still, in the fireplace in the loom-room there were signs of
+furtive cooking which a housekeeper's eye would infallibly detect.
+He saw that the search must proceed. It was not all a question of his
+wife's fears, as he opened the stair-door cautiously and tramped slowly
+up towards the tower bedroom. He could not remember who had gone out
+last, on the day the old secretary was moved down. There had been
+four men up there, and--yes, the key was still in the lock outside. He
+clutched it and it fell rattling on the steps. He swung the door open
+and stared into the further darkness beyond his range of vision. He
+waved his candle as far as his arm would reach. "Anybody _in_ here?" he
+shouted. The silence made his flesh prick. "I'm goin' to lock up now.
+Better show up. It's the last chance." He waited while one could count
+ten. "Anybody in here that wants to be let free? Nobody's goin' to hurt
+ye."
+
+To his anxious relief there was no reply. But as he listened, he heard
+the loud, measured tick, tick, of the old clock, appalling in the
+darkness, on the silence of that empty room. Chauncey could not have
+told just how he got the door to, nor where he found strength to lock it
+and drag his feet downstairs, but the hand that held the key was moist
+with cold perspiration as he reached the open air.
+
+"Well, if that's rain I'd like to know where it comes from!" He looked
+up at the moon breaking through drifting clouds. The night was keen and
+clear.
+
+"If I was to tell that to Cerissa she'd never go within a mile o' that
+house again! Maybe I was mistaken--but I ain't goin' back to see!"
+
+Next morning on calmer reflection he changed his mind about removing the
+lawn-mower and other hand-tools from the loom-room as he had determined
+overnight should be done. The place continued to be used as a storeroom,
+open by day.
+
+At night it was Chauncey's business to lock it up, and he was careful to
+repeat his search--as far as the stair-door. Never did the silent room
+above give forth a protest, a sound of human restraint or occupation. He
+reported to the mistress that all was snug at the old house, and nobody
+anywhere about the place.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+THE FELL FROST
+
+After the rain came milder days. The still white mornings slowly
+brightened into hazy afternoons. The old moon like a sleep walker stood
+exposed in the morning sky. The roads to Stone Ridge were deep in fallen
+leaves. Soft-tired wheels rustled up the avenue and horses' feet fell
+light, as the last of the summer neighbors came to say good-by.
+
+It was a party of four--Miss Sallie and a good-looking youth of the
+football cult on horseback, her mother and an elder sister, the delicate
+Miss Remsen, in a hired carriage. Their own traps had been sent to town.
+
+Tea was served promptly, as the visitors had a long road home before
+their dinner-hour. In the reduced state of the establishment it was
+Katy who brought the tea while Cerissa looked after her little charge.
+Cerissa sat on the kitchen porch sewing and expanding under the deep
+attention of the cook; they could see Middy a little way off on the
+tennis-court wiping the mud gravely from a truant ball he had found
+among the nasturtiums. All was as peaceful as the time of day and the
+season of the year.
+
+"Yes," said Cerissa solemnly. "Old Abraham Van Elten was too much
+cumbered up with this world to get quit of it as easy as some. If his
+spirit is burdened with a message to anybody it's to _her_. He died
+unreconciled to her, and she inherited all this place in spite of him,
+as you may say. I've come as near believin' in such things since the
+goings on up there in that room"--
+
+"She wants Middy fetched in to see the comp'ny," cried Katy, bursting
+into the sentence. "Where is he, till I clean him? And she wants some
+more bread and butter as quick as ye can spread it."
+
+"Well, Katy!" said Cerissa slowly, with severe emphasis. "When I was a
+girl, my mother used to tell me it wasn't manners to"--
+
+"I haven't got time to hear about yer mother," said Katy rudely. "What
+have ye done with me boy?" The tennis-court lay vacant on the terrace in
+the sun; the steep lawn sloped away and dipped into the trees.
+
+"Don't call," said the cook warily. "It'll only scare her. He was there
+only a minute ago. Run, Katy, and see if he's at the stables."
+
+It was not noticed, except by Mrs. Bogardus, that no Katy, and no boy,
+and no bread and butter, had appeared. Possibly the last deficiency had
+attracted a little playful attention from the young horseback riders,
+who were accusing each other of eating more than their respective
+shares.
+
+At length Miss Sallie perceived there was something on her hostess's
+mind. "Where is John Middleton?" she whispered. "Katy is dressing him
+all over, from head to foot, isn't she? I hope she isn't curling his
+hair. John Middleton has such wonderful hair! I refuse to go back to
+New York till I have introduced you to John Middleton Bogardus," she
+announced to the young man, who laughed at everything she said. Mrs.
+Bogardus smiled vacantly and glanced at the door.
+
+"Let me go find Katy," cried Miss Sally. Katy entered as she spoke,
+and said a few words to the mistress. "Excuse me." Mrs. Bogardus rose
+hastily. She asked Miss Sallie to take her place at the tea-tray.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"The boy--they cannot find him. Don't say anything." She had turned ashy
+white, and Katy's pretty flushed face had a wild expression.
+
+In five minutes the search had begun. Mrs. Bogardus was at the
+telephone, calling up the quarry, for she was short of men. One order
+followed another quickly. Her voice was harsh and deep. She had frankly
+forgotten her guests. Embarrassed by their own uselessness, yet unable
+to take leave, they lingered and discussed the mystery of this sudden,
+acute alarm.
+
+"It is the sore spot," said Miss Sally sentimentally. "You know her
+husband was missing for years before she gave him up; and then that
+dreadful time, three years ago, when they were so frightened about
+Paul."
+
+Having spread the alarm, Mrs. Bogardus took the field in person. Her
+head was bare in the keen, sunset light. She moved with strong, fleet
+steps, but a look of sudden age stamped her face.
+
+"Go back, all of you!" she said to the women, who crowded on her heels.
+"There are plenty of places to look." Her stern eyes resisted their
+frightened sympathy. She was not ready to yield to the consciousness of
+her own fears.
+
+To the old house she went, by some sure instinct that told her the road
+to trouble. But her trouble stood off from her, and spared her for one
+moment of exquisite relief; as if the child of Paul and Moya had no part
+in what was waiting for her. The door at the foot of the stairs stood
+open. She heard a soft, repeated thud. Panting, she climbed the stairs;
+and as she rounded the shoulder of the chimney, there, on the top step
+above her, stood the fair-haired child, making the only light in the
+place. He was knocking, with his foolish ball, on the door of the
+chamber of fear. Three generations of the living and the dead were
+brought together in this coil of fate, and the child, in his happy
+innocence, had joined the knot.
+
+The woman crouching on the stairs could barely whisper, "Middy!" lest
+if she startled him he might turn and fall. He looked down at her,
+unsurprised, and paused in his knocking. "Man--in there--won't 'peak to
+Middy!" he said.
+
+She crept towards him and sat below him, coaxing him into her lap. The
+strange motions of her breast, as she pressed his head against her, kept
+the boy quiet, and in that silence she heard an inner sound--the awful
+pulse of the old clock beating steadily, calling her, demanding the
+evidence of her senses,--she who feared no ghosts,--beating out the
+hours of an agony she was there to witness. And she was yet in time. The
+hapless creature entrapped within that room dragged its weight
+slowly across the floor. The clock, sole witness and companion of its
+sufferings, ticked on impartially. Neither is this any new thing, it
+seemed to say. A life was starved in here before--not for lack of food,
+but love,--love,--love!
+
+She carried the child out into the air, and he ran before her like a
+breeze. The women who met them stared at her sick and desperate face.
+She made herself quickly understood, and as each listener drained her
+meaning the horror spread. There was but one man left on the place,
+within call, he with the boyish face and clean brown hands, who had
+ridden across the fields for an afternoon's idle pleasure. He stepped to
+her side and took the key out of her hand. "You ought not to do this,"
+he said gently, as their eyes met.
+
+"Wednesday, Thursday, Friday," she counted mechanically. "He has been
+in there six days and seven nights by my orders." She looked straight
+before her, seeing no one, as she gave her commands to the women: fire
+and hot water and stimulants, in the kitchen of the old house at once,
+and another man, if one could be found to follow her.
+
+The two figures moving across the grass might have stepped out of an
+illustration in the pages of some current magazine. In their thoughts
+they had already unlocked the door of that living death and were face to
+face with the insupportable facts of nature.
+
+The morbid, sickening, prison odor met them at the door--humanity's
+helpless protest against bolts and bars. Again the young man begged his
+companion not to enter. She took one deep breath of the pure outside
+air and stepped before him. They searched the emptiness of the barely
+furnished room. The clock ticked on to itself. Mrs. Bogardus's companion
+stood irresolute, not knowing the place. The fetid air confused
+his senses. But she went past him through the inner door, guided by
+remembrance of the sounds she had heard.
+
+She had seen it. She approached it cautiously, stooping for a better
+view, and closing in upon it warily, as one cuts off the retreat of a
+creature in the last agonies of flight. Her companion heard her say:
+"Show me your face!--Uncover his face," she repeated, not moving her
+eyes as he stepped behind her. "He will not let me near him. Uncover
+it."
+
+The thing in the corner had some time been a man. There was still enough
+manhood left to feel her eyes and to shrink as an earthworm from the
+spade. He had crawled close to the baseboard of the room. An old man's
+ashen beard straggled through the brown claws wrapped about the face. As
+the dust of the threshing floor to the summer grain, so was his likeness
+to one she remembered.
+
+"I must see that man's face!" she panted. "He will die if I touch him.
+Take away his hands." It was done, with set teeth, and the face of the
+football hero was bathed in sweat. He breathed through tense nostrils,
+and a sickly whiteness spread backward from his lips. Suddenly he loosed
+his burden. It fell, doubling in a ghastly heap, and he rushed for the
+open air.
+
+Mrs. Bogardus groaned. She raised herself up slowly, stretching back her
+head. Her face was like the terrible tortured mask of the Medusa. She
+had but a moment in which to recover herself. Deliberately she spoke
+when her companion returned and stood beside her.
+
+"That was my husband. If he lives I am still his wife. You are not to
+forget this. It is no secret. Are you able to help me now? Get a blanket
+from the women. I hear some one coming."
+
+She waited, with head erect and eyes closed and rigid tortured lips
+apart, till the feet were heard at the door.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+
+Mrs. Remsen and her delicate daughter had driven away to avoid
+excitement and the night air.
+
+Chauncey hovered round the piazza steps, talking, with but little
+encouragement, to Miss Sallie and the young man who had become the
+centre of all eyes.
+
+"I don't see how anybody on the face of the earth could blame her, nor
+me either!" Chauncey protested. "If the critter wanted to git out, why
+couldn't he say so? I stood there holdin' the door open much as five
+minutes. 'Who's in there?' I says. I called it loud enough to wake the
+dead. 'Nobody wants to hurt ye,' says I. There want nothing to be afraid
+of. He hadn't done nothing anyway. It's the strangest case ever I heard
+tell of. And the doctor don't think he was much crazy either."
+
+"Can he live?" asked Miss Sallie.
+
+"He's alive now, but doctor don't know how long he'll last. There he
+comes now. I must go and git his horse."
+
+The doctor, who seemed nervous,--he was a young local
+practitioner,--asked to speak with Miss Sallie's hero apart.
+
+"Did Mrs. Bogardus say anything when she first saw that man? Did you
+notice what she said?--how she took it?"
+
+The hero, who was also a gentleman, looked at the doctor coolly.
+
+"It was not a nice thing," he said. "I saw just as little as I could."
+
+"You don't understand me," said the doctor. "I want to know if Mrs.
+Bogardus appeared to you to have made any discovery--received any shock
+not to be accounted for by--by what you both saw?"
+
+"I shouldn't attempt to answer such a question," said the youngster
+bluntly. "I never saw Mrs. Bogardus in my life before to-day."
+
+The doctor colored. "Mrs. Bogardus has given me a telegram to send, and
+I don't know whether to send it or not. It's going to make a whole lot
+of talk. I am not much acquainted with Mrs. Bogardus myself, except by
+hearsay. That's partly what surprises me. It looks a little reckless
+to send out such a message as that, by the first hand that comes along.
+Hadn't we better give her time to think it over?" He opened the telegram
+for the other to read. "The man himself can't speak. But he just pants
+for breath every time she comes near him: he tries to hide his face. He
+acts like a criminal afraid of being caught."
+
+"He didn't look that way to me--what was left of him. Not in the least
+like a criminal."
+
+"Well, no; that's a fact, too. Now they've got him laid out clean and
+neat, he looks as if he might have been a very decent sort of man. But
+_that_, you know--that's incredible. If she knows him, why doesn't he
+know her? Why won't he own her? He's afraid of her. His eyes are ready
+to burst out of his head whenever she comes near him."
+
+"Did Mrs. Bogardus write that telegram herself?"
+
+"She did."
+
+"And what did she tell you to do with it?"
+
+"Send it to her son."
+
+"Then why don't you send it?"
+
+This was the disputed message: "Come. Your father has been found. Bring
+Doctor Gainsworth."
+
+In the local man's opinion, the writer of that dispatch was Doctor
+Gainsworth's true patient. What could induce a woman in Mrs. Bogardus's
+position to give such hasty publicity to this shocking disclosure,
+allowing it were true? The more he dwelt on it the less he liked the
+responsibility he was taking. He discussed it openly; and, with the
+best intentions, this much-impressed young man gave out his own
+counter-theory of the case, hoping to forestall whatever mischief might
+have been done. He put himself in the place of Mr. Paul Bogardus, whom
+he liked extremely, and tried to imagine that young gentleman's state
+of mind when he should look upon this new-found parent, and learn the
+manner of his resurrection.
+
+This was the explanation he boldly set forth in behalf of those most
+nearly concerned. [He was getting up his diagnosis for an interesting
+half hour with the great doctor who had been called in consultation.]
+The shock of that awful discovery in the locked chamber, he attested,
+had put Mrs. Bogardus temporarily beside herself. Outwardly composed,
+her nerves were ripped and torn by the terrible sight that met her
+eyes. She was the prey of an hallucination founded on memories of former
+suffering, which had worn a channel for every fresh fear to seek. There
+was something truly noble and loyal and pathetic in the nature of her
+possession. It threw a softened light upon her past. How must she have
+brooded, all these years, for that one thought to have ploughed so deep!
+It was quite commonly known in the neighborhood that she had come back
+from the West years ago without her husband, yet with no proof of his
+death. But who could have believed she would cling for half a lifetime
+to this forlorn expectancy, depicting her own loss in every sad hulk of
+humanity cast upon her prosperous shores!
+
+Every one believed she was deceiving herself, but great honor was hers
+among the neighbors for the plain truth and courage of her astonishing
+avowal. They had thought her proud, exclusive, hard in the security
+of wealth. Here she stood by a pauper's bed in the name of simple
+constancy, stripping herself of all earthly surplusage, exposing her
+deepest wound, proclaiming the bond--herself its only witness--between
+her and this speechless wreck, drifting out on the tide of death. She
+had but to let him go. It was the wild word she had spoken in the name
+of truth and deathless love that fired the imagination of that slow
+countryside. It was the touch beyond nature that appeals to the higher
+sense of a community, and there is no community without a soul.
+
+The straight demands of justice are frequently hard to meet, but its
+ironies are crushing. Mrs. Bogardus had fallen back on the line of a
+mother's duty since that moment of personal accountability. She read
+the unspoken reverence in the eyes of all around her, but she put in
+no disclaimer. Her past was not her own. She could not sin alone. Only
+those who have been honest are privileged under all conditions to remain
+so.
+
+On his arrival with the doctor, Paul endeavored first to see his
+mother alone. For some reason she would not have it so. She took the
+unspeakable situation as it came. He was shown into the room where she
+sat, and by her orders Doctor Gainsworth was with him.
+
+She rose quietly and came to meet them. Placing her hand in her son's
+arm, and looking towards the bed, she said:--
+
+"Doctor--my husband."
+
+"Madam!" said Doctor Gainsworth. He had been Mrs. Bogardus's family
+physician for many years.
+
+"My husband," she repeated.
+
+The doctor appeared to accept the statement. As the three approached the
+bed Mrs. Bogardus leaned heavily upon her son. Paul released his arm and
+placed it firmly around her. He felt her shudder. "Mother," he said to
+her with an indescribable accent that tore her heart.
+
+The doctor began his examination. He addressed his patient as "Mr.
+Bogardus."
+
+"Mistake," said a low, husky voice from the bed. "This ain't the man."
+
+Doctor Gainsworth pursued his investigations. "What is your name?" he
+asked the patient suddenly.
+
+The hunted eyes turned with ghastly appeal upon the faces around him.
+
+"Paul, speak to him! Own your father," Mrs. Bogardus whispered
+passionately.
+
+"It is for him to speak now," said Paul. "When he is well, Doctor," he
+added aloud, "he will know his own name."
+
+"This man will never be well," the doctor answered. "If there is
+anything to prove, for or against the identity you claim for him, it
+will have to be done within a very few days."
+
+Doctor Gainsworth rose and held out his hand. He was a man of delicate
+perceptions. His respect at that moment for Mrs. Bogardus, though
+founded on blindest conjecture, was an emotion which the mask of his
+professional manner could barely conceal. "As a friend, Mrs. Bogardus, I
+hope you will command me--but you need no doctor here."
+
+"As a friend I ask you to believe me," she said. "This man _is_ my
+husband. He came back here because this was his home. I cannot tell you
+any more, but this we expect you and every one who knows"--
+
+The dissenting voice from the bed closed her assertion with a hoarse
+"No! Not the man."
+
+"Good-by, Mrs. Bogardus," said the doctor. "Don't trouble to explain.
+You and I have lived too long and seen too much of life not to recognize
+its fatalities: the mysterious trend in the actions of men and women
+that cannot be comprised in--in the locking of a door."
+
+"It is of little consequence--what was done, compared to what was not
+done." This was all the room for truth she could give herself to turn
+in. The doctor did not try to understand her: yet she had snatched a
+little comfort from merely uttering the words.
+
+Paul and the doctor dined together, Mrs. Bogardus excusing herself.
+
+"There seems to be an impression here," said the doctor, examining
+the initials on his fish-fork, "that your mother is indulging an
+overstrained fancy in this melancholy resemblance she has traced.
+It does not appear to have made much headway as a fact, which rather
+surprises me in a country neighborhood. Possibly your doctor here, who
+seems a very good fellow, has wished to spare the family any unnecessary
+explanations. If you'll let me advise you, Paul, I would leave it as
+it is,--open to conjecture. But, in whatever shape this impression
+may reach you from outside, I hope you won't let it disturb you in the
+least, so far as it describes your mother's condition. She is one of the
+few well-balanced women I have had the honor to know."
+
+Paul did not take advantage of the doctor's period. He went on.
+
+"Not that I do know her. Possibly you may not yourself feel that you
+altogether understand your mother? She has had many demands upon her
+powers of adaptation. I should imagine her not one who would adapt
+herself easily, yet, once she had recognized a necessity of that sort,
+I believe she would fit herself to its conditions with an exacting
+thoroughness which in time would become almost, one might say, a second,
+an external self. The 'lendings' we must all of us wear."
+
+"There will be no explanations," said Paul, not coldly, but helplessly.
+
+"Much the best way," said the doctor relieved, and glad to be done with
+a difficult undertaking. "If we are ever understood in this world, it
+is not through our own explanations, but in spite of them. My daughters
+hope to see a good deal of your charming wife this winter. I hear great
+pleasure expressed at your coming back to town."
+
+"Thank you, Doctor. She will be up this evening. We shall stay here
+with my mother for a time. It will be her desire to carry out
+this--recognition--to the end. We must honor her wishes in the matter."
+
+The talk then fell upon the patient's condition. The doctor left certain
+directions and took shelter in professional platitudes, but his eyes
+rested with candid kindness upon the young man, and his farewell
+hand-clasp was a second prolonged.
+
+He went away in a state of simple wonderment, deeply marveling at Paul's
+serenity.
+
+"Extraordinary poise! Where does it come from? No: the boy is happy! He
+hides it; but it is the one change in him. He has experienced a great
+relief. Is it possible"--
+
+On his way down the river the doctor continued to muse upon the dignity,
+the amazingly beautiful behavior of this rising family in whose somewhat
+commonplace city fortunes he had taken a friendly interest for years. He
+owned that he had sounded them with too short a line.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Watching with the dying man hours when she was with him alone, Emily
+Bogardus continued to test his resolution. He never retracted by a
+look--faithful to the word she had spoken which made them strangers.
+
+It was the slightest shell of mortality that ever detained a soul on
+earth. The face, small like the face of an old, old child, waxed finer
+and more spiritual, yet ever more startlingly did it bear the stamp of
+that individuality which the spirit had held so cheap--the earthly
+so impenetrated with the spiritual part that the face had become a
+sublimation. As one sees a sheet of paper covered with writing wither
+in flame and become a quivering ash, yet to the last attenuation of
+its fibre the human characters will stand forth, till all is blown up
+chimney to the stars.
+
+Still, peaceful, implacable in its peace, settling down for the silence
+of eternity. Still no sign.
+
+The younger ones came and went. The little boy stole in alone and pushed
+against his grandmother's knee,--she seated always by the bed,--gazed,
+puzzled, at the strange, still face, and whispered obediently,
+"Gran'faver." There was no response. Once she took the boy and drew him
+close and placed his little tender hand within the dry, crumpled husk
+extended on the bedclothes. The eyes unclosed and rested long and
+earnestly on the face of the child, who yawned as if hypnotized and
+flung his head back on the grandmother's breast. She bent suddenly and
+laid her own hand where the child's had been. The eyes turned inward
+and shut again, but a sigh, so deep it seemed that another breath might
+never come, was all her answer.
+
+Past midnight of the fourth night's watch Paul was awakened by a light
+in his room. His mother stood beside him, white and worn. "He is
+going," she said. It was the final rally of the body's resistance. A
+few moments' expenditure, and that stubborn vitality would loose its
+hold.--The strength of the soil!
+
+The wife stood aside and gave up her place to the children. Her
+expression was noble, like a queen rebuked before her people. There was
+comfort in that, too. A great, solemn, mutual understanding drew this
+death-bed group together. Within the sickle's compass so they stood:
+the woman God gave this man to found a home; the son who inherited
+his father's gentleness and purity of purpose; the fair flower of the
+generations that father's sacrifice had helped him win; the bud of
+promise on the topmost bough. Those astonished eyes shed their last
+earthly light on this human group, turned and rested in the eyes of
+the woman, faded, and the light went out. He died, blessing her in one
+whispered word. Her name.
+
+Before daybreak on the morning of the funeral, Paul awoke under pressure
+of disturbing dreams. There were sounds of hushed movements in the
+house. He traced them to the door of the room below stairs where his
+father lay. Some one had softly unlocked that door, and entered. He knew
+who that one must be. His place was there alone with his mother, before
+they were called together as a family, and the mask of decency resumed
+for those ironic rites in the presence of the unaccusing dead.
+
+The windows had been lowered behind closed curtains, and the air of the
+death chamber, as he entered, was like the touch of chilled iron to the
+warm pulse of sleep. Without, a still dark night of November had frosted
+the dead grass.
+
+The unappeasable curiosity of the living concerning the Great
+Transition, for the moment appeared to have swept all that was personal
+out of the watcher's gaze, as she bent above the straightened body.
+And something of the peace there dawning on the cold, still face was
+reflected in her own.
+
+"You have never seen your father before. There he is." She drew a
+deep sigh, as if she had been too intent to breathe naturally. All her
+self-consciousness suddenly was gone. And Paul remembered his dream,
+that had goaded him out of sleep, and vanished with the shock of waking.
+It gave him the key to this long-expected moment of confidence.
+
+"The old likeness has come back," his mother repeated, with that new
+quietness which restored her to herself.
+
+"I dreamed of that likeness," said Paul, "only it was much
+stronger--startling--so that the room was full of whispers and
+exclamations as the neighbors--there were hundreds of them--filed past.
+And you stood there, mother, flushed, and talking to each person who
+passed and looked at him and then at you; you said--you"--
+
+Mrs. Bogardus raised her head. "I know! I have been thinking all night.
+Am I to do that? Is that what you wish me to do? Don't hesitate--to
+spare me."
+
+"Mother! I could not imagine you doing such a thing. It was like
+insanity. I wanted to tell you how horrible, how unseemly it was,
+because I was sure you had been dwelling on some form--some outward"--
+
+"No," she said. "I know how I should face this if it were left to me.
+But you are my only earthly judge, my son. Judge now between us two. Ask
+of me anything you think is due to him. As to outsiders, what do they
+matter! I will do anything you say."
+
+"_I_ say! Oh, mother! Every hand he loved was against him--bruising his
+gentle will. Each one of us has cast a stone upon his grave. But you
+took the brunt of it. You spoke out plain the denial that was in my
+coward's heart from the first. And I judged you! I--who uncovered
+my father's soul to ease my own conscience, and put him to shame and
+torture, and you to a trial worse than death. Now let us think of the
+whole of his life. I have much to tell you. You could not listen before;
+but now he is listening. I speak for him. This is how he loved us!"
+
+In hard, brief words Paul told the story of his father's sin and
+self-judgment; his abdication in the flesh; what he esteemed the rights
+to be of a woman placed as he had placed his wife; how carefully he had
+guarded her in those rights, and perjured himself at the last to
+leave her free in peace and honor with her children. She listened, not
+weeping, but with her great eyes shining in her pallid face.
+
+"All that came after," said Paul, taking her cold hands in his--"after
+his last solemn recantation does not touch the true spirit of his
+sacrifice. It was finished. My father died to us then as he meant to
+die. The body remained--to serve out its time, as he said. But his brain
+was tired. I do not think he connected the past very clearly with the
+present. I think you should forget what has happened here. It was a
+hideous net of circumstance that did it."
+
+"There is no such thing as circumstance," said Mrs. Bogardus with
+loftiness. Her face was calm and sweet in its exaltation. "I cannot
+say things as you can, but this is what I mean. I was the wife of his
+body--sworn flesh of his flesh. In the flesh that made us one I denied
+him, and caused his death. And if I could believe as I used to about
+punishment, I would lock myself in that room, and for every hour he
+suffered there, I would suffer two. And no one should prevent me,
+or hasten the end. And the feet of the young men that carried out my
+husband who lied to save me, should wait there for me who lied to save
+myself. All lies are death. But what is a made-up punishment to me! I
+shall take it as it comes--drop by drop--slowly."
+
+"Mother--my mother! The fashion of this world does not last; but one
+thing does. Is it nothing to you, mother?"
+
+"Have I my son--after all?" she said as one dreaming.
+
+The night lamp expired in smoke that tainted the cold air. Paul drew
+back the curtains one by one, and let in the new-born day.
+
+"'Peace to this house,'" he said; "'not as the world giveth,'" his
+thought concluded.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Desert and the Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Desert and The Sown
+
+Author: Mary Hallock Foote
+
+
+Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8219]
+This file was first posted on July 3, 2003
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
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+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DESERT AND THE SOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Eric Eldred, Clay Massei and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
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+HTML file produced by David Widger
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+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE DESERT AND THE SOWN
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Mary Hallock Foote
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> I. &mdash; A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> II. &mdash; INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> III. &mdash; THE INITIAL LOVE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV. &mdash; A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN
+ COURT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> V. &mdash; DISINHERITED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI. &mdash; AN APPEAL TO NATURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> VII. &mdash; MARKING TIME </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VIII. &mdash; A HUNTER'S DIARY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> IX. &mdash; THE POWER OF WEAKNESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> X. &mdash; THE WHITE PERIL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> XI. &mdash; A SEARCHING OF HEARTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> XII. &mdash; THE BLOOD-WITE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XIII. &mdash; CURTAIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XIV. &mdash; KIND INQUIRIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XV. &mdash; A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XVI. &mdash; THE NATURE OF AN OATH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XVII. &mdash; THE HIDDEN TRAIL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XVIII. &mdash; THE STAR IN THE EAST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XIX. &mdash; PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XX. &mdash; A STATION IN THE DESERT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> XXI. &mdash; INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD
+ HOUSE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XXII. &mdash; THE CASE STRIKES IN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XXIII. &mdash; RESTIVENESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXIV. &mdash; INDIAN SUMMER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXV. &mdash; THE FELL FROST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXVI. &mdash; PEACE TO THIS HOUSE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. &mdash; A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was an evening of sudden mildness following a dry October gale. The
+ colonel had miscalculated the temperature by one log&mdash;only one, he
+ declared, but that had proved a pitchy one, and the chimney bellowed with
+ flame. From end to end the room was alight with it, as if the stored-up
+ energies of a whole pine-tree had been sacrificed in the consumption of
+ that four-foot stick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young persons of the house had escaped, laughing, into the fresh night
+ air, but the colonel was hemmed in on every side; deserted by his
+ daughter, mocked by the work of his own hands, and torn between the duties
+ of a host and the host's helpless craving for his after-dinner cigar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the hearth, filling with her silks all the visible room in his own
+ favorite settle corner, sat the one woman on earth it most behooved him to
+ be civil to,&mdash;the future mother-in-law of his only child. That Moya
+ was a willing, nay, a reckless hostage, did not lessen her father's awe of
+ the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus, according to her wont at this hour, was composedly doing
+ nothing. The colonel could not make his retreat under cover of her real or
+ feigned absorption in any of the small scattering pursuits which distract
+ the female mind. When she read she read&mdash;she never &ldquo;looked at books.&rdquo;
+ When she sewed she sewed&mdash;presumably, but no one ever saw her do it.
+ Her mind was economic and practical, and she saved it whole, like many men
+ of force, for whatever she deemed her best paying sphere of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a silence that crackled with heat! The colonel, wrathfully
+ perspiring in the glow of that impenitent stick, frowned at it like an
+ inquisitor. Presently Mrs. Bogardus looked up, and her expression softened
+ as she saw the energetic despair upon his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, don't you always smoke after dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is my bad habit, madam. I belong to the generation that smokes&mdash;after
+ dinner and most other times&mdash;more than is good for us.&rdquo; Colonel
+ Middleton belonged also to the generation that can carry a sentence
+ through to the finish in handsome style, and he did it with a suave
+ Virginian accent as easy as his seat in the saddle. Mrs. Bogardus always
+ gave him her respectful attention during his best performances, though she
+ was a woman of short sentences herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you smoke in this room sometimes?&rdquo; she asked, with a barely
+ perceptible sniff the merest contraction of her housewifely nostrils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;h! Those rascally curtains and cushions! You ladies&mdash;women,
+ I should say&mdash;Moya won't let me say ladies&mdash;you bolster us up
+ with comforts on purpose to betray us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can say 'ladies' to me,&rdquo; smiled the very handsome one before him.
+ &ldquo;That's the generation <i>I</i> belong to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel bowed playfully. &ldquo;Well, you know, I don't detect myself, but
+ there's no doubt I have infected the premises.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open fires are good ventilators. I wish you would smoke now. If you
+ don't, I shall have to go away, and I'm exceedingly comfortable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are exceedingly charming to say so&mdash;on top of that last stick,
+ too!&rdquo; The colonel had Irish as well as Virginian progenitors. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he
+ sighed, proceeding to make himself conditionally happy, &ldquo;Moya will never
+ forgive me! We spoil each other shamefully when we're alone, but of course
+ we try to jack each other up when company comes. It's a great comfort to
+ have some one to spoil, isn't it, now? I needn't ask which it is in your
+ family!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The spoiled one?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus smiled rather coldly. &ldquo;A woman we had for
+ governess, when Christine was a little thing, used to say: 'That child is
+ the stuff that tyrants are made of!' Tyrants are made by the will of their
+ subjects, don't you think, generally speaking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you couldn't have made a tyrant of your son, Mrs. Bogardus. He's
+ the Universal Spoiler! He'll ruin my striker, Jephson. I shall have to
+ send the fellow back to the ranks. I don't know how you keep a servant
+ good for anything with Paul around.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul thinks he doesn't like to be waited on,&rdquo; Paul's mother observed
+ shrewdly. &ldquo;He says that only invalids, old people, and children have any
+ claim on the personal service of others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By George! I found him blacking his own boots!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I'm paying a man to do it for him. It upsets my contract with that
+ other fellow for Paul to do his work. We have a claim on what we pay for
+ in this world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose we have. But Paul thinks that nothing can pay the price of
+ those artificial relations between man and man. I think that's the way he
+ puts it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Heavens! Has the boy read history? It's a relation that began when
+ the world was made, and will last while men are in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not defending Paul's ideas, Colonel. I have a great sympathy with
+ tyrants myself. You must talk to him. He will amuse you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My word! It's a ticklish kind of amusement when <i>we</i> get talking.
+ Why, the boy wants to turn the poor old world upside down&mdash;make us
+ all stand on our heads to give our feet a rest. Now, I respect my feet,&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ colonel drew them in a little as the lady's eyes involuntarily took the
+ direction of his allusion,&mdash;&ldquo;I take the best care I can of them; but
+ I propose to keep my head, such as it is, on top, till I go under
+ altogether. These young philanthropists! They assume that the Hands and
+ the Feet of the world, the class that serves in that capacity, have got
+ the same nerves as the Brain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a sort of connection,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus carelessly. &ldquo;Some of
+ our Heads have come from the class that you call the Hands and Feet,
+ haven't they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel admitted the fact, but the fact was the exception. &ldquo;Why,
+ that's just the matter with us now! We've got no class of legislators. I
+ don't wish to plume myself, but, upon my word, the two services are about
+ all we have left to show what selection and training can do. And we're
+ only just getting the army into shape, after the raw material that was
+ dumped into it by the civil war.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weren't you in the civil war yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was&mdash;a West Pointer, madam; and I was true to my salt and false to
+ my blood. But, the flag over all!&mdash;at the cost of everything I held
+ dear on earth.&rdquo; After this speech the colonel looked hotter than ever and
+ a trifle ashamed of himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus's face wore its most unobservant expression. &ldquo;I don't agree
+ with Paul,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I wish in some ways he were more like other young
+ men&mdash;exercise, for instance. It's a pity for young men not to love
+ activity and leadership. Besides, it's the fashion. A young man might as
+ well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Blood is a strange thing,&rdquo;
+ she mused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel looked at her curiously. In a woman so unfrank, her occasional
+ bursts of frankness were surprising and, as he thought, not altogether
+ complimentary. It was as if she felt herself so far removed from his
+ conception of her that she might say anything she pleased, sure of his
+ miscomprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not lazy intellectually,&rdquo; said the colonel, aiming to comfort her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not say he was lazy&mdash;only he won't do things except to what he
+ calls some 'purpose.' At his age amusement ought to be purpose enough. He
+ ought to take his pleasures seriously&mdash;this hunting-trip, for
+ instance. I believe, on the very least encouragement, he would give it all
+ up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mustn't let him do that,&rdquo; said the colonel, warming. &ldquo;All that
+ country above Yankee Fork, for a hundred miles, after you've gone fifty
+ north from Bonanza, is practically virgin forest. Wonderful flora and
+ fauna! It's late for the weeds and things, but if Paul wants game trophies
+ for your country-house, he can load a pack-train.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus continued to be amused, in a quiet way. &ldquo;He calls them
+ relics of barbarism! He would as soon festoon his walls with scalps, as
+ decorate them with the heads of beautiful animals,&mdash;nearer the
+ Creator's design than most men, he would say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's right there! But that doesn't change the distinction between men and
+ animals. He is your son, madam&mdash;and he's going to be mine. But, fine
+ boy as he is, I call him a crank of the first water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll find him quite good to Moya,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus remarked
+ dispassionately. &ldquo;And he's not quite twenty-four.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true. Well, <i>I</i> should send him into the woods for the sake of
+ getting a little sense into him, of an every-day sort. He 'll take in
+ sanity with every breath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you don't think it's too late in the season for them to go out?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no change in Mrs. Bogardus's voice, unconcerned as it was; yet
+ the colonel felt at once that this simple question lay at the root of all
+ her previous skirmishing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The guide will decide as to that,&rdquo; he said definitely. &ldquo;If it is, he
+ won't go out with them. They have got a good man, you say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are waiting for a good man; they have waited too long, I think. He
+ is expected in with another party on Monday, perhaps, Paul is to meet the
+ Bowens at Challis, where they buy their outfit. I do believe&rdquo;&mdash;she
+ laughed constrainedly&mdash;&ldquo;that he is going up there more to head them
+ off than for any other reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it's very stupid of them! They seem to think an army post is part of
+ the public domain. They have been threatening, if Paul gives up the trip,
+ to come down here on a gratuitous visit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, let them come by all means! The more the merrier! We will quarter
+ them on the garrison at large.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherever they were quartered, they would be here all the time. They are
+ not intimate friends of Paul's. <i>Mrs.</i> Bowen is&mdash;a very great
+ friend. He is her right-hand in all that Hartley House work. The boys are
+ just fashionable young men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can't they go hunting without Paul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wheels within wheels!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus sighed impatiently. &ldquo;Hunting trips
+ are expensive, and&mdash;when young men are living on their fathers, it is
+ convenient sometimes to have a third. However, Paul goes, I half believe,
+ to prevent their making a descent upon us here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; I should ask them to come, or make it plain they were not
+ expected.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, would you?&mdash;if their mother was one of the nicest women, and
+ your friend? Besides, the reservation does not cover the whole valley.
+ Banks Bowen talks of a mine he wants to look at&mdash;I don't think it
+ will make much difference to the mine! This is simply to say that I wish
+ Paul cared more about the trip for its own sake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, frankly, I think he's better out of the way for the next fortnight.
+ The girls ought to go to bed early, and keep the roses in their cheeks for
+ the wedding. Moya's head is full of her frocks and fripperies. She is
+ trying to run a brace of sewing women; and all those boxes are coming from
+ the East to be 'inspected, and condemned' mostly. The child seems to make
+ a great many mistakes, doesn't she? About every other day I see a box as
+ big as a coffin in the hall, addressed to some dry-goods house, 'returned
+ by &mdash;&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya should have sent to me for her things,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus. &ldquo;I am
+ the one who makes her return them. She can do much better when she is in
+ town herself. It doesn't matter, for the few weeks they will be away, what
+ she wears. I shall take her measures home with me and set the people to
+ work. She has never been <i>fitted</i> in her life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel looked rather aghast. He had seldom heard Mrs. Bogardus speak
+ with so much animation. He wondered if really his household was so very
+ far behind the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's very kind of you, I'm sure, if Moya will let you. Most girls think
+ they can manage these matters for themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's impossible to shop by mail,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus said decidedly. &ldquo;They
+ always keep a certain style of things for the Western and Southern trade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel was crushed. Mrs. Bogardus rose, and he picked up her
+ handkerchief, breathing a little hard after the exertion. She passed out,
+ thanking him with a smile as he opened the door. In the hall she stopped
+ to choose a wrap from a collection of unconventional garments hanging on a
+ rack of moose horns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I shall go out,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The air is quite soft to-night. Do
+ you know which way the children went?&rdquo; By the &ldquo;children,&rdquo; as the colonel
+ had noted, Mrs. Bogardus usually meant her daughter, the budding tyrant,
+ Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fine woman!&rdquo; he mused, alone with himself in his study. &ldquo;Splendid
+ character head. Regular Dutch beauty. But hard&mdash;eh?&mdash;a trifle
+ hard in the grain. Eyes that tell you nothing. Mouth set like a stone.
+ Never rambles in her talk. Never speculates or exaggerates for fun. Never
+ runs into hyperbole&mdash;the more fool some other folks! Speaks to the
+ point or keeps still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. &mdash; INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The colonel's papers failed to hold him somehow. He rose and paced the
+ room with his short, stiff-kneed tread. He stopped and stared into the
+ fire; his face began to get red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So! Moya's clothes are not good enough. Going to set the people to work,
+ is she? Wants an outfit worthy of her son. And who's to pay for it, by
+ gad? Post-nuptial bills for wedding finery are going to hurt poor little
+ Moya like the deuce. Confound the woman! Dressing my daughter for me,
+ right in my own house. Takes it in her hands as if it were her right, by&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo;
+ The colonel let slip another expletive. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he sighed, half amused at
+ his own violence, &ldquo;I'll write to Annie. I promised Moya, and it's high
+ time I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Annie was the colonel's sister, the wife of an infantry captain, stationed
+ at Fort Sherman. She was a very understanding woman; at least she
+ understood her brother. But she was not solely dependent upon his laggard
+ letters for information concerning his private affairs. The approaching
+ wedding at Bisuka Barracks was the topic of most of the military families
+ in the Department of the Columbia. Moya herself had written some time
+ before, in the self-conscious manner of the newly engaged. Her aunt knew
+ of course that Moya and Christine Bogardus had been room-mates at Miss
+ Howard's, that the girls had fallen in love with each other first, and
+ with visits at holidays and vacations, when the army girl could not go to
+ her father, it was easily seen how the rest had followed. And well for
+ Moya that it had, was Mrs. Creve's indorsement. As a family they were
+ quite sufficiently represented in the army; and if one should ever get an
+ Eastern detail it would be very pleasant to have a young niece charmingly
+ settled in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel drew a match across the top bar of the grate and set it to his
+ pipe. His big nostrils whitened as he took a deep in-breath. He reseated
+ himself and began his duty letter in the tone of a judicious parent; but,
+ warming as he wrote, under the influence of Annie's imagined sympathy, he
+ presently broke forth with his usual arrogant colloquialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She might have had her pick of the junior officers in both branches. And
+ there was a captain of engineers at the Presidio, a widower, but an
+ awfully good fellow. And she has chosen a boy, full of transcendental
+ moonshine, who climbs upon a horse as if it were a stone fence, and has
+ mixed ideas which side of himself to hang a pistol on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no particular quarrel with the lad, barring his great burly
+ mouthful of a name, Bo&mdash;gardus! To call a child Moya and have her
+ fetch up with her soft, Irish vowels against such a name as that! She had
+ a fond idea that it was from Beauregard. But she has had to give that up.
+ It's Dutch&mdash;Hudson River Dutch&mdash;for something horticultural&mdash;a
+ tree, or an orchard, or a brush-pile; and she says it's a good name where
+ it belongs. Pity it couldn't have stayed where it belongs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;However, you won't find him quite so scrubby as he sounds. He's very
+ proper and clean-shaven, with a good pair of dark, Dutch eyes, which he
+ gets from his mother; and I wish he had got her business ability with
+ them, and her horse sense, if the lady will excuse me. She runs the
+ property and he spends it, as far as she'll let him, on the newest
+ reforms. And there's another hitch!&mdash;To belong to the Truly Good at
+ twenty-four! But beggars can't be choosers. He's going to settle something
+ handsome on Moya out of the portion Madame gives him on his marriage. My
+ poor little girl, as you know, will get nothing from me but a few old bits
+ and trinkets and a father's blessing,&mdash;the same doesn't go for much
+ in these days. I have been a better dispenser than accumulator, like
+ others of our name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do assure you, Annie, it bores me down to the ground, this humanitarian
+ racket from children with ugly names who have just chipped the shell. This
+ one owns his surprise that we <i>work</i> in the army! That our junior
+ officers teach, and study a bit perforce themselves. His own idea is that
+ every West Pointer, before he gets his commission, should serve a year or
+ two in the ranks, to raise the type of the enlisted man, and chiefly, mark
+ you, to get his point of view, the which he is to bear in mind when he
+ comes to his command. Oh, we've had some pretty arguments! But I suspect
+ the rascal of drawing it mild, at this stage, for the old dragon who
+ guards his Golden Apple. He doesn't want to poke me up. How far he'd go if
+ he were not hampered in his principles by the fact that he is in love, I
+ cannot say. And I'd rather not imagine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commandant's house at Bisuka Barracks is the nearest one to the
+ flag-pole as you go up a flight of wooden steps from the parade ground.
+ These steps, and their landings, flanked by the dry grass terrace of the
+ line, are a favorite gathering place for young persons of leisure at the
+ Post. They face the valley and the mountains; they lead past the
+ adjutant's office to the main road to town; they command the daily pageant
+ of garrison duty as performed at such distant, unvisited posts, with only
+ the ladies and the mountains looking on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Retreat had sounded at half after five, for the autumn days grew short.
+ The colonel's orderly had been dismissed to his quarters. There was no
+ excuse, at this hour, for two young persons lingering in sentimental
+ corners of the steps, beyond a flagrant satisfaction in the shadow thereof
+ which covered them since the lighting of lamps on Officers' Row.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel stood at his study window keeping his pipe alive with slow and
+ dreamy puffs. The moon was just clearing the roof of the men's quarters.
+ His eye caught a shape, or a commingling of shapes, ensconced in an angle
+ of the steps; the which he made out to be his daughter, in her light
+ evening frock with one of his own old army capes over her shoulders,
+ seated in close formation beside the only man at the Post who wore
+ civilian black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel had the feelings of a man as well as a father. He went back to
+ his letter with a softened look in his face. He had said too much; he
+ always did&mdash;to Annie; and now he must hedge a little or she would
+ think there was trouble brewing, and that he was going to be nasty about
+ Moya's choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. &mdash; THE INITIAL LOVE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us be simple! Not every one can be, but we can. We can afford to be,
+ and we know how!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya was speaking rapidly, in her singularly articulate tones. A reader of
+ voices would have pronounced hers the physical record of unbroken health
+ and constant, joyous poise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear the word of your prophet Emerson!&rdquo; she brought a little fist down
+ upon her knee for emphasis, a hand several sizes larger closed upon it and
+ held it fast. &ldquo;Hear the word&mdash;are you listening? 'Only <i>two</i> in
+ the Garden walked and with Snake and Seraph talked.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man's answer was an instant's impassioned silence. Too close it
+ touched him, that vital image of the Garden. Then, with an effect of
+ sternness, he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have we the right to do as we please? Have we the courage that comes of
+ right to cut ourselves off from all those calls and cries for help?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> have,&rdquo; said the girl; &ldquo;I have just that right&mdash;of one who
+ knows exactly what she wants, and is going to get it if she can!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed at her happy insolence, with which all the youth and nature in
+ him made common cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shouldn't mind thinking about your Poor Man,&rdquo; she tripped along, &ldquo;if he
+ liked being poor, or if it seemed to improve him any; or if it were only
+ now and then. But there is so dreadfully much of him! Once we begin, how
+ should we ever think about anything else? He'd rise up and sit down with
+ us, and eat and drink with us, and tell us what to wear. Every pleasure of
+ our lives would be spoiled with his eternal 'Where do <i>I</i> come in?'
+ It was simple enough in <i>that</i> garden, with only those two and nobody
+ outside to feel injured. But we are those two, aren't we? Isn't everybody&mdash;once
+ in a life, and once only?&rdquo; She turned her face aside, slighting by her
+ manner the excessive meaning of her words. &ldquo;I ask for myself only what I
+ think I have a right to give you&mdash;my absolute undivided attention for
+ those first few years. They say it never lasts!&rdquo; she hastened to add with
+ playful cynicism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Bogardus seemed incapable under the circumstances of any adequate
+ reply. Free as they were in words, there was an extreme personal shyness
+ between these proud young persons, undeveloped on the side of passion and
+ better versed in theories of life than in life itself. They had separated
+ the day after their sudden engagement, and their nearest approaches to
+ intimacy had been through letters. Naturally the girl was the bolder,
+ having less in herself to fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is what <i>I</i> call being simple,&rdquo; she went on briskly. &ldquo;If you
+ think we can be that in New York, let us live there. <i>I</i> could be
+ simple there, but not with you, sir! That terrible East Side would be
+ shaking its gory locks at us. We should feel that we did it&mdash;or you
+ would! Then good-by to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are my life, liberty, and happiness, and I will be your almoner,&rdquo;
+ said Paul, &ldquo;and dispense you&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dispense <i>with</i> me!&rdquo; laughed the girl. &ldquo;And what shall I be doing
+ while you are dispensing me on the East Side? New York has other sides.
+ While you go slumming with the Seraph, I shall be talking to the Snake!
+ Now, <i>do</i> laugh!&rdquo; she entreated childishly, turning her sparkling
+ face to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I expected to laugh at that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what shall we do? Don't make me harden my heart before it has had
+ time to soften naturally. Give my poor pagan sympathies a little time to
+ ripen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you have lived in New York. Did you find it such a strain on your
+ sympathies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was a visitor; and a girl is not expected to have sympathies. But to
+ begin our home there: we should have to strike a note of some sort. How if
+ my note should jar with yours? Paul, dear, it isn't nice to have
+ convictions when one is young and going to be married. You know it isn't.
+ It's not poetic, and it's not polite, and it's a dreadful bore!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The altruist and lover winced at this. Allowing for exaggeration, which
+ was the life of speech with her, he knew that Moya was giving him a bit of
+ her true self, that changeful, changeless self which goes behind all law
+ and &ldquo;follows joy and only joy.&rdquo; Her voice dropped into its sweetest tones
+ of intimacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why need we live in a crowd? Why must we be pressed upon with all this
+ fuss and doing? Doing, doing! We are not ready to do anything yet. Every
+ day must have its dawn;&mdash;and I don't see my way yet; I'm hardly
+ awake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Darling, hush! You must not say such things to me. For you only to look
+ at me like that is the most terrible temptation of my life. You make me
+ forget everything a man is bound&mdash;that I of all men am bound to
+ remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will keep on looking! Behold, I am Happiness, Selfishness, if you
+ like! I have come to stay. No, really, it's not nice of you to act as if
+ you were under higher orders. You are under my orders. What right have we
+ to choose each other if we are not to be better to each other than to any
+ one else?&mdash;if our lives belong to any one who needs us, or our time
+ and money, more than we need it ourselves? Why did you choose me? Why not
+ somebody pathetic&mdash;one of your Poor Things; or else save yourself
+ whole for all the Poor Things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you are 'talking for victory,'&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;You don't believe we must
+ be as consistent as all that. Hearts don't have to be coddled like pears
+ picked for market. But I'm not preaching to you. The heavens forbid! I'm
+ trying to explain. You don't think this whole thing with me is a pose? I
+ know I'm a bore with my convictions; but how do we come by such things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! How do I come not to have any, or to want any?&rdquo; she rejoined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once for all, let me tell you how I came by mine. Then you will know just
+ where and how those cries for help take hold on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't wish to know. Preserve me from knowing! Why didn't you choose
+ somebody different?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her with all his passion in his eyes. &ldquo;I did not choose. Did
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn't too late,&rdquo; she whispered. Her face grew hot in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; it is too late&mdash;for anything but the truth. Will you listen,
+ sweet? Will you let the nonsense wait?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Deeper and deeper! Haven't we reached the bottom yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on! It's the dearest nonsense,&rdquo; she heard him say; but she detected
+ pain in his voice and a new constraint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it? What is the 'truth'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it's not so dreadful. Only, you always put me in quite a different
+ class from where I belong, and I haven't had the courage to set you
+ right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Children, children!&rdquo; a young voice called, from the lighted walk above.
+ Two figures were going down the line, one in uniform keeping step beside a
+ girl in white who reefed back her skirts with one hand, the other was
+ raised to her hair which was blowing across her forehead in bewitching
+ disorder. Every gesture and turn of her shape announced that she was
+ pretty and gay in the knowledge of her power. It was Chrissy, walking with
+ Lieutenant Lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are you&mdash;ridiculous ones? Don't you want to come with us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Now who were they?'&rdquo; Paul quoted derisively out of the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are going to Captain Dawson's to play Hearts. Come! Don't be stupid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not stupid, we are busy!&rdquo; Moya called back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Busy! Doing what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, deciding things. We are talking about the Poor Man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The poor men, she means.&rdquo; Christine's high laugh followed the
+ lieutenant's speech, as the pair went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He <i>is</i> a bore!&rdquo; Moya declared. &ldquo;We can't even use him for a joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speaking of Lane, dear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Poor Man. Are you sure that you've got a sense of humor, Paul? Can't
+ we have charity for jokes among the other poor things?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul had raised himself to the step beside her. &ldquo;You are shivering,&rdquo; he
+ said, &ldquo;I must let you go in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not shivering&mdash;I'm chattering,&rdquo; she mocked. &ldquo;Why should I go in
+ when we are going to be really serious?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul waited a moment; his breath came short, as if he were facing a
+ postponed dread. &ldquo;Moya, dear,&rdquo; he began in a forced tone, &ldquo;I can't help my
+ constraints and convictions that bore you so, any more than you can help
+ your light heart&mdash;God bless it&mdash;and your theory of class which
+ to me seems mediaeval. I have cringed to it, like the coward a man is when
+ he is in love. But now I want you to know me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took her hand and kissed it repeatedly, as if impressing upon her the
+ one important fact back of all hypothesis and perilous efforts at
+ statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, are you bidding me good-by?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must give me time,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It takes courage in these days for a
+ good American to tell the girl he loves that his father was a hired man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled, but there was little mirth and less color in his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What absurdity!&rdquo; cried Moya. Then glancing at him she added quickly, &ldquo;<i>My</i>
+ father is a hired man. Most fathers who are worth anything are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father was because he came of that class. His father was one before
+ him. His mother took in tailoring in the village where he was born. He had
+ only the commonest common-school education and not much of that. At eleven
+ he worked for his board and clothes at my Grandfather Van Elten's, and
+ from that time he earned his bread with his hands. Don't imagine that I'm
+ apologizing,&rdquo; Paul went on rapidly. &ldquo;The apology belongs on the other
+ side. In New York, for instance, the Bogardus blood is quite as good as
+ the Bevier or the Broderick or the Van Elten; but up the Hudson, owing to
+ those chances or mischances that selected our farming aristocracy for us,
+ my father's people had slipped out of their holdings and sunk to the poor
+ artisan class which the old Dutch landowners held in contempt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not landowners,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;What does it matter? What does any of
+ it matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It matters to be honest and not sail under false colors. I thought you
+ would not speak of the Poor Man as you do if you knew that I am his son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Money has nothing to do with position in the army. I am a poor man's
+ daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, child! Your father gives orders&mdash;mine took them, all his life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father has to take what he gives. There is no escaping 'orders.' Even
+ I know that!&rdquo; said Moya. A slight shiver passed over her as she spoke,
+ laughing off as usual the touch of seriousness in her words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did you do that?&rdquo; Paul touched her shoulder. &ldquo;Is it the wind? There
+ is a wind creeping down these steps.&rdquo; He improved the formation slightly
+ in respect to the wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;Isn't that your mother walking on the porch? Father,
+ I know, is writing. She will be lonely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is never lonely, more or less. It is always the same loneliness&mdash;of
+ a woman widowed for years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How very much she must have cared for him!&rdquo; Moya sighed incredulously.
+ What a pity, she thought, that among the humbler vocations Paul's father
+ should have been just a plain &ldquo;hired man.&rdquo; Cowboy, miner, man-o'-war's
+ man, even enlisted man, though that were bad enough&mdash;any of these he
+ might have been in an accidental way, that at least would have been
+ picturesque; but it is only the possession of land, by whatsoever means or
+ title, that can dignify an habitual personal contact with it in the form
+ of soil. That is one of the accepted prejudices which one does not meddle
+ with at nineteen. &ldquo;Youth is conservative because it is afraid.&rdquo; Moya, for
+ all her fighting blood, was traditionally and in social ways much more in
+ bonds than Paul, who had inherited his father's dreamy speculative habit
+ of thought, with something of the farm-hand's distrust of society and its
+ forms and shibboleth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul's voice took a narrative tone, and Moya gave herself up to listening&mdash;to
+ him rather more, perhaps, than to his story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few young men of twenty-four can go very deeply into questions of
+ heredity. Of what follows here much was not known to Paul. Much that he
+ did know he would have interpreted differently. The old well at Stone
+ Ridge, for instance, had no place in his recital; and yet out of it sprang
+ the history of his shorn generation. Had Paul's mother grown up in a
+ houseful of brothers and sisters, governed by her mother instead of an old
+ ignorant servant, in all likelihood she would have married differently&mdash;more
+ wisely but not perhaps so well, her son would loyally have maintained. The
+ sons of the rich farmers who would have been her suitors were men inferior
+ to their fathers. They inherited the vigor and coarseness of constitution,
+ the unabashed materialism of that earlier generation that spent its
+ energies coping with Nature on its stony farms, but the sons were spared
+ the need of that hard labor which their blood required. They supplied an
+ element of force, but one of great corruption later, in the state politics
+ of their time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. &mdash; A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the kitchen court called the &ldquo;Airy&rdquo; at Abraham Van Elten's, there was
+ one of those old family wells which our ancestors used to locate so
+ artlessly. And when it tapped the kitchen drain, and typhoid took the
+ elder children, and the mother followed the children, it was called the
+ will of God. A gloomy distinction rested on the house. Abraham felt the
+ importance attaching to any supreme experience in a community where life
+ runs on in the middle key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young doctor who had been called in at the close of the last case went
+ prying about the premises, asking foolish questions that angered Abraham.
+ It is easier for some natures to suffer than to change. If the farmer had
+ ever drunk water himself, except as tea or coffee, or mixed with something
+ stronger, he must have been an early victim, to his own crass ignorance.
+ He was a vigorous, heavy-set man, a grand field for typhoid. But he
+ prospered, and the young doctor was turned down with the full weight and
+ breadth of the Van Elten thumb, or the Broderick; Abraham's build was that
+ of his maternal grandmother, Hillotje Broderick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Ridge, which later developed into a valuable slate quarry, there
+ was a spring of water, cold and perpetual, flowing out of the
+ trap-formation. Abraham had piped this water down to his barns and
+ cattle-sheds; it furnished power for the farm-work. But to bring it to the
+ house, in obedience to the doctor's meddlesome advice, would be an
+ acknowledgment of fatal mistakes in the past; would raise talk and blame
+ among the neighbors, and do away with the honor of a special visitation;
+ would cost no trifle of money; would justify the doctor's interference,
+ and insult the old well of his father and his father's father, the
+ fountain of generations. To seal its mouth and bid its usefulness cease in
+ the house where it had ministered for upwards of a hundred years was an
+ act of desecration impossible to the man who in his stolid way loved the
+ very stones that lined its slimy sides. The few sentiments that had taken
+ hold on Abraham's arid nature went as deep as his obstinacy and clung as
+ fast as his distrust of new opinions and new men. The question of water
+ supply was closed in his house; but the well remained open and kept up its
+ illicit connection with the drain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Becky, keeper of the widower's keys, had followed closely the history
+ of those unhappy &ldquo;cases;&rdquo; she had listened to discussions, violent or
+ suppressed, she had heard much talk that went on behind her master's back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Employers of that day and generation were masters; and masters are meant
+ to be outwitted. Emily, the youngest and last of the flock, was now a
+ child of four, dark like her mother, sturdy and strong like her father. On
+ an August day soon after the mother's funeral, Becky took her little
+ charge to the well and showed her a tumbler filled, with water not freshly
+ drawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See them little specks and squirmy things?&rdquo; Emmy saw them. She followed
+ their wavering motion in the glass as the stern forefinger pointed. &ldquo;Those
+ are little baby snakes,&rdquo; said Becky mysteriously. &ldquo;The well is full of
+ 'em. Sometimes you can see 'em, sometimes you can't, but they're always
+ there. They never grow big down the well; it's too dark 'n' cold. But you
+ drink that water and the snakes will grow and wriggle and work all through
+ ye, and eat your insides out, and you'll die. Your mother&rdquo;&mdash;in a
+ whisper&mdash;&ldquo;she drunk that water, and she died. Your sister Ruth, and
+ Dirck, and Jimmy, they drunk it, and they died. Now if Emmy wants to die&rdquo;&mdash;Large
+ eyes of horror fastened on the speaker's face. &ldquo;No&mdash;o, she don't want
+ to die, the Loveums! She don't want Becky to have no little girl left at
+ all! No; we mustn't ever drink any of that bad water&mdash;all full of
+ snakes, ugh! But if Emmy's thirsty, see here! Here's good nice water. It's
+ going to be always here in this pail&mdash;same water the little lambs
+ drink up in the fields. Becky 'll take Emmy up on the hill sometime and
+ show where the little lambs drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grief had not clouded the farmer's oversight in petty things. He noticed
+ the innocent pail on the area bench, never empty, always specklessly
+ clean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is this water?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becky was surly. &ldquo;Drinking water. Want some?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's it doing here all the time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I set it there for Emmy. She can't reach up to the bucket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham tasted the water suspiciously. The well-water was hard, with a
+ tang of iron. The spring soft, and less cold for its journey to the barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where did you get this water?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help yourself. There's plenty more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Becky, where did this water come from? Out o' the well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becky gave a snort of exasperation. &ldquo;Sam Lewis brought it from the barn!
+ I'm too lame to be histin' buckets. I've got the rheumatiz' awful in my
+ back and shoulders, if ye want to know!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Becky, you're lying to me. You've been listening to what don't concern
+ you. Now, see here. You are not going to ask the men to carry water for
+ you. They've got something else to do. <i>There's</i> your water, as handy
+ as ever a woman had it; use that or go without.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham caught up the pail and flung its contents out upon the grass,
+ scattering the hens that came sidling back with squawks of inquiring
+ temerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When next Emmy came for water, the old woman took her by the hand in
+ silence and led her into the dim meat-cellar, a half-basement with one low
+ window level with the grass. There was the pail, safe hidden behind the
+ soft-soap barrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had to hide it from your pa,&rdquo; Becky whispered. &ldquo;Don't you never let him
+ know you're afraid o' the well-water. He drunk it when he was a little
+ boy. He don't believe in the snakes. But <i>there wa'n't none then</i>.
+ It's when water gets old and rotten. You can believe what Becky says. <i>She</i>
+ knows! But you mustn't ever tell. Your father 'd be as mad as fire if he
+ knowed I said anything about snakes. He'd send me right away, and some
+ strange woman would come, and maybe she'd whip Emmy. Emmy want Becky to
+ go?&rdquo; Sobs, and little arms clinging wildly to Becky's aproned skirts. &ldquo;No,
+ no! Well, she ain't goin'. But Emmy mustn't tell tales or she might have
+ to. Tattlers are wicked anyway. 'Telltale tit! Your tongue shall be slit,
+ and all the little dogs'&mdash;There! run now! There's your poppy. Don't
+ you never,&mdash;never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emmy let her eyes be wiped, and with one long, solemn, secret look of awed
+ intelligence she ran out to meet her father. She did not love him, and the
+ smile with which she met him was no new lesson in diplomacy. But her first
+ secret from him lay deep in the beautiful eyes, her mother's eyes, as she
+ raised them to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ain't that wonderful!&rdquo; said Becky, with a satisfied sigh, watching her.
+ &ldquo;Safe as a jug! An' she not five years old!&rdquo; For vital reasons she had
+ taught the child an ugly lesson. Such lessons were common enough in her
+ experience of family discipline. She never thought of it again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That year which took Emmy's mother from her brought to the child her first
+ young companion and friend. Adam Bogardus came as chore-boy to the farm,&mdash;an
+ only child himself, and sensitive through the clashing of gentle instincts
+ with rough and inferior surroundings; brought up in that depressed
+ God-fearing attitude in which a widow not strong, and earning her bread,
+ would do her duty by an only son. Not a natural fighter, she took what
+ little combativeness he had out of him, and made his school-days miserable&mdash;a
+ record of humiliations that sunk deep and drove him from his kind. He was
+ a big, clumsy, sagacious boy, grave as an old man, always snubbed and
+ condescended to, yet always trusted. Little Emmy made him her bondslave at
+ sight. His whole soul blossomed in adoration of the beautiful, masterful
+ child who ordered him about as her vassal, while slipping a soft little
+ trustful hand in his. She trotted at his heels like one of the lambs or
+ chickens that he fed. She brought him into perpetual disgrace with Becky,
+ for wasting his time through her imperious demands. She was the burden,
+ the delight, the handicap, the incentive, and the reward of his humble
+ apprenticeship. And when he was promoted to be one of the regular hands
+ she followed him still, and got her pleasure out of his day's work. No one
+ had such patience to tell her things, to wait for her and help her over
+ places where her tagging powers fell short. But though she bullied him,
+ she looked up to him as well. His occupations commanded her respect. He
+ was the god of the orchards and of the cider-making; he presided at all
+ the functions of the farm year. He was a perfect calendar besides of
+ country sports in their season. He swept the ice pools in the meadow for
+ winter sliding, after his day's work was done. He saved up paper and
+ string for kite-making in March. He knew when willow bark would slip for
+ April's whistles. In the first heats of June he climbed the tall
+ locust-trees to put up a swing in which she could dream away the perfumed
+ hours. At harvest she waited in the meadow for him to toss her up on the
+ hay-loads, and his great arms received her when she slid off in the barn.
+ She knelt at his feet on the bumping boards of the farm-wagon while he
+ braced himself like a charioteer, holding the reins above her head. He
+ threshed the nut-trees and routed marauding boys from her preserves, and
+ carved pumpkin lanterns to light her to her attic chamber on cold November
+ nights, where she would lie awake watching strange shadows on the sloping
+ roof, half worshiping, half afraid of her idol's ugliness in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were some of Paul's illustrations of that pastoral beginning, and no
+ doubt they were sympathetically close to the truth. He lingered over them,
+ dressing up his mother's choice instinctively to the little aristocrat
+ beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Emmy grew big enough to go to the Academy, three miles from the farm,
+ it was all in the day's work that Adam should take her and fetch her home.
+ He combined her with the mail, the blacksmith, and other village errands.
+ Whoever met her father's team on those long stony hills of Saugerties
+ would see his little daughter seated beside his hired man, her face turned
+ up to his in endless confiding talk. It was a face, as we say, to dream
+ of. But there were few dreamers in that little world. The farmers would
+ nod gravely to Adam. &ldquo;Abraham's girl takes after her mother; heartier
+ lookin', though. Guess he'll need a set o' new tires before spring.&rdquo; The
+ comments went no deeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham was now well on in years; he made no visits, and he never drove
+ his own team at night. When his daughter began to let down her frocks and
+ be asked to evening parties, it was still Adam who escorted her. He sat in
+ the kitchen while she was amusing herself in the parlor. She discussed her
+ young acquaintances with him on their way home. The time for distinctions
+ had come, but she was too innocent to feel them herself, and too proud to
+ accept the standards of others. He was absolutely honest and unworldly. He
+ thought it no treachery to love her for herself, and he believed, as most
+ of us do, that his family was as good as hers or any other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be hard to explain the old man's obliviousness. Perhaps he had
+ forgotten his own youth; or class prejudice had gone so deep with him as
+ to preclude the bare thought of a child of his falling in love with one of
+ his &ldquo;men.&rdquo; His imagination could not so insult his own blood. But when the
+ awakening came, his passion of anger and resentment knew no bounds. To
+ discharge his faithless employee out of hand would be the cripple throwing
+ away his crutch. Though he called Adam <i>one</i> of his men, and though
+ his pay was that of a common laborer, his duties had long been of a much
+ higher order. Abraham had made a very good bargain out of the widow's son.
+ Adam knew well that he could not be spared, and pitied the old man's
+ helpless rage. He took his frantic insults as part of his senility, and
+ felt it no unmanliness to appease it by giving his promise that he would
+ speak no more of love to Emmy while he was taking her father's wages. But
+ Emmy did not indorse this promise fully. To her it looked like weakness,
+ and implied a sort of patience which did not become a lover such as she
+ wished hers to be. The winter wore on uncomfortably for all. Towards
+ spring, Becky's last illness and passing away brought the younger ones
+ together again, and closer than before. Adam kept his promise through days
+ and nights of sickroom intimacy; but though no word of love was spoken,
+ each bore silent witness to what was loveliest in the other, and the bond
+ between them deepened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then spring came, and its restlessness was strong upon them both. But it
+ was Emmy to whom it meant action and rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stood on the orchard hill one Sunday afternoon at the pause of the
+ year. Buds were swelling and the edges of the woods wore a soft blush
+ against the vaporous sky. The bare brown slopes were streaked with snow. A
+ floe of winter ice, grinding upon itself with the tide, glared yellow as
+ an old man's teeth in the setting sun. From across the river came the
+ thunder of a train, bound north, two engines dragging forty cars of
+ freight piled up by some recent traffic-jam; it plunged into a tunnel, and
+ they waited, listening to the monster's smothered roar. Out it burst, its
+ breath packed into clouds, the engines whooped, and round the curve where
+ a point of cedars cut the sky the huge creature unwound itself, the hills
+ echoing to its tread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emmy watched it out of sight, and breathed again. &ldquo;Hundreds, hundreds
+ going every day! It seems easy enough for everybody else. Oh, if I were a
+ man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want I should do, Emmy?&rdquo; Adam knew well what man she was
+ thinking of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> want? Don't you ever want things yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I want a thing bad, I gen'ly think it's worth waiting for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;People don't get things by waiting. I don't know how you can stand it,&mdash;to
+ stay here year after year. And now you've tied yourself up with a promise,
+ and you know you cannot keep it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm trying to keep it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You couldn't keep it if you cared&mdash;really and truly&mdash;as some
+ do!&rdquo; She dropped her voice hurriedly. &ldquo;To live here and eat your meals day
+ after day and pass me like a stick or a stone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slow blood burned in Adam's face and hammered in his pulses. His blue
+ eyes were bashful through its heat. &ldquo;I don't feel like a stick nor a
+ stone. You know it, Emmy. You want to be careful,&rdquo; he added gently. &ldquo;Would
+ going away look as if I cared?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why&mdash;why don't you ask me to go with you?&rdquo; The girl tried to meet
+ his eyes. She turned off her question with a proud laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be&mdash;careful, child! You know why I can't take you up on that. Would
+ you want we should leave him here alone&mdash;without even Becky? You're
+ only trying me for fun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I am not!&rdquo; Emmy was pale now. Her breast was rising in strong
+ excitement. &ldquo;If we were gone, he would know then what you are worth to
+ him. Now, you're only Adam! He thinks he can put you down like a boy. He
+ won't believe I care for you. There's only one way to show him&mdash;that
+ is, if we do care. In one month he would be sending for us back. Then we
+ could come, and you would take your right place here, and be somebody. You
+ would not eat in the kitchen, then. Haven't you been like a son to him?
+ And why shouldn't he own it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he won't? Suppose he don't send for us to come back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you could strike out for yourself. What was Tom Madden, before he
+ went away to Colorado, or somewhere&mdash;where was it? And now everybody
+ stops to shake hands with him;&mdash;he's as much of a man as anybody. If
+ you could make a little money. That's the proof he wants. If you were
+ rich, you'd be all right with him. You know that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd hate to think it. But I'll never be rich. Put that out of your mind,
+ Emmy. It don't run in the blood. I don't come of a money-making breed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a silly thing to say! Of course, if you don't believe you can, you
+ can't. Who has made the money here for the last ten years?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was his capital done it. It ain't hard to make money after you've
+ scraped the first few thousands together. But it's the first thousand that
+ costs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much have you got ahead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adam answered awkwardly, &ldquo;Eleven hundred and sixty odd.&rdquo; He did not like
+ to talk of money to the girl who was the prayer, the inspiration, of his
+ life. It hurt him to be questioned by her in this sordid way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You earned it all, didn't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've took no risks. Here was my home. He give me the chance and he showed
+ me how. And&mdash;he's your father. I don't like to talk about his money,
+ nor about my own, to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you are good, good! Nobody knows! But it's all wasted if you haven't
+ got any push&mdash;anything inside of yourself that makes people know what
+ you are. I wish I could put into you some of my <i>fury</i> that I feel
+ when things get in my way! You have held yourself in too long. You can't&mdash;<i>can't</i>
+ love a girl, and be so careful&mdash;like a mother. Don't you understand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop right there, Emmy! You needn't push no harder. I can let go whenever
+ you say so. But&mdash;do <i>you</i> understand, little girl? Man and wife
+ it will have to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emmy did not shrink at the words. Her face grew set, her dark eyes full of
+ mystery fixed themselves on the slow-moving ice-floe grinding along the
+ shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; she assented slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't give you no farm, nor horses and carriages, nor help in the
+ kitchen. It's bucklin' right down with our bare hands&mdash;me outside and
+ you in? And you only eighteen. See what little hands&mdash;If I could do
+ it all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your promise is broken,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;I made you break it. You will
+ have to tell him now, or&mdash;we must go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be!&rdquo; said Adam solemnly. &ldquo;And God do so to me and more also, if I have
+ to hurt my little girl,&mdash;Emmy&mdash;wife!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He folded her in his great arms clumsily&mdash;the man she had said was
+ like a mother. He was almost as ignorant as she, and more hopeful than he
+ had dared to seem, as to their worldly chances. But the love he had for
+ her told him it was not love that made her so bold. The first touch of
+ such love as his would have made her fear him as he feared her. And the
+ subtle pain of this instinctive knowledge, together with that broken
+ promise, shackled the wings of his great joy. It was not as he had hoped
+ to win the crown of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul, it may be supposed, had never liked to think of his mother's
+ elopement. It had been the one hard point to get over in his conception of
+ his father, but he could never have explained it by such a scene as this.
+ It would have hampered him terribly in his tale had he dreamed of it. He
+ passed over the unfortunate incident with a romancer's touch, and dwelt
+ upon his grandfather's bitter resentment which he resented as the son of
+ his mother's choice. The Van Eltens and Brodericks all fared hardly at the
+ hands of their legatee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not only in the person of a hireling who had abused his trust that
+ Abraham had felt himself outraged. There were old neighborhood spites and
+ feuds going back, dividing blood from blood&mdash;even brothers of the
+ same blood. There was trouble between him and his brother Jacob, of New
+ York, dating from the settlement of their father's, Broderick Van Elten's,
+ estate; and no one knows what besides that was private and personal may
+ have entered into it. It was years since they had met, but Jacob kept well
+ abreast of his brother's misfortunes. A bachelor himself, with no children
+ to lose or to quarrel with, it was not displeasing to him to hear of the
+ breaks in his brother's household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, what, what! The last one left him,&mdash;run off with one of his
+ men! What a fool the man must be. Can't he look after his women folks
+ better than that? Better have lost her with the others. Two boys, and
+ Chrissy, and the girl&mdash;and now the last girl gone off with his hired
+ man. Poor Chrissy! Guess she had about enough of it. Things have come out
+ pretty much even, after all! There was more love and lickin's wasted on
+ Abe. Father was proudest of him, but he couldn't break him. Hi! but I've
+ crawled under the woodshed to hear him yell, and father would tan him with
+ a raw-hide, but he couldn't break him; couldn't get a sound out of him.
+ Big, and hard, and tough&mdash;Chrissy thought she knew a man; she thought
+ she took the best one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With slow, cold spite Jacob had tracked his brother's path in life through
+ its failures. Jacob had no failures, and no life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. &mdash; DISINHERITED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Proud little Emmy, heiress no longer, had put her spirit into her
+ farm-hand and incited him to the first rebellion of his life. They crossed
+ the river at night, poling through floating ice, and climbed aboard one of
+ those great through trains whose rushing thunder had made the girlish
+ heart so often beat. This was long before the West Shore Line was built.
+ Neither of them had ever seen the inside of a Pullman sleeper. Emmy could
+ count the purchased meals she had eaten in her life; she had never slept
+ in a hotel or hired lodging till after her marriage. Hardly any one could
+ be so provincial in these days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adam Bogardus was a plodder in the West as he had been in the East. He was
+ an honest man, and he was wise enough not to try to be a shrewd one. He
+ tried none of the short-cuts to a fortune. Hard work suited him best, and
+ no work was too hard for his iron strength and patient resolution. But it
+ broke the spirit of a man in him to see his young wife's despair. Poverty
+ frightened and quelled her. The deep-rooted security of her old home was
+ something she missed every day of her makeshift existence. It was
+ degradation to live in &ldquo;rooms,&rdquo; or a room; to move for want of means to
+ pay the rent. She pined for the good food she had been used to. Her health
+ suffered through anxiety and hard work. She was too proud to complain, but
+ the sight of her dumb unacceptance of what had come to her through him
+ undoubtedly added the last straw to her husband's mental strain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is hard for me to realize it as I once did,&rdquo; said Paul, as the story
+ paused. &ldquo;You make tragedy a dream. But there is a deep vein of tragedy in
+ our blood. And my theory is that it always crops out in families where
+ it's the keynote, as it were.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, you old care-taker! We Middletons carry sail enough to need a
+ ton or two of lead in our keel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, you understand?&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand the distinction between what I call your good blood, and the
+ sort of blood I thought you had. It explains a certain funny way you have
+ with arms&mdash;weapons. Do you mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; said Paul coldly. &ldquo;I hate a weapon. I am always ashamed of
+ myself when I get one in my hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You act that way, dear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God made tools and the Devil made weapons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are civil to my father's profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father is what he is aside from his profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are quite mistaken, Paul. My father and his profession are one. His
+ sword is a symbol of healing. The army is the great surgeon of the nation
+ when the time comes for a capital operation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It grows harder to tell my story,&rdquo; said Paul gloomily;&mdash;&ldquo;the short
+ and simple annals of the poor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now come! Have I been a snob about my father's profession?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but you love it, naturally. You have grown up with its pomp and
+ circumstance around you. You are the history makers when history is most
+ exciting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on with your story, you proud little Dutchman! When I despise you for
+ your farming relatives, you can taunt me with my history making.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was about two years old when his parents broke up in the Wood River
+ country and came south by wagon on the old stage-road to Felton. Whenever
+ he saw a &ldquo;string-bean freighter's&rdquo; outfit moving into Bisuka, if there was
+ a woman on the driver's seat, he wanted to take off his hat to her. For so
+ his mother sat beside his father and held him in her arms two hundred
+ miles across the Snake River desert. The stages have been laid off since
+ the Oregon Short Line went through, but there were stations then all along
+ the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night they made camp at a lonely place between Soul's Rest and
+ Mountain Home. Oneman Station it was called; afterwards Deadman Station,
+ when the keeper's body was found one morning stiff and cold in his bunk.
+ He died in the night alone. Emily Bogardus had cause to hate the man when
+ he was living, and his dreary end was long a shuddering remembrance to
+ her, like the answer to an unforgiving prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The station was in a hollow with bare hills around, rising to the highest
+ point of that rolling plain country. The mountains sink below the plain,
+ only their white tops showing. It was October. All the wild grass had been
+ eaten close for miles on both sides of the road, but over a gap in the
+ Western divide was the Bruneau Valley, where the bell-mare of the team had
+ been raised. In the night she broke her hopples and struck out across the
+ summit with the four mules at her heels. Towards morning a light snow fell
+ and covered their tracks. Adam was compelled to hunt his stock on foot;
+ the keeper refusing him a horse, saying he had got himself into trouble
+ before through being friendly with the company's horses. He started out
+ across the hills, expecting that the same night would see him back, and
+ his wife was left in the wagon camp alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know this story very well,&rdquo; said Paul, &ldquo;and yet I never heard it but
+ once, when mother decided I was old enough to know all. But every word was
+ bitten into me&mdash;especially this ugly part I am coming to. I wish it
+ need not be told, yet all the rest depends on it; and that such an
+ experience could come to a woman like my mother shows what exposure and
+ humiliation lie in the straightest path if there is no money to smooth the
+ way. You hear it said that in the West the toughest men will be chivalrous
+ to a woman if she is the right sort of a woman. I'm afraid that is a
+ romantic theory of the Western man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That night, before his team stampeded, as he sat by the keeper's fire,
+ father had made up his mind that the less they had to do with that man the
+ better. He may have warned mother; and she, left alone with the brute, did
+ not know the wisdom of hiding her fear and loathing of him. He may have
+ meant no more than a low kind of teasing, but her suffering was the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father did not come. She dared not leave the camp. She knew no place to
+ go to, and in his haste, believing he would soon be with her again, he had
+ taken all their little stock of funds. But he had left her his gun, and
+ with this within reach of her hand in the shelter of the wagon hood,
+ without fire and without cooked food, she kept a sleepless watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The stages came and went; help was within sound of her voice, but she
+ dared make no sign. The passengers were few at that season, always men, on
+ the best of terms with the keeper. He had threatened&mdash;well, no matter&mdash;such
+ a threat as a more sophisticated woman would have smiled at. She was
+ simple, but she was not weak. It was a moral battle between them. There
+ were hours when she held him by the power of her eye alone; she conquered,
+ but it nearly killed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One morning a man jumped down from the stage whose face she knew. He had
+ recognized my father's outfit and he came to speak to her, amazed to find
+ her in that place alone. There was no need to put her worst fear into
+ words; he knew the keeper. He made the best he could of father's
+ detention, but he assured her, as she knew too well, that she could not
+ wait for him there. He was on his way East, and he took us with him as far
+ as Mountain Home. To this day she believes that if Bud Granger had led the
+ search, my father would have been found; but he went East to sell his
+ cattle, the snows set in, and the search party came straggling home. The
+ man, Granger, had left a letter of explanation, inclosing one from mother
+ to father, with the keeper. He bribed and frightened him, but for years
+ she used to agonize over a fear that father had come back and the keeper
+ had withheld the letter and belied her to him with some devilish story
+ that maddened him and drove him from her. Such a fancy might have come out
+ of her mental state at that time. I believe that Granger left the letter
+ simply to satisfy her. He must have believed my father was dead. He could
+ not have conceived of a man's being lost in that broad country at that
+ season; but my father was a man of hills and farms, all small, compact.
+ The plains were another planet to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The letter was found in the keeper's clothing after his death; no one
+ ever came to claim it of his successor. Somewhere in this great wilderness
+ a tired man found rest. What would we not give if we knew where!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she worked in a hotel in Mountain Home. Can you imagine it! Then
+ Christine was born and the multiplied strain overcame her. Strangers took
+ care of her children while she lay between life and death. She had been
+ silent about herself and her past, but they found a letter from one of her
+ old schoolmates asking about teachers' salaries in the West, and they
+ wrote to her begging her to make known my mother's condition to her
+ relatives if any were living. At length came a letter from grandfather&mdash;characteristic
+ to the last. The old home was there, for her and for her children, but no
+ home for the traitor, as he called father. She must give him up even to
+ his name. No Bogardus could inherit of a Van Elten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She had not then lost all hope of father's return, and she never forgave
+ her father for trying to buy her back for the price of what she considered
+ her birthright. She settled down miserably to earn bread for her children.
+ Then, when hope and pride were crushed in her, and faith had nothing left
+ to cling to, there came a letter from Uncle Jacob, the bachelor, who had
+ bided his time. Out of the division in his brother's house he proposed to
+ build up his own; just as he would step in and buy depreciated bonds to
+ hold them for a rise. He offered her a home and maintenance during his
+ lifetime, and his estate for herself and her children when he was through.
+ There were no conditions referring to our father, but it was understood
+ that she should give up her own. This, mainly, to spite his brother, yet
+ under all there was an old man's plea. She felt she could make the
+ obligation good, though there might not be much love on either side.
+ Perhaps it came later; but I remember enough of that time to believe that
+ her children's future was dearly paid for. Grandfather died alone, in the
+ old rat-ridden house up the Hudson. He left no will, to every one's
+ surprise. It might have been his negative way of owning his debt to nature
+ at the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is how we came to be rich; and no one detects in us now the crime of
+ those early struggles. But my father was a hired man; and my mother has
+ done every menial thing with those soft hands of hers.&rdquo; A softer one was
+ folded in his own. Its answering clasp was loyal and strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is <i>this</i> the story you had not the courage to tell me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the story I had the courage to tell you&mdash;not any too soon,
+ perhaps you think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you think it needed courage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The question is what you think. What are we to do with Uncle Jacob's
+ money? Go off by ourselves and have a good time with it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will not decide to-night,&rdquo; said Moya, tenderly subdued. But, though
+ the story had interested and touched her, as accounting for her lover's
+ saddened, conscience-ridden youth, it was no argument against teaching him
+ what youth meant in her philosophy. The differences were explained, but
+ not abolished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was spite money, remember, not love money,&rdquo; he continued, reverting to
+ his story. &ldquo;It purchased my mother's compliance to one who hated her
+ father, who forced her to listen, year after year, to bitter, unnatural
+ words against him. I am not sure but it kept her from him at the last; for
+ if Uncle Jacob had not stepped in and made her his, I can't help thinking
+ she would have found somehow a way to the soft place in his heart.
+ Something good ought to be done with that money to redeem its history.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must not be morbid, Paul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That sounds like mother,&rdquo; said Paul, smiling. &ldquo;She is always jealous for
+ our happiness; because she lost her own, I think, and paid so heavily for
+ ours. She prizes pleasure and success, even worldly success, for us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't blame her!&rdquo; cried Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; of course not. But you mustn't both be against me, and Chrissy, too.
+ She is so, unconsciously; she does not know the pull there is on me,
+ through knowing things she doesn't dream of, and that I can never forget.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;I am sure she is perfectly unconscious. We exchanged
+ biographies at school, and there was nothing at all like this in hers. Why
+ was she never told?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has always been too strained, too excitable. Every least incident is
+ an emotion with her. When she laughs, her laugh is like a cry. Haven't you
+ noticed that? Startle her, and her eyes are the very eyes of fear. Mother
+ was wise, I think, not to pour those old sorrows into her little fragile
+ cup.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So she emptied them all into yours!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was my right, of the elder and stronger. I wouldn't have missed the
+ knowledge of our beginnings for the world. What a prosperous fool and ass
+ I might have made of myself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Morbid again,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;You belong to your own day and generation. You
+ might as well wear country shoes and clothes because your father wore
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, if we have such a thing in this country as class, then you and I
+ do not belong to the same class except by virtue of Uncle Jacob's money.
+ Confess you are glad I am a Bevier and a Broderick and a Van Elten, as
+ well as a Bogardus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall confess nothing of the kind. Now you do talk like a <i>nouveau</i>
+ Paul, dear,&rdquo; said Moya, with her caressing eyes on his&mdash;they had
+ paused under the lamp at the top of the steps&mdash;&ldquo;I think your father
+ must have been a very good man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All our fathers were,&rdquo; Paul averred, smiling at her earnestness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but yours in particular; because <i>you</i> are an angel; and your
+ mother is quite human, is she not?&mdash;almost as human as I am? That
+ carriage of the head,&mdash;if that does not mean the world!&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has needed all her pride.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't object to pride, myself,&rdquo; said the girl, &ldquo;but you dwell so upon
+ her humiliations. I see no such record in her face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has had much to hide, you must remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she can hide things; but one's self must escape sometimes. What has
+ become of little Emily Van Elten who ran away with her father's hired man?
+ What has become of the freighter's wife?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is all mother now. She brought us back to the world, and for our
+ sakes she has learned to take her place in it. Herself she has buried.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but which is&mdash;was herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you cannot see her story in her face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the crushing reserve, the long suspense, the silence of a sorrow that
+ even her children could not share?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know her silence. Your mother is a most reticent woman. But is she now
+ the woman of that story?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand you quite,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;How much are we ourselves
+ after we have passed through fires of grief, and been recast under the
+ pressure of circumstances! She was that woman once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The saddest part of the story to me is, that your father, who loved her
+ so, and worked so hard for his family, should have served you all the
+ better by his death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don't say that, dear! Who knows what is best? But one thing we do
+ know. The sorrow that cut my mother's life in two brought you and me
+ together. It rent the stratum on which I was born and raised it to the
+ level of yours, my lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall not forget,&rdquo; whispered Moya with blissful irony, &ldquo;that you are
+ the Poor Man's son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. &mdash; AN APPEAL TO NATURE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The autumn days were shortening imperceptibly and the sunsets had gained
+ an almost articulate splendor: cloud calling unto cloud, the west horizon
+ signaling to the east, and answering again, while the mute dark circle of
+ hills sat like a council of chiefs with their blankets drawn over their
+ heads. Soon those blankets would be white with snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind the Post where the hills climb toward the Cottonwood Creek divide,
+ there is a little canon which at sunset is especially inviting. It hastens
+ twilight by at least an hour during midsummer, and in autumn it leads up a
+ stairway of shadow to the great spectacle of the day&mdash;the day's
+ departure from the hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canon has its companion rivulet always coming down to meet the
+ stage-road going up. As this road is the only outlet hillward for all the
+ life of the plain, and as the tendency of every valley population is to
+ climb, one thinks of it as a way out rather than a way in. Higher up, the
+ stage-road becomes a pass cut through a wall of splintered cliffs; and
+ here it leads its companion, the brook, a wild dance over boulders, and
+ under culverts of fallen rock. At last it emerges on what is called The
+ Summit; and between are green, deep valleys where the little ranches,
+ fields and fences and houses, seem to have slid down to the bottom and lie
+ there at rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A party of young riders from the post had gone up this road one evening,
+ and two had come down, laughing and talking; but the other two remained in
+ the circle of light that rested on the summit. Prom where they sat in the
+ dry grass they could hear a hollow sound of moving feet as the cattle
+ wandered down through folds of the hills, seeking the willow copses by the
+ water. On the breast of her habit Moya wore the blossoms of the wild
+ evening primrose, which in this region flowers till the coming of frost.
+ They had been gathered for her on the way up, and as she had waited for
+ them, sitting her horse in silence, the brown owls gurgled and hooted
+ overhead from nest to nest in the crannies of the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not hold the horses,&rdquo; she commanded, in her fresh voice. &ldquo;Throw
+ my bridle over your saddle pommel and yours over mine.&mdash;There!&rdquo; she
+ said, watching the horses as they shuffled about interlinked. &ldquo;That is
+ like half the marriages in this world. They don't separate and they don't
+ go astray, but they don't <i>get</i> anywhere!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been thinking of those 'two in the Garden,'&rdquo; mused Paul, resting
+ his dark, abstracted eyes on her. &ldquo;Whether or no your humble servant has a
+ claim to unchallenged bliss in this world, there's no doubt about your
+ claim. If my plans interfere, I must take myself out of the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you funny old croaker!&rdquo; laughed the girl. &ldquo;Take yourself out of the
+ way, indeed! Haven't you chosen me to show you the way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya, Moya!&rdquo; said Paul in a smothered voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know what you are thinking. But stop it!&rdquo; she held one of her crushed
+ blossoms to his lips. &ldquo;What was this made for? Why hasn't it some work to
+ do? Isn't it a skulker&mdash;blooming here for only a night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ripen, fall, and cease!'&rdquo; Paul murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much more am I&mdash;are you, then? The sum of us may amount to
+ something, if we mind our own business and keep step with each other, and
+ finish one thing before we begin the next. I will not be in a hurry about
+ being good. Goodness can take care of itself. What you need is to be
+ happy! And it's my first duty to make you so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God knows what bliss it would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't say 'would be.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God knows it is!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then hush and be thankful!&rdquo; There was a long hush. They heard the far,
+ faint notes of a bugle sounding from the Post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lights out,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;We must go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You haven't told me yet where our Garden is to be,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell you on the way home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had come down into the neighborhood of ranches, and Bisuka's
+ lights were twinkling below them, she asked: &ldquo;Who lives now in the
+ grandfather's house on the Hudson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The farmer, Chauncey Dunlop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there any other house on the place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Mother built a new one on the Ridge some years ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of a house is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was called a good house once; but now it's rather everything it
+ shouldn't be. It was one of the few rash things mother ever did; build a
+ house for her children while they were children. Now she will not change
+ it. She says we shall build for ourselves, how and where we please. Stone
+ Ridge is her shop. Of course, if Chrissy liked it&mdash;But Chrissy
+ considers it a 'hole.' Mother goes up there and indulges in secret orgies
+ of economy; one man in the stable, one in the garden&mdash;'Economy has
+ its pleasures for all healthy minds.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Economy is as delicious as bread and butter after too much candy. I
+ should love to go up to Stone Ridge and wear out my old clothes. Did any
+ one tell me that place would some day be yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be my wife's on the day we are married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is where your wife, sir, would like to live.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a stony Garden, dear! The summer people have their places nearer
+ the river. Our land lies back, with no view but hills. For one who has the
+ world before her where to choose, it strikes me she has picked out a very
+ humble Paradise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you think my idea was to travel&mdash;a poor army girl who spends her
+ life in trunks? Do we ever buy a book or frame a picture without thinking
+ of our next move? As for houses, who am I that I should be particular? In
+ the Army's House are many mansions, but none that we can call our own. Oh,
+ I'm very primitive; I have the savage instinct to gather sticks and
+ stones, and get a roof over my head before winter sets in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To such a speech as this there was but one obvious answer, as she rode at
+ his side, her appealing slenderness within reach of his arm. It did not
+ matter what thousands he proposed to spend upon the roof that should cover
+ her; it was the same as if they were planning a hut of tules or a burrow
+ in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a poor man's country,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;stony hillsides, stony roads lined
+ with stone fences. The chief crop of the country is ice and stone. In one
+ of my grandfather's fields there is a great cairn which Adam Bogardus,
+ they say, picked up, stone by stone, with his bare hands, and carted there
+ when he was fourteen years old. We will build them into the walls of our
+ new house for a blessing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;We will let sleeping stones lie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. &mdash; MARKING TIME
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was impatience at the garrison for news that the hunters had
+ started. Every day's delay at Challis meant an abridgment of the
+ bridegroom's leave, and the wedding was now but a fortnight away. It began
+ to seem preposterous that he should go at all, and the colonel was annoyed
+ with himself for his enthusiasm over the plan in the first place. Mrs.
+ Bogardus's watchfulness of dates told the story of her thoughts, but she
+ said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mamsie is restless,&rdquo; said Christine, putting an arm around her mother's
+ solid waist and giving her a tight little hug apropos of nothing. &ldquo;I
+ believe it's another case of 'mail-time fever.' The colonel says it comes
+ on with Moya every afternoon about First Sergeant's call. But Moya is
+ cunning. She goes off and pretends she isn't listening for the bugle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'First Sergeant or Second,' it's all one to me,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus. &ldquo;I
+ never know one call from another, except when the gun goes off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mamsie! 'When the gun goes off!' What a civilian way of talking. You are
+ not getting on at all with your military training. Now let me give you
+ some useful information. In two seconds the bugle will call the first
+ sergeant&mdash;of each company&mdash;to the adjutant's office, and there
+ he'll get the mail for his men. The orderly trumpeter will bring it to the
+ houses on the line, and the colonel's orderly&mdash;beautiful creature!
+ There he goes! How I wish we could take him home with us and have him in
+ our front hall. Fancy the feelings of the maids! And the rage on the noble
+ brow of Parkins&mdash;awful Parkins. I should like to give his pride a
+ bump.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mother and daughter were pacing the colonel's veranda, behind a partial
+ screen of rose vines&mdash;October vines fast shedding their leaves. Every
+ breeze shook a handful down, which the women's skirts swept with them as
+ they walked. Mrs. Bogardus turned and clasped Christine's arm above the
+ elbow; through the thin sleeve she could feel its cool roundness. It was a
+ soft, small, unmuscular arm, that had never borne its own burdens, to say
+ nothing of a share in the burdens of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get your jacket,&rdquo; said the mother. &ldquo;There is a chill in the air.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no chill in me,&rdquo; laughed Christine. &ldquo;You know, mamsie, you
+ aren't a girl. I should simply die in those awful things that you wear.
+ Did you ever know such a hot house as the colonel keeps!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The rooms are small, and the colonel is&mdash;impulsive,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus
+ added with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is something very like him about his fire-making. I should know by
+ the way he puts on wood that he never would have &ldquo;&mdash;Mrs. Bogardus
+ checked herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A large bank account?&rdquo; Christine supplied, with her quick wit, which was
+ not of a highly sensitive order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has a large heart,&rdquo; said her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And plenty of room for it, bless him! The slope of his chest is like the
+ roof of a house. The only time I envy Moya is when she lays her head down
+ on it and tries to meet her arms around him as if he were a tree, and he
+ strokes her hair as if his hand was a bough! If ever I marry a soldier he
+ shall be a colonel with a white mustache and a burnt-sienna complexion,
+ and a sword-belt that measures&mdash;what is the colonel's waist-measure,
+ do you suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus listened to this nonsense with the smile of a silent woman
+ who has borne a child that can talk. Moya had often noticed how uncritical
+ she was of Christine's &ldquo;unruly member.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn't polite to speak of waist-measures to middle-aged persons like
+ your mother and the colonel,&rdquo; she said placidly. &ldquo;You like it very much
+ out here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fascinating! Never had such a good time in my whole life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you like the West altogether? Would you like to live here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, if it came to living, I should want to be sure there was a way out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There generally is a way out of most things. But it costs something.&rdquo;
+ Mrs. Bogardus was so concise in her speech as at times to be almost
+ oracular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Army people are sure of their way out,&rdquo; said Christine, &ldquo;and I guess they
+ find it costs something.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do they buy so many books, I wonder? If I moved as often as they do,
+ I'd have only paper covers and leave them behind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not a reader, mummy. You're a business woman. You look at
+ everything from the practical side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I didn't, who would?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus spoke with earnestness. &ldquo;We
+ can't all be dreamers like Paul or privileged persons like you. There has
+ to be one in every family to say the things no one likes to hear and do
+ the things nobody likes to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are the rich repiners and you are the household drudge!&rdquo; Christine
+ shouted, laughing at her own wit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush!&rdquo; her mother smiled. &ldquo;Don't make so much noise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to know who's to be the drudge in Paul's privileged family.
+ It doesn't strike me it's going to be Moya. And Paul only drudges for
+ people he doesn't know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya is a girl you can expect anything of. She is a wonderful mixture of
+ opposites. She has the Irish quickness, and yet she has learned to obey.
+ She has had the freedom and the discipline of these little lordly army
+ posts. She is one of the few girls of her age who does not measure
+ everything from her own point of view.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that a dig at me, ma'am?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment Moya came out upon the porch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was very striking with the high color and brilliant eyes that
+ mail-time fever breeds. Christine looked at her with freshly aroused
+ curiosity, moved by her mother's unwonted burst of praise. The faintest
+ tinge of jealousy made her feel naughty. As Moya went down the board walk,
+ the colonel's orderly came springing up the steps to meet her with the
+ mail-bag. He saluted and turned off at an angle down the embankment not to
+ present his back to the ladies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you see that! He never raised his eyes. They are like priests. You
+ can't make them look at you.&rdquo; Moya looked at Christine in amazement. The
+ man himself might have heard her. It was not the first time this
+ privileged guest had rubbed against garrison customs in certain directions
+ hardly worth mentioning. Moya hesitated. Then she laughed a little, and
+ said: &ldquo;Only a raw recruity would look at an officer's daughter, or any
+ lady of the line.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you horrid little aristocrat! Well, I look at them, when they are as
+ pretty as that one, and I forgive them if they look at me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya turned and hovered over the contents of the mail-bag. In the exercise
+ of one of her prerogatives, it was her habit to sort its contents before
+ delivering it at the official door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All, all for you!&rdquo; she offered a huge packet of letters, smiling, to Mrs.
+ Bogardus. It was faced with one on top in Paul's handwriting. &ldquo;All but
+ one,&rdquo; she added, and proceeded to open her own much fatter one in the same
+ hand. She stood reading it in the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus presently followed and remained beside her. &ldquo;Could I speak
+ to your father a moment?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, I will call him,&rdquo; said Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait: I hear him now.&rdquo; The study door opened and Colonel Middleton joined
+ them. Mrs. Bogardus leading the way into the sitting-room, the colonel
+ followed her, and Moya, not having been invited, lingered in the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, have the hunters started yet?&rdquo; the colonel inquired in his breezy
+ voice, which made you want to open the doors and windows to give it room.
+ &ldquo;Be seated! Be seated! I hope you have got a long letter to read me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus stood reflecting. &ldquo;The day this letter was mailed they got
+ off&mdash;only two days ago,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Could I reach them, Colonel, with
+ a telegram?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two days ago,&rdquo; the colonel considered. &ldquo;They must have made Yankee Fork
+ by yesterday. Today they are deep in the woods. No; I should say a man on
+ horseback would be your surest telegram. Is it anything important?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, I wish we could call them back! They have gone off, it seems to
+ me, in a most crazy way&mdash;against the judgment of every one who knows.
+ The guide, this man whom they waited for, refused, it appears, to go out
+ again with another party so late in the fall. But the Bowens were
+ determined. They insisted on making arrangements with another man. Then,
+ when 'Packer John,' they call him, heard of this, he went to Paul and
+ urged him, if he could not prevent the others from going, to give up the
+ trip himself. The Bowens were very much annoyed at his interference, and
+ with Paul for listening to him. And Paul, rather than make things
+ unpleasant, gave in. You know how young men are! What silly grounds are
+ enough for the most serious decisions when it is a question of pride or
+ good faith. The Bowens had bought their outfit on Paul's assurance that he
+ would go. He felt he could not leave them in the lurch. On that, the guide
+ suddenly changed his mind and said he would go with them sooner than see
+ them fall into worse hands. They were, in a way, committed to the other
+ man, so they took <i>him</i> along as cook&mdash;the whole thing done in
+ haste, you see, and unpleasant feelings all around. Do you call that a
+ good start for a pleasure trip?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's very much the way with young troops when they start out&mdash;everything
+ wrong end foremost, everybody mad with everybody else. A day in the saddle
+ will set their little tempers all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't the point,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus persisted gloomily. As she spoke,
+ the two girls came into the room and stood listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the point, then?&rdquo; Christine demanded. &ldquo;Moya has no news; all
+ those pages and pages, and nothing for anybody or about anybody!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Such an intolerable deal of sack to such a poor pennyworth of bread,'&rdquo;
+ the colonel quoted, smiling at Moya's bloated envelope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what do you think?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus recalled him. &ldquo;Don't you think it's
+ a mistake all around?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all, if they have a good man. This flat-footed fellow, John, will
+ take command, as he should. There is no danger in the woods at any season
+ unless the party gets rattled and goes to pieces for want of a head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; exclaimed Moya. &ldquo;You know there is danger. Often, things have
+ happened!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what could happen?&rdquo; asked Christine, with wide eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many things very interesting could happen,&rdquo; the colonel boasted
+ cheerfully. &ldquo;That is the object of the trip. You want things to happen. It
+ is the emergency that makes the man&mdash;sifts him, and takes the chaff
+ out of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take the chaff out of Banks Bowen,&rdquo; Moya imprudently struck in, &ldquo;and what
+ would you have left?&rdquo; She had met Banks Bowen in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tut, tut!&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;Silence, or a good word for the absent&mdash;same
+ as the&rdquo;&mdash;The colonel stopped short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are so scornful about the other men, now you have chosen one!&rdquo;
+ Christine's face turned red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Chrissy! You would not compare your brother to those men! Papa, I
+ beg your pardon; this is only for argument.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't compare him; but that's not to say all the other men are chaff!&rdquo;
+ Christine joined constrainedly in the laugh that followed her speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not go fancying things, Moya,&rdquo; she cried, in answer to a
+ quizzical look. &ldquo;As if I hadn't known the Bowen boys since I was so high!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might know them from the cradle to the grave, my dear young lady, and
+ not know them as Paul will, after a week in the woods with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel had missed the drift of the girls' discussion. He was
+ considering, privately, whether he had not better send a special messenger
+ on the young men's trail. His assurances to the women left a wide margin
+ for personal doubt as to the prudence of the trip. Aside from the lateness
+ of the start, it was, undoubtedly, an ill-assorted company for the woods.
+ There was a wide margin also for suspense, as all mail facilities ceased
+ at Challis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. &mdash; A HUNTER'S DIARY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Early in November, about a week before the hunters were expected home, a
+ packet came addressed to Moya. It was a journal letter from Paul, mailed
+ by some returning prospector chance encountered in the forest as the party
+ were going in. Moya read it aloud, with asterisks, to a family audience
+ which did not include her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-day,&rdquo; one of the first entries read, &ldquo;we halt at Twelve-Mile Cabin,
+ the last roof we shall sleep under. There are pine-trees near the cabin
+ cut off fifteen feet above the ground, felled in winter, John tells us, <i>at
+ the level of the snow!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These cabins are all deserted now; the tide of prospecting has turned
+ another way. The great hills that crowd one another up against the sky are
+ so infested and overridden by this enormous forest-growth, and the
+ underbrush is so dense, it would be impossible for a 'tenderfoot' to gain
+ any clear idea of his direction. I should be a lost man the moment I
+ ventured out of call. Woodcraft must be a sixth sense which we lost with
+ the rest of our Eden birthright when we strayed from innocence, when we
+ ceased to sleep with one ear on the ground, and to spell our way by the
+ moss on tree-trunks. In these solitudes, as we call them, ranks and clouds
+ of witnesses rise up to prove us deaf and blind. Busy couriers are passing
+ every moment of the day; and we do not see, nor hear, nor understand. We
+ are the stocks and stones. Packer John is our only wood-sharp;&mdash;yet
+ the last half of the name doesn't altogether fit him. He is a one-sided
+ character, handicapped, I should say, by some experience that has humbled
+ and perplexed him. Two and two perhaps refused to make four in his account
+ with men, and he gave up the proposition. And now he consorts with trees,
+ and hunts to live, not to kill. He has an impersonal, out-door odor about
+ him, such as the cleanest animals have. I would as soon eat out of his
+ dry, hard, cool hand, as from a chunk of pine-bark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is amusing to see him with a certain member of the party who tries to
+ be fresh with him. He has a disconcerting eye when he fixes it on a man,
+ or turns it away from one who has said a coarse or a foolish thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'The jungle is large,' he seems to say, 'and the cub he is small. Let him
+ think and be still!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is this 'certain member' who tries to be 'fresh'?&rdquo; Christine inquired
+ with perceptible warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The cook, perhaps,&rdquo; said Moya prudently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The cook isn't a 'member'!&mdash;Well, can't you go on, Moya? Paul seems
+ to need a lot of editing.&rdquo; Moya had paused and was glancing ahead, smiling
+ to herself constrainedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there more disparagement of his comrades?&rdquo; Christine persisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christine, be still!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus interfered. &ldquo;Moya ought to have the
+ first reading of her own letter. It's very good of her to let us hear it
+ at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh dear, there's no disparagement. Quite the contrary! I'll go on with
+ pleasure if you don't mind.&rdquo; Moya read hurriedly, laughing through her
+ words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'If you were here, (Ah, <i>if</i> you were here!) You should lend me an
+ ear&mdash;One at the least Of a pair the prettiest'&mdash;which is, within
+ a foot or two, the rhythm of 'Wood Notes.' Of course you don't know it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a gibe at me,&rdquo; Moya explained, &ldquo;because I don't read Emerson. 'It
+ is the very measure of a marching chorus,' he goes on to say, 'where the
+ step is broken by rocks and tree-roots;'&mdash;and he is chanting it to
+ himself (to her it was in the original) as they go in single file through
+ these 'haughty solitudes, the twilight of the gods!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Haughty solitudes'!&rdquo; Christine derided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus sighed with impatience, and Moya's face became set. &ldquo;Well,
+ here he quotes again,&rdquo; she haughtily resumed. &ldquo;Anybody who is tired of
+ this can be excused. Emerson won't mind, and I'm sure Paul won't!&rdquo; She
+ looked a mute apology to Paul's mother, who smiled and said, &ldquo;Go on, dear.
+ I don't read Emerson either, but I like him when Paul reads him for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I warn you there is an awful lot of him here!&rdquo; Moya's voice was a
+ trifle husky as she read on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old as Jove, Old as Love'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought Love was young!&rdquo;&mdash;Christine in a whisper aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Who of me Tells the pedigree? Only the mountains old, Only the waters
+ cold, Only the moon and stars, My coevals are.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya sighed, and sank into prose again. &ldquo;There is a gaudy yellow moss in
+ these woods that flecks the straight and mournful tree-trunks like a
+ wandering glint of sunlight; and there is a crêpe-like black moss that
+ hangs funeral scarfs upon the boughs, as if there had been a death in the
+ forest, and the trees were in line for the burial procession. The grating
+ of our voices on this supreme silence reminds one of 'Why will you still
+ be talking, Monsieur Benedick?&mdash;nobody marks you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are silences, and again there are whole symphonies of sound. The
+ winds smites the tree-tops over our heads, a surf-like roar comes up the
+ slope, and the yellow pine-needles fall across the deepest darks as motes
+ sail down a sunbeam. One wearies of the constant perpendicular, always
+ these stiff, columnar lines, varied only by the melancholy incline where
+ some great pine-chieftain is leaning to his fall supported in the arms of
+ his comrades, or by the tragic prostration of the 'down timber'&mdash;beautiful
+ straight-cut English these woodsmen talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last evening John and I sat by the stove in the men's tent, while the
+ others were in the cabin playing penny-ante with the cook (a sodden brute
+ who toadies to the Bowens, and sulks with John because he objected to our
+ hiring the fellow&mdash;an objection which I sustained, hence his logical
+ spite includes me). John was melting pine gum and elk tallow into a
+ dressing for our boots. I took a mean advantage of him, his hands being in
+ the tallow and the tent-flap down, and tried on him a little of&mdash;now,
+ don't deride me!&mdash;'Wood Notes.' It is seldom one can get the comment
+ of a genuine woodsman on Nature according to the poets.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya read on perfunctorily, feeling that she was not carrying her audience
+ with her, and longing for the time when she could take her letter away and
+ have it all to herself. If she stopped now, Christine, in this sudden new
+ freak of distrustfulness, would be sure to misunderstand.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'For Nature ever faithful is
+ To such as trust her faithfulness.
+ When the forest shall mislead me,
+ When the night and morning lie,
+ When sea and land refuse to feed me,
+ Will be time enough to die.
+
+ Then will yet my Mother yield
+ A pillow in her greenest field;
+ Nor the June flowers scorn to cover
+ The clay of their departed lover.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is beautiful,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus murmured hastily. &ldquo;Even I can
+ understand that.&rdquo; Moya thanked her with a glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what did the infallible John say?&rdquo; Christine inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John looked at me and smiled, as at a babbling infant&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good for John!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christine, be still!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John looked at me and smiled,&rdquo; Moya repeated steadily. Nothing could have
+ stopped her now. She only hoped for some further scattering mention of
+ that &ldquo;certain member&rdquo; who had set them all at odds and spoiled what should
+ have been an hour's pure happiness. &ldquo;'You'll get the pillow all right,' he
+ said. 'It might not be a green one, nor I wouldn't bank much on the
+ flowers; but you'll be tired enough to sleep without rocking about the
+ time you trust to Nature's tuckin' you in and puttin' victuals in your
+ mouth. I never <i>see</i> nature till I came out here. I'd seen pretty
+ woods and views, that a young lady could take down with her paints; but
+ how are you going to paint that?'&mdash;he waved his tallow-stick towards
+ the night outside. 'Ears can't reach the bottom of that stillness. That's
+ creation before God ever thought of man. Long as I've been in the woods, I
+ never get over the feeling that there's <i>something behind me</i>. If you
+ go towards the trees, they come to meet you; if you go backwards, they go
+ back; but you can't sit down and sit still without they'll come a-creeping
+ up and creeping up, and crowding in'&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He stirred his 'dope' awhile, and then he struck another note. 'I've
+ wintered alone in these mountains,' he said, 'and I've seen snowslides
+ pounce out of a clear sky&mdash;a puff and a flash and a roar; an' trees
+ four foot across snappin' like kindlin' wood&mdash;not because it hit 'em;
+ only the breath of it struck them; and maybe a man lying dead somewheres
+ under his cabin timbers. That's no mother's love-tap. Pillows and flowers
+ ain't in it. But it's good poetry,' he added condescendingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not quoted him right, not being much of a snap-shot at dialect;
+ and his is an undefined, unclassifiable mixture. Eastern farm-hand and
+ Western ranchman, prospector, who knows what? His real language is in his
+ eye and his rare, pure smile. And just as his countenance expresses his
+ thoughts without circumlocution or attempt at effect, so his body informs
+ his clothing. Wind and rain have moulded his hat to his head, his shoes
+ grip the ground like paws; his buckskins have a surface like a cast after
+ Rodin. They are repousséed by the hard bones and sinews underneath. I can
+ think of nothing but the clothing of Millet's peasants to compare with
+ this exterior of John's. He is himself a peasant of the woods. He has not
+ the predatory instincts. If he could have his way, not a shot would be
+ fired by any of us for the mere idle sport of killing. Shooting these
+ innocent, fearless creatures, who have not learned that we are here for
+ their destruction, is too like murder and treachery combined. Hunger
+ should be our only excuse. My forbearance, or weakness, is a sort of
+ unspoken bond between us. But I am a peasant, too, you know. I do not come
+ of the lordly, arms-bearing blood. I shoot at a live mark always under
+ protest; and when I fairly catch the look in the great eye of a dying elk
+ or black-tail, it knocks me out for that day's hunt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul is perfectly happy!&rdquo; Christine broke in. &ldquo;He has got one of his
+ beloved People to grovel to. They can sleep in the same tent and eat from
+ the same plate, if you like. Why, it's better than the East Side! He'll be
+ blood brother to Packer John before they leave the woods.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya blushed with anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have said enough on that subject, Christine.&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus bent her
+ dark, keen gaze upon her daughter's face. &ldquo;Come&rdquo;&mdash;she rose. &ldquo;Come
+ with me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine sat still. &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; her mother repeated sternly. &ldquo;Moya,&rdquo;&mdash;in
+ a different voice,&mdash;&ldquo;your letter was lovely. Shall you read it to
+ your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hardly,&rdquo; said Moya, flushing. &ldquo;Father does not care for descriptions, and
+ the woods are an old story to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus placed her hands on the girl's shoulders and gave her one of
+ her infrequent, ceremonious kisses, which, like her finest smile, she kept
+ for occasions too nice for words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. &mdash; THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Christine followed her mother to their room, and the two faced each other
+ a moment in pale silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus spoke first. &ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo;&mdash;her breath came
+ short, perhaps from climbing the stairs. She was a large woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does what mean? I don't understand you, mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, child, don't repulse me! Twice you and Moya have nearly quarreled
+ about those men. Why were you so rude to her? Why did you behave so about
+ her letter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul is so intolerant! And the airs he puts on! If he is my own brother I
+ must say he's an awful prig about other men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not discussing Paul. That is not the question now. Have you
+ anything to tell me, Christine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To tell you?&mdash;about what, mother?&rdquo; Christine spoke lower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know what I mean. Which of them is it? Is it Banks?&mdash;don't say
+ it is Banks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, how can I say anything when you begin like that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you any idea what sort of a man Banks Bowen really is? His father
+ supports him entirely&mdash;six years now, ever since he left the law
+ school. He does nothing, never will do anything. He has no will or purpose
+ in life, except about trifles like this hunting-trip. As far as I can see
+ he is without common sense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine stood by the dressing-table pleating the cover-frilling with her
+ small fingers that were loaded with rings. She pinched the folds hard and
+ let them go. &ldquo;Why did no one ever say these things before?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We don't say things about the sons of our friends, unless we are
+ compelled to. They were implied in every way possible. When have I asked
+ Banks Bowen to the house except when everybody was asked! I would never in
+ the world have come out in Mr. Borland's car if I had known the Bowens
+ were to be of the party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That made no difference,&rdquo; said Christine loftily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was all settled before then, was it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I said it was settled, mother? He asked me if I could ever care for
+ him; and I said that I did&mdash;a little. Why shouldn't I? He does what I
+ like a man to do. I don't enjoy people who have wills and purposes. It may
+ be very horrid of me, but I wouldn't be in Moya's place for worlds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You poor child! You poor, unhappy child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why am I unhappy? Has Paul added so much to our income since he left
+ college?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul does not make money; neither does he selfishly waste it. He has a
+ conscience in his use of what he has.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see what conscience has to do with it. When it is gone it's
+ gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will learn what conscience has to do with a man's spending if ever
+ you try to make both ends meet with Banks Bowen. I suppose he will go
+ through the form of speaking to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother dear! He has only just spoken to me. How fast you go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not fast enough to keep up with my children, it seems. Was it you,
+ Christine, who asked them to come here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where did you learn such ways?&mdash;such want of frankness, of delicacy,
+ of the commonest consideration for others? To be looking out for your own
+ little schemes at a time like this!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus saw now what must have
+ been Paul's reason for doing what, with all her forced explanations of the
+ hunting-trip, she had never until now understood. He had taken the alarm
+ before she had, and done what he could to postpone this family
+ catastrophe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christine retreated to a deep-cushioned chair, and threw herself into it,
+ her slender hands, palm upwards, extended upon its arms. Total surrender
+ under pressure of cruel odds was the expression of her pointed eyebrows
+ and drooping mouth. She looked exasperatingly pretty and irresponsibly
+ fragile. Her blue-veined eyelids quivered, her breath came in distinct
+ pants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you will not be troubled with my 'ways' for very many years,
+ mother. If you could feel my heart now! It jumps like something trying to
+ get out. It will get out some day. Have patience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a poor way to retaliate upon your mother, Christine. Your health
+ is too serious a matter to trifle with. If you choose to make it a shield
+ against everything I say that doesn't please you, you can cut yourself off
+ from me entirely. I cannot beat down such a defense as that. Anger me you
+ never can, but you can make me helpless to help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare say it's better that I should never marry at all,&rdquo; said Christine,
+ her eyes closed in resignation. &ldquo;You never would like anybody I like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall say no more. You are a woman. I have protected you as far as I
+ was able on account of your weakness. I cannot protect you from the
+ weakness itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus rose. She did not offer to comfort her child with caresses,
+ but in her eyes as she looked at her there was a profound, inalienable,
+ sorrowing tenderness, a depth of understanding beyond words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know so well,&rdquo; the dark eyes seemed to say, &ldquo;how you came to be the
+ poor thing that you are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The constraint which she felt towards her mother threw Chrissy back upon
+ Moya. Being a lesser power, she was always seeking alliances. Moya had put
+ aside their foolish tiff as unworthy of another thought; she was
+ embarrassed when at bedtime Christine came humbly to her door, and putting
+ her arms around her neck implored her not to be cross with her &ldquo;poor
+ pussy.&rdquo; It was always the other person who was &ldquo;cross&rdquo; with Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody is cross with anybody, so far as I know,&rdquo; said Moya briskly. A
+ certain sort of sentimentality always made her feel like whistling or
+ singing or asserting the commonplace side of life in some way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. &mdash; THE WHITE PERIL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus received many letters, chiefly on business, and these she
+ answered with manlike brevity, in a strong, provincial hand. They took up
+ much of her time, and mercifully, for it was now the last week in November
+ and the young men did not return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The range cattle had been driven down into the valleys, deer-tracks
+ multiplied by lonely mountain fords; War Eagle and his brethren of the
+ Owyhees were taking council under their winter blankets. The nights were
+ still, the mornings rimy with hoarfrost. Fogs arose from the river and cut
+ off the bases of the mountains, converting the valley before sunrise into
+ the likeness of a polar sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have let your fire go out,&rdquo; said the colonel briskly. He had invaded
+ the sitting-room at an unaccustomed hour, finding the lady at her letters
+ as usual. She turned and held her pen poised above her paper as she looked
+ at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You did not come to see about the fire?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I have had letters from the north. Would you step into my study a
+ moment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya was in her father's room when they entered. She had been weeping, but
+ at sight of Paul's mother she rose and stood picking at the handkerchief
+ she held, without raising her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be alarmed at Moya's face,&rdquo; said the colonel stoutly. &ldquo;Paul was all
+ right at last accounts. We will have a merry Christmas yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is not from Paul!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus fixed her eyes upon a letter which
+ she held at arm's length, feeling for her glasses. &ldquo;It's not for me&mdash;'<i>Miss</i>
+ Bogardus.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, well. I saw it was postmarked Lemhi&mdash;Fort Lemhi, you know. Sit
+ down, madam. Suppose I give you Mr. Winslow's report first&mdash;Lieutenant
+ Winslow. You heard of his going to Lemhi?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She doesn't know,&rdquo; whispered Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True. Well, two weeks ago I gave Mr. Winslow a hunter's leave, as we call
+ it in the army, to beat up the trail of those boys. I thought it was time
+ we heard from them, but it wasn't worth while to raise a hue and cry. He
+ started out with a few picked men from Lemhi, the Indian Reservation, you
+ know. I couldn't have sent a better man; the thing hasn't got into the
+ local papers even. My object, of course, has been to save unnecessary
+ alarm. Mr. Winslow has just got back to Challis. He rounded up the Bowen
+ youths and the cook and the helper, in bad shape, all of them, but able to
+ tell a story. The details we shall get later, but I have Mr. Winslow's
+ report to me. It is short and probably correct.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was Paul not with them?&rdquo; his mother questioned in a hard, dry voice.
+ &ldquo;Where is he then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is in camp, madam, in charge of the wounded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear father! if you would speak plain!&rdquo; Moya whispered nervously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly. There is nothing whatever to hide. We know now that on their
+ last day's hunt they met with an accident which resulted in a division of
+ the party. A fall of snow had covered the ice on the trails, and the
+ guide's horse fell and rolled on him&mdash;nature of his injuries not
+ described. This happened a day's journey from their camp at Ten-Mile
+ cabin, and the retreat with the wounded man was slow and of course
+ difficult over such a trail. They put together a sort of horse-litter made
+ of pine poles and carried him on that, slung between two mules tandem. A
+ beastly business, winding and twisting over fallen timber, hugging the
+ cañon wall, near a thousand feet down&mdash;'Impassable' the trail is
+ marked, on the government military maps. This first day's march was so
+ discouraging that at Ten Mile they called a council, and the packer spoke
+ up like a man. He disposed of his own case in this way. If he were to
+ live, they could send back help to fetch him out. If not, no help would be
+ needed. The snows were upon them; there was danger in every hour's delay.
+ It was insane to sacrifice four sound men for one, badly hurt, with not
+ many hours perhaps to suffer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A murmur from the mother announced her appreciation of the packer's
+ argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was no more than a man should do; but as to taking him at his word,
+ why, that's another question.&rdquo; The colonel paused and gustily cleared his
+ throat. &ldquo;They were up against it right then and there, and the party split
+ upon it. Three of them went on,&mdash;for help, as they put it,&mdash;and
+ Paul stayed behind with the wounded man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul stayed&mdash;alone?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus uttered with hoarse emphasis.
+ &ldquo;Was not that a very strange way to divide? Among them all, I should think
+ they might have brought the man out with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Their story is that his injuries were such that he could not have borne
+ the pain of the journey. Rather an unusual case,&rdquo; the colonel added dryly.
+ &ldquo;In my experience, a wounded man will stand anything sooner than be left
+ on the field.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot understand it,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus repeated, in a voice of indignant
+ pain. &ldquo;Such a strange division! One man left alone&mdash;to nurse, and
+ hunt, and cook, and keep up fires! Suppose the guide should die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul was not <i>left</i>, you know,&rdquo; the colonel said emphatically. &ldquo;He
+ <i>stayed</i>. And I should be thankful in your place, madam, that my son
+ was the man who made that choice. But setting conduct aside, for we are
+ not prepared to judge, it is merely a matter of time our getting in there,
+ now that we know where he is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much time?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus opened her ashen lips to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel's face fell. &ldquo;Mr. Winslow reports heavy snows for the past
+ week,&mdash;soft, clogging snow,&mdash;too deep to wade through and too
+ soft to bear. A little later, when the cold has formed a crust, our men
+ can get in on snowshoes. There is nothing for it but patience, Mrs.
+ Bogardus, and faith in the boy's endurance. The pluck that made him stay
+ behind will help him to hold out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya gave a hurt sob; the colonel stepped to the desk and stood there a
+ moment turning over his papers. Behind his back the mother sent a glance
+ to Moya expressive of despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know what happened to his father? Did he ever tell you?&rdquo; she
+ whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya assented; she could not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twice, twice in a lifetime!&rdquo; said the older woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a gesture, Moya protested against this wild prophecy; but as Paul's
+ mother left the room she rushed upon her father, crying: &ldquo;Tell <i>me</i>
+ the truth! What do you think of it? Did you ever hear of such a dastardly
+ thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a rout,&rdquo; said the colonel coolly. &ldquo;They were in full flight before
+ the enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What enemy? They deserted a wounded comrade, and a servant at that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The enemy was panic,&mdash;panic, my dear. In these woods I've seen
+ strong men go half beside themselves with fear of something&mdash;the Lord
+ knows what! Then, add the winter and what they had seen and heard of that.
+ Anyway, you can afford to be easy on the other boys. The honors of the day
+ are with Paul&mdash;and the old packer, though it's all in the day's work
+ to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are satisfied with Paul, father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't desert his command to save his own skin.&rdquo; The colonel smiled
+ grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the men of the Fourth discovered those other fellows they had
+ literally sat down in the snow to die. Not a man of them knew how to pack
+ a mule. Their meat pack slipped, going along one of those high trails, and
+ scared the mule, and in trying to kick himself free the beast fell off the
+ trail&mdash;mule and meat both gone. They got tired of carrying their
+ stuff and made a raft to float it down the river, and lost that! Paul has
+ been much better off in camp than he would have been with them. So cheer
+ up, my girl, and think how you'd like to have your bridegroom out on an
+ Indian campaign!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but that would be orders! It's the uselessness that hurts. There was
+ nothing to do or to gain. He didn't want to go. Oh, daddy dear, I made fun
+ of his shooting,&mdash;I did! I laughed at his way with firearms. Wretched
+ fool and snob that I was! As if I cared! I thought of what other people
+ would say. You remember,&mdash;he went shooting up the gulch with Mr.
+ Lane, and when he hit but didn't kill he wouldn't&mdash;couldn't put the
+ birds out of pain. Jephson had to do it for him, and he told it in
+ barracks and the men laughed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you know that! And what does it all amount to! Blame yourself all
+ you like, dear, if it does you any good, but don't make him out a fool!
+ There's not much that comes to us straight in this world&mdash;not even
+ orders, you'll find. But we have to take it straight and leave the muddles
+ and the blunders as they are. That's the brave man's courage and the brave
+ woman's. Orders are mixed, but duty is clear. And the boy out there in the
+ woods has found his duty and done it like a man. That should be enough for
+ any soldier's daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour passed in suspense. Moya was disappointed in her expectation of
+ sharing in whatever the letter from Fort Lemhi might contain. Christine
+ was in bed with a headache, her mother dully gave out, with no apparent
+ expectation that any one would accept this excuse for the girl's complete
+ withdrawal. The letter, she told Moya, was from Banks Bowen. &ldquo;There was
+ nothing in it of consequence&mdash;to us,&rdquo; she added, and Moya took the
+ words to mean &ldquo;you and me&rdquo; to the unhappy exclusion of Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus's face had settled into lines of anxiety printed years
+ before, as the creases in an old garment, smoothed and laid away, will
+ reappear with fresh wear. Her plan was to go back to New York with
+ Christine, who was plainly unfit to bear a long siege of suspense. There
+ she could leave the girl with friends and learn what particulars could be
+ gathered from the Bowens, who would have arrived. She would then return
+ alone and wait for news at the garrison. That night, with Moya's help, she
+ completed her packing, and on the following day the wedding party broke
+ up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. &mdash; A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Fine, dry snowflakes were drifting past the upper square of a window set
+ in a wall of logs. The lower half was obscured by a white bulk that
+ shouldered up against the sash in the likeness of a muffled figure
+ stooping to peer in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lying in his bunk against the wall, the packer watched this sentinel
+ snowdrift grow and become human and bold and familiar. His deep-lined
+ visage was reduced to its bony structure. The hand was a claw with which
+ he plucked at the ancient fever-crust shredding from his lips: an
+ occupation at once so absorbing and so exhausting that often the hand
+ would drop and the blankets rise upon the arch of the chest in a sigh of
+ retarded respiration. The sigh would be followed by a cough, controlled,
+ as in dread of the shock to a sore and shattered frame. The snow came
+ faster and faster until the dim, wintry pane was a blur. Millions of atoms
+ crossed the watcher's weary vision, whirling, wavering, driven with an
+ aimless persistence, unable to pause or to stop. And the blind white
+ snowdrift climbed, fed, like human circumstance, from disconnected atoms
+ impelled by a common law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were sounds in the cabin: wet wood sweating on hot coals; a step
+ that went to and fro. Outside, a snow-weighted bough let go its load and
+ sprang up, scraping against the logs. Some heavy soft thing slid off the
+ roof and dropped with a <i>chug</i>. Then the door, that hung awry like a
+ drooping eyelid, gave a disreputable wink, and the whole front gable of
+ the cabin loomed a giant countenance with a silly forehead and an evil
+ leer. Now it seemed that a hand was hurling snow against the door, as a
+ sower scatters grain,&mdash;snow that lay like beach sand on the floor, or
+ melted into a crawling pool&mdash;red in the firelight, red as blood!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and other phantasms had now for an unmeasured time been tenants of
+ the packer's brain, sharing and often overpowering the reality of the
+ human step that went to and fro. To-day the shapes and relations of things
+ were more natural, and the step aroused a querulous curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; the sick man imagined himself to have said. A croaking
+ sound in his throat, which was all he could do by way of speech, brought
+ the step to his bedside. A young face, lightly bearded, and gaunt almost
+ as his own, bent over him. Large, black eyes rested on his; a hand with
+ womanish nails placed its fingers on his wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are better to-day. Your pulse is down. I wouldn't try to talk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's that&mdash;outside?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no one outside,&rdquo; Paul answered, following the direction of his
+ patient's eyes. &ldquo;That? That is only a snowdrift. It grows faster than I
+ can shovel it away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer had forgotten his own question. He dozed off, and presently
+ roused again as suddenly as he had slept. His utterance was clearer, but
+ not his meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&mdash;you want to fetch me back for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back?&rdquo; Paul repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was most gone, wa'n't I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back to life, you mean? You came back of yourself. I hadn't much to do
+ with it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's been the matter&mdash;gen'ly speaking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were hurt, don't you remember? Something like wound fever set in. The
+ altitude is bad for fevers. You have had a pretty close call.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Been here all the time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I been here?&mdash;yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Lone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With you. How is your chest? Does it hurt you still when you breathe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man filled his lungs experimentally. &ldquo;Something busted inside, I
+ guess,&rdquo; he panted. &ldquo;'Tain't no killing matter, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nourishment, in a tin cup, warm from the fire was offered him, refused
+ with a gesture, and firmly urged upon him. This necessitated another rest.
+ It was long before he spoke again&mdash;out of some remoter train of
+ thought apparently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Family all in New York?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My family? They were at Bisuka when I left them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't <i>live</i> West!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I was born in the West, though. Idaho is my native state.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patient fell to whimpering suddenly like a hurt child. He drew up the
+ blanket to cover his face. Paul, interpreting this as a signal for more
+ nourishment, brought the sad decoction,&mdash;rinds of dried beef cooked
+ with rice in snow water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guess that'll do, thank ye. My tongue feels like an old buckskin glove.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I was a little fellow,&rdquo; said the nurse, beguiling the patient while
+ he tucked the spoonfuls down, &ldquo;I was like you: I wouldn't take what the
+ doctor ordered, and they used to pretend I must take it for the others of
+ the family,&mdash;a kind of vicarious milk diet, or gruel, or whatever it
+ was. 'Here's a spoonful for mother, poor mother,' they would say; and of
+ course it couldn't be refused when mother needed it so much. 'And now one
+ for Chrissy'&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sister, Christine. And then I'd take one for 'uncle' and one for each
+ of the servants; and the cupful would go down to the health of the
+ household, and I the dupe of my sympathies! Now you are taking this for
+ me, because it's nicer to be shut up here with a live man than a dead one;
+ and we haven't the conveniences for a first-class funeral.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You never took a spoonful for 'father,'&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul answered the question with gravity. &ldquo;No. We never used that name in
+ common.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead was he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell you some time. Better try to sleep now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul returned the saucepan to the fire, after piecing out its contents
+ with water, and retired out of his patient's sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again came a murmur, chiefly unintelligible, from the bunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ask for anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man heaved a worried sigh. &ldquo;See what a mis'rable presumptuous
+ piece of work!&rdquo; he muttered, addressing the logs overhead. &ldquo;But that
+ Clauson&mdash;he wa'n't no more fit to guide ye than to go to heaven!
+ Couldn't 'a' done much worse than this, though!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has done worse!&rdquo; Paul came over to the bunk-side to reason on this
+ matter. &ldquo;They started back from here, four strong men with all the animals
+ and all the food they needed for a six weeks' trip. We came in in one. If
+ they got through at all, where is the help they were to send us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help!&rdquo; The packer roused. &ldquo;They helped themselves, and pretty frequent. I
+ said to them more than once&mdash;they didn't like it any too well: 'We
+ can't drink up here like they do down to the coast. The air is too light.
+ What a man would take with his dinner down there would fit him out with a
+ first-class jag up here, 'leven thousand above the sea!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a waste of breath to talk about them&mdash;breath burns up food and
+ we haven't much to spare. We rushed into this trouble and we dragged you
+ in after us. We have hurt you a good deal more than you have us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man groaned. He flung one hand back against the logs, dislodging
+ ancient dust that fell upon his corpse-like forehead. It was carefully
+ wiped away. Helpless tears stole down the rigid face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John,&rdquo; said Paul with animation, &ldquo;your general appearance just now
+ reminds me of those worked-out placer claims we passed in Ruby Gulch, the
+ first day out. The fever and my cooking have ground-sluiced you to the
+ bone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John smiled faintly. &ldquo;Don't look very fat yourself. Where'd you git all
+ that baird on your face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have been here some time, you know&mdash;or you don't know; you have
+ been living in places far away from here. I used to envy you sometimes.
+ And other times I didn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean I was off my head?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At times. But more of the time you were dreaming and talking in your
+ dreams; seeing things out loud by the flash-light of fever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talking, was I? Guess there wa'n't much sense in any of it?&rdquo; The hazard
+ was a question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A kind of sense,&mdash;out of focus, distorted. Some of it was opium.
+ Didn't you coax a little of his favorite medicine out of the cook?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Packer John apologized sheepishly, &ldquo;I cal'lated I was going to be left.
+ You put it up on me&mdash;making out you were off with the rest. <i>That</i>
+ was all right. But I wa'n't going to suffer it out; why should I? A
+ gunshot would have cured me quicker, perhaps. Then some critter might 'a'
+ found me and called it murder. A word like that set going can hang a man.
+ No, I just took a little to deaden the pain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The whole discussion was rather nasty, right before the man we were
+ talking about,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;I wanted to get them off and out of hearing.
+ Then we had a few words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At intervals during that day and the next, Paul's patient expended his
+ strength in questions, apparently trivial. His eyes, whenever they were
+ open, followed his nurse with a shrinking intelligence. Paul was on his
+ guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What day of the month do you make it out to be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The second of December.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;December!&rdquo; The packer lay still considering. &ldquo;Game all gone down?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not much of a pot-hunter,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;There may be game, but I
+ can't seem to get it. The snow is pretty deep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wouldn't bear a man on snowshoes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would go out of sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Snowing a little every day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right along, quietly, for I don't know how many days! I think the sky is
+ packed with it a mile deep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much grub have we got?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul gave a flattering estimate of their resources. The patient was not
+ deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where's it all gone to? You ain't eat anything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've eaten a good deal more than you have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was livin' on fever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can't live on fever any longer. The fever has left you, and you'll go
+ with it if you don't obey your doctor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where's all the stuff <i>gone</i> to?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There were four of them, and they allowed for some delay in getting out,&rdquo;
+ Paul explained, with a sickly smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, they was hogs! I knew how they'd pan out! That was why&rdquo;&mdash;He
+ wearied of speech and left the point unfinished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening following, when the two could no longer see each other's
+ faces in the dusk, Paul spoke, controlling his voice:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I need not ask you, John, what you think of our chances?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess they ain't much worth thinking about.&rdquo; The fire hissed and
+ crackled; the soft subsidence of the snow could be heard outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are 'free among the dead,' how does it go? 'Like unto them that are
+ wounded and lie in the grave.' What we say to each other here will stop
+ here with our breath. Let us put our memories in order for the last
+ reckoning. I think, John, you must, at some time in your life, have known
+ my father, Adam Bogardus? He was lost on the Snake River plains,
+ twenty-one years ago this autumn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Receiving no answer, the pale young inquisitor went on, choosing his words
+ with intense deliberation as one feeling his way in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most of us believe in some form of communication that we can't explain,
+ between those who are separated in body, in this world, but closely united
+ in thought. Do I make myself clear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sound of deep breathing from the bunk; it produced a similar
+ conscious excitement in the speaker. He halted, recovered himself, and
+ continued:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After my father's disappearance, my mother had a distinct presentiment&mdash;it
+ haunted her for years&mdash;that something had happened to him at a place
+ called One Man Station. Did you ever know the place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might have.&rdquo; The words came huskily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father had left her at this place, and to her knowledge he never came
+ back. But she had this intimation&mdash;and suffered from it&mdash;that he
+ did come back and was foully dealt with there&mdash;wronged in body or
+ mind. The place had most evil associations for her; it was not strange she
+ should have connected it with the great disaster of her life. As you lay
+ talking to yourself in your fever, you took me back on that lost trail
+ that ended, as we thought, in the grave. But we might have been mistaken.
+ Is there anything it would not be safe for you and me to speak of now? Do
+ you know any tie between men that should be closer than the tie between
+ us? Any safer place where a man could lay off the secret burdens of his
+ life and be himself for a little while&mdash;before the end answers all? I
+ know you have a secret. I believe that a share of it belongs to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are better off sometimes if we don't get all that belongs to us,&rdquo; said
+ John gratingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn't seem to be a matter of choice, does it? If you were not meant
+ to tell me&mdash;what you have partly told me already&mdash;where is there
+ any meaning in our being here at all? Let us have some excuse for this
+ senseless accident. Do you believe much in accidents? How foolish&rdquo;&mdash;Paul
+ sighed&mdash;&ldquo;for you and me to be afraid of each other! Two men who have
+ parted with everything but the privilege of speaking the truth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer raised himself in his bunk slowly, like one in pain. He looked
+ long at the listless figure crouching by the fire; then he sank back again
+ with a low groan. &ldquo;What was it you heared me say? Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't give you the exact words. The words were nothing. Haven't you
+ watched the sparks blow up, at night, when the wind goes searching over
+ the ashes of an old camp-fire? It was the fever made you talk, and your
+ words were the sparks that showed where there had been fire once. Perhaps
+ I had no right to track you by your own words when you lay helpless, but I
+ couldn't always leave you. Now I'd like to have my share of that&mdash;whatever
+ it was&mdash;that hurt you so, at One Man Station.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ought to been a lawyer,&rdquo; said the packer, releasing his breath. There
+ was less strain in his voice. It broke with feeling. &ldquo;You put up a mighty
+ strong case for your way of looking at it. I don't say it's best. There,
+ if you will have it! Sonny&mdash;my son! It&mdash;it's like startin' a
+ snow-slide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sick man broke down and sobbed childishly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take it quietly! Oh, take it quietly!&rdquo; Paul shivered. &ldquo;I have known it a
+ long time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hours later they were still awake, the packer in his bunk, Paul in his
+ blankets by the winking brands. The pines were moving, and in pauses of
+ the wind they could hear the incessant soft crowding of the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When they find us here in the spring,&rdquo; said the packer humbly, &ldquo;it won't
+ matter much which on us was 'Mister' and which was 'John.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you thinking of that!&rdquo; Paul answered with nervous irritation. &ldquo;I
+ thought you had lived in the woods long enough to have got rid of all that
+ nonsense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess there was some of it where you've been living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are done with all that now. Go to sleep,&mdash;Father.&rdquo; He pronounced
+ the word conscientiously to punish himself for dreading it. The darkness
+ seemed to ring with it and give it back to him ironically. &ldquo;Father!&rdquo;
+ muttered the pines outside, and the snow, listening, let fall the word in
+ elfin whispers. Paul turned over desperately in his blankets. &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; he
+ repeated out loud. &ldquo;Do <i>you</i> believe it? Does it do you any good?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn't distress myself, one way or t' other, if it don't come
+ natural,&rdquo; the packer spoke, out of his corner in the darkness. &ldquo;Wait till
+ you can feel to say it. The word ain't nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do you feel it? Is it any comfort to you at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain't in any hurry to feel it. We'll get there. Don't worry. And s'pose
+ we don't! We're men. Man to man is good enough for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul spent some wakeful hours after that, trying not to think of Moya, of
+ his mother and Christine. They were of another world,&mdash;a world that
+ dies hard at twenty-four. Towards morning he slept, but not without
+ dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in the pent-road at Stone Ridge. It was sunset and long shadows
+ striped the lane. A man stood, back towards him, leaning both arms on the
+ stone fence that bounds the lane to the eastward,&mdash;a plain farmer
+ figure, gazing down across the misty fields as he might have stood a
+ hundred times in that place at that hour. Paul could not see his face, but
+ something told him who it must be. His heart stood still, for he saw his
+ mother coming up the lane. She carried something in her hand covered with
+ a napkin, and she smiled, walking carefully as if carrying a treat to a
+ sick child. She passed the man at the fence, not appearing to have seen
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you speak to him, mother? Won't you speak to&rdquo;&mdash;He could not
+ utter the name. She looked at him bewildered. &ldquo;Speak? who shall I speak
+ to?&rdquo; The man at the fence had turned and he watched her, or so Paul
+ imagined. He felt himself choking, faint, with the effort to speak that
+ one word. Too late! The moment passed. The man whom he knew was his
+ father, the solemn, quiet figure, moved away up the road unquestioned. He
+ never looked back. Paul grew dizzy with the lines of shadow; they
+ stretched on and on, they became the ties of a railroad&mdash;interminable.
+ He awoke, very faint and tired, with a lost feeling and the sense upon him
+ of some great catastrophe. The old man was sleeping deeply in his bunk, a
+ ray of white sunlight falling on his yellow features. He looked like one
+ who would never wake again. But as Paul gazed at him he smiled, and sighed
+ heavily. His lips formed a name; and all the blood in Paul's body dyed his
+ face crimson. The name was his mother's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. &mdash; THE BLOOD-WITE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A few hours seemed days, after the great disclosure. Both men had recoiled
+ from it and were feeling the strain of the new relation. Three times since
+ their first meeting the elder had adjusted himself quietly to a change in
+ the younger's manner to him. First there had been respectful curiosity in
+ the presence of a new type, combined with the deference due a leader and
+ an expert in strange fields. Then indignant partisanship, pity, and the
+ slight condescension of the nurse. This had hurt the packer, but he took
+ it as he accepted his physical downfall. The last change was hardest to
+ bear; for now the time was short, and, as Paul himself had said, they were
+ in the presence of the final unveiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when Paul made artificial remarks to break the pauses, avoiding his
+ father's eye and giving him neither name nor title, the latter became
+ silent and lay staring at the logs and picking at his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I was hunting up a father,&rdquo; he said to himself aloud one day, &ldquo;I'd try
+ to find a better lookin' one. I wouldn't pa'm off on myself no such old
+ warped stick as I be.&rdquo; The remark seemed a tentative one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had the choice, to take or leave you,&rdquo; Paul responded. &ldquo;You were an
+ unconscious witness. Why should I have opened the subject at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both knew that this answer was an evasion. By forcing the tie they had
+ merely marked the want of ease and confidence between them. As &ldquo;Packer
+ John&rdquo; Paul could have enjoyed, nay, loved this man; as his father, the sum
+ and finality of his filial dreams, the supplanter of that imaginary
+ husband of his mother's youth, the thing was impossible. And the father
+ knew it and did not resent it in the least, only pitied the boy for his
+ needless struggle. He was curious about him, too. He wanted to understand
+ him and the life he had come out of: his roundabout way of reaching the
+ simplest conclusions; his courage in argument, and his personal shying
+ away from the truth when found. More than all he longed for a little plain
+ talk, the exile's hunger for news from home. It pleased him when Paul,
+ rousing at this deliberate challenge, spoke up with animation, as if he
+ had come to some conclusion in his own mind. It could not be expected he
+ would express it simply. The packer had become used to his oddly elaborate
+ way of putting things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we had food enough and time, we might afford to waste them discussing
+ each other's personal appearance. <i>I</i> propose we talk to some
+ purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talking sure burns up the food.&rdquo; The packer waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I knew what my father was doing with himself, all those years when
+ his family were giving him the honors of the dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I warned ye about this pumping out old shafts. You can't tell what you'll
+ find in the bottom. I suppose you know there are things in this world,
+ Boy, a good deal worse than death?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Desertion is worse. It is not my father's death I want explained, it is
+ his life, your life, in secret, these twenty years! Can you explain that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer doubled his bony fist and brought it down on the bunk-side.
+ &ldquo;Now you talk like a man! I been waiting to hear you say that. Yes, I can
+ answer that question, if you ain't afeard of the answer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am keeping alive to hear it!&rdquo; said Paul in a guarded voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might say you're keeping me alive to tell it. It's a good thing to
+ git off of one's mind; but it's a poor thing to hand over to a son. All
+ I've got to leave ye, though: the truth if you can stand it! Where do you
+ want I should begin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At the night when you came back to One Man Station.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How'd you know I come back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were back there in your fever, living over something that happened in
+ that place. There was a wind blowing and the door wouldn't shut. And
+ something had to be lifted,&rdquo;&mdash;the old man's eyes, fixed upon his son,
+ took a look of awful comprehensions,&mdash;&ldquo;something heavy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; great Lord, it was heavy! And I been carrying it ever since!&rdquo; His
+ chest rose as if the weight of that load lay on it still, and his breath
+ expired with a hoarse &ldquo;haugh.&rdquo; &ldquo;I got out of the way because it was <i>my</i>
+ load. I didn't want no help from them.&rdquo; He paused and sat picking at his
+ hands. &ldquo;It's a dreadful ugly story. I'd most as soon live it over again as
+ have to tell it in cold blood. I feel sometimes it <i>can't be!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not go back beyond that night. I know how my mother was left,
+ and what sort of a man you were forced to leave her with. Was it&mdash;the
+ keeper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's what it was. That was the hard knot in my thread. Nothing wouldn't
+ go past that. Some, when they git things in a tangle, they just reach for
+ the shears an' cut the thread. I wa'n't brought up that way. I was taught
+ to leave the shears alone. So I went on stringin' one year after another.
+ But they wouldn't join on to them that went before. There was the knot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was between you and him&mdash;and the law?&rdquo; said Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've got it! I was there alone with it,&mdash;witness an' judge an'
+ jury; I worked up my own case. Manslaughter with extenuatin'
+ circumstances, I made it&mdash;though he was more beast than man. I give
+ myself the outside penalty,&mdash;imprisonment for life. And I been
+ working out my sentence ever since. The Western country wa'n't home to me
+ then&mdash;more like a big prison. It's been my prison these twenty-odd
+ years, while your mother was enjoying what belonged to her, and making a
+ splendid job of your education. If I had let things alone I might have
+ finished my time out: but I didn't, and now the rest of it's commuted&mdash;for
+ the life of my son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't put it that way! I am no lamb of sacrifice. Why, how can we let
+ things alone in this world! Should I have stood off from this secret and
+ never asked my father for his defense?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say a boy like you can take hold of this thing and
+ understand it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;I could almost tell the story myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put it up then!&rdquo; said the packer. The fascination of confession was
+ strong upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had been out in the mountains&mdash;how long?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two days and three nights, just as I left camp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were crazed with anxiety for us. You came back to find your camp
+ empty, the wife and baby gone. You had reason to distrust the keeper. Not
+ for what he did&mdash;for what you knew he meant to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For what he meant and tried to do. I seen it in his eye. The devil that
+ wanted him incited him to play with me and tell me lies about my wife. She
+ scorned the brute and he took his mean revenge. He kep' back her letter,
+ and he says to me, leerin' at me out of his wicked eyes, 'Your livestock
+ seems to be the strayin' kind. The man she went off with give me that,'&mdash;he
+ lugged a gold piece out of his clothes and showed me,&mdash;'give me
+ that,' he says, 'to keep it quiet.' He kep' it quiet! Half starved and
+ sick's I was, the strength was in me. But vengeance in the hand of a man,
+ it cuts both ways, my son! His bunk had a sharp edge to it like this. He
+ fell acrost it with my weight on top of him and he never raised up again.
+ There wasn't a mark on him. His back was broke. He died slow, his eyes
+ mocking me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'You fool,' he says. 'Go look in that coat hangin' on the wall.' I found
+ her letter there inside of one from Granger. He watched me read it and he
+ laughed. 'Now, go tell her you've killed a man!' He knew I didn't come of
+ a killin' breed. There was four hours to think it over. Four hours! I
+ thought hard, I tell you! 'T was six of one and half a dozen of t' other
+ 'twixt him and me, but I worked it back 'n' forth a good long while about
+ her. First, taking her away from her father, an old man whose bread I'd
+ eat. She was like a child of my own raising. I always had felt mean about
+ that. We'd had bad luck from the start,&mdash;my luck,&mdash;and now
+ disgrace to cap it all. Whether I hid it or told her and stood my trial,
+ I'd never be a free man again. There he lay! And a sin done in secret,
+ it's like a drop of nitric acid: it's going to eat its way out&mdash;and
+ in!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew she'd have friends enough, once she was quit of me. That was the
+ case between us. The thing that hurt me most was to put her letter back
+ where I found it, and leave it, there with him. Her little cry to me&mdash;and
+ I couldn't come! I read the words over and over, I've said 'em to myself
+ ever since. I've lived on them. But I had to leave the letter there to
+ show I'd never come back. I put it back after he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The sins of the parents shall be visited,&mdash;when it's in the blood!
+ But I declare to the Almighty, murder wa'n't in my blood! It come on me
+ like a stroke of lightning hits a tree, and I had a clear show to fall
+ alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's the answer. Maybe I didn't see all sides of it, but there never
+ was no opening to do different, after that night. Now, you've had an
+ education. I should be glad to hear your way of looking at it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think you might stand your trial, now, before any judge or jury,
+ in this world or the next,&rdquo; Paul answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is only one Judge.&rdquo; The packer smiled a beautiful quiet smile that
+ covered a world of meanings. &ldquo;What a man re'ly wants, if he'd own up it,
+ is a leetle shade of partiality. Maybe that's what we're all going to
+ need, before we git through.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was glad to be saved the necessity of speech, and he felt the swift
+ discernment with which the packer resumed his usual manner. &ldquo;Got any more
+ of that stuff you call soup? Divide even! I won't be made no baby of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We might as well finish it up. It's hardly worth making two bites of a
+ cherry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call this 'cherry'! It's been a good while on the bough. What's it mostly
+ made of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rind of bacon, snow water,&mdash;plenty of water,&mdash;and a
+ tablespoonful of rice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good work! Hungry folks can live on what the full bellies throw away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I can save. But there comes a time when you can't live by saving what
+ you haven't got.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's right! Well, let's talk, then, before the bacon-rind fades out of
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer's face and voice, his whole manner, showed the joy of a soul
+ that has found relief. Paul was not trying now to behave dutifully; they
+ were man to man once more. The quaint, subdued humor asserted itself, and
+ the narrator's speech flowed on in the homely dialect which expressed the
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I stayed out all that winter, workin' towards the coast. One day, along
+ in March, I fetched a charcoal burner's camp, and the critter took me in
+ and nursed my frost-bites and didn't ask no questions, nor I of him. We
+ struck up a trade, my drivin' stock, mostly skin and bone, for a show in
+ his business. He wa'n't gettin' rich at it, that was as plain as the hip
+ bones on my mules. I kep' in the woods, cuttin' timber and tendin' kiln,
+ and he hauled and did the sellin'. Next year he went below to Portland and
+ brought home smallpox with him. It broke out on him on the road. He was a
+ terrible sick man. I buried him, and waited for my turn. It didn't come. I
+ seemed kind o' insured. I've been in lots of trouble since then, but
+ nothing ever touched me till now. I banked on it too strong, though. I
+ sure did! My pardner was just such another lone bird like me. If he had
+ any folks of his own he kep' still about them. So I took his name&mdash;whether
+ it was his name there's no knowing. Guess I've took full as good care of
+ it as he would. 'Hagar?' folk would say, sort o' lookin' me over. 'You
+ ain't Jim Hagar.' No, but I was John, and they let it go at that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I heard of your mother that summer, from a prospector who came up past my
+ camp. He'd wintered in Mountain Home. He told me my own story, the way
+ they had it down there, and what straits your mother was in. I had scraped
+ up quite a few dollars by then, and was thinking how I'd shove it into a
+ bank like an old debt coming to Adam Bogardus. I was studying how I was
+ going to rig it. There wasn't any one who knew me down there, so I felt
+ safe to ventur' a few inquiries. What I heard was that she'd gone home to
+ her folks and was as well off as anybody need be. That broke me all up at
+ first. I must have had a sneakin' notion that maybe some day I could see
+ my way to go back to her, but that let me out completely. I quit then, and
+ I've stayed quit. The only break I made was showin' up here at the
+ 'leventh hour, thinking I could be some use to my son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was to be,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;For years our lives have been shaping towards
+ this meeting. There were a thousand chances against it. Yet here we are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here we are!&rdquo; the packer repeated soberly. &ldquo;But don't think that I lay
+ any of my foolishness on the Almighty! Maybe it was meant my son should
+ close my eyes, but it's too dear at the price. Anybody would say so, I
+ don't care who.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But aside from the 'price,' is it something to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More&mdash;more than I've got words to say. And yet it grinds me, every
+ breath I take! Not that I wish you'd done different&mdash;you couldn't and
+ be a man. I knew it even when I was kickin' against it. Oh, well! It ain't
+ no use to kick. I thought I'd learned something, but I ain't&mdash;learned&mdash;a
+ thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. &mdash; CURTAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A greater freedom followed this confession, as was natural. It became the
+ basis for lighter confidences and bits of autobiography that came to the
+ surface easily after this tremendous effort at sincerity. Paul found that
+ he could speak even of the family past, into which by degrees he began to
+ fit the real man in place of that bucolic abstraction which had walked the
+ fields of fancy. He had never dared to actuate the &ldquo;hired man,&rdquo; his
+ father, on a basis of fact. He knew the speech and manners of the class
+ from which he came,&mdash;knew men of that class, and talked with them
+ every summer at Stone Ridge; but he had brooded so deeply over the tragic
+ and sentimental side of his father's fate as to have lost sight of the
+ fact that he was a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reality has its own convincing charm, not inconsistent with plainness or
+ even with commonness. To know it is to lose one's taste for toys of the
+ imagination. Paul, at last, could look back almost with, a sense of humor
+ at the doll-like progenitor he had played with so long. But when it came
+ to placing the real man, Adam Bogardus, beside that real woman, once his
+ wife, their son could but own with awe that there is mercy in extinction,
+ after all; in the chance, however it may come to us, for slipping off
+ those cruel disguises that life weaves around us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the strange, wakeful nights, full of starvation dreams, he saw his
+ mother as she would look on state occasions in the hostess's place at her
+ luxurious table; the odor of flowers, the smell of meats and wines,
+ tantalized and sickened him. Christine would come in her dancing frocks,
+ always laughing, greedy in her mirth; but Moya, face to face, he could
+ never see. It was torture to feel her near him, a disembodied embrace.
+ Passionate panegyrics and hopeless adjurations he would pour out to that
+ hovering loveliness just beyond his reach. The agony of frustration would
+ waken him, if indeed it were sleep that dissolved his consciousness, and
+ he would be irritable if spoken to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer broke in, one morning, on these unnerving dreams. &ldquo;You wouldn't
+ happen to have a picture of her along with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul stared at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, of course you wouldn't! And I'd be 'most afeard to look at it, if you
+ had. She must have changed considerable. Time hasn't stood still with her
+ any more than the rest of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no picture of my mother,&rdquo; Paul replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer saw that his question had jarred; he had waited weeks to ask
+ it. He passed it off now with one of his homely similes. &ldquo;If you was to
+ break a cup clean in two, and put the halves together again while the
+ break was fresh, they'd knit so you wouldn't hardly see a crack. But you
+ take one half and set it in the chainy closet and chuck the other half out
+ on the ash-heap,&mdash;them halves won't look much like pieces of the same
+ cup, come a year or two. The edges won't jine no more than the lips of an
+ old cut that's healed without stitches. No; married folks they grow
+ together or they grow apart, and they're a-doing of the one or the other
+ every minute of the time, breaks or no breaks. Does she go up to the old
+ place summers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not lately, except on business,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;A company was formed to open
+ slate quarries on the upper farm, a good many years ago. They are worth
+ more than all the land forty times over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always said so; always told the old man he had a gold mine in that
+ ridge. Was this before he died?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long after. It was my mother's scheme mainly. She controls it now. She is
+ a very strong business woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She got her training, likely, from that uncle in New York. He had the
+ business head. The old man had no more contrivance than one of the bulls
+ in his pastures. He could lock horns and stay there, but it wa'nt no
+ trouble to outflank him. More than once his brother Jacob got to the
+ windward of him in a bargain. He was made a good deal like his own land.
+ Winters of frost it took to break up that ground, and sun and rain to
+ meller it, and then't was a hatful of soil to a cartful of stone. The
+ plough would jump the furrows if you drew it deep. My arms used to ache as
+ if they'd been pounded, with the jar of them stones. They used to tell us
+ children a story how Satan, he flew over the earth a-sowing it with rocks
+ and stones, and as he was passing over our county a hole bu'st through his
+ leather apron and he lost his whole load right slam there. I could 'a'
+ p'inted out the very spot where the heft on it fell. Ten Stone meadow,
+ so-called. Ten million stone! I was pickin' stone in that field all of one
+ summer when I was fifteen year old. We built a mile of fence with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Them quarries must have brought a mint of money into the country.
+ Different sort of labor, too. Well, the world grows richer and poorer
+ every year. More difference every year between the way rich folks and poor
+ folks live. I wouldn't know where I belonged, 't ain't likely, if I was to
+ go back there. I'd be way off! One while I used to think a good deal about
+ going back, just to take a look around. It comes over me lately like
+ hunger and thirst. I think about the most curious things when I'm asleep&mdash;foolish,
+ like a child! I can smell all the good home smells of a frosty morning:
+ apple pomace, steaming in the barnyard; sausage frying; Becky scouring the
+ brass furnace-kittle with salt and vinegar. Killin' time, you know&mdash;makes
+ you think of boiling souse and head-cheese. You ever eat souse?&rdquo; The
+ packer sucked in his breath with a lean smile. &ldquo;It ain't best to dwell on
+ it. But you can't help yourself, at night. I can smell Becky's fresh
+ bread, in my dreams, just out of the brick oven. Never eat bread cooked in
+ a stove till I came out here. I never drunk any water like that spring on
+ the ridge. Last night I was back there, and the maples were all yellow
+ like sunshine. Once it was spring, and apple-blooms up in the hill
+ orchard. And little Emmy, a-setting on the fence, with her bunnit throwed
+ back on her neck. 'Addy!' she called, way across the lot; 'Addy, come,
+ help me down!' She was a master hand for venturin' up on places, but she
+ didn't like the gettin' down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, she 'a learned the ups and downs by this time. She don't need Addy
+ to help her. I'd have helped a big sight more if I had kep' my distance.
+ It's a thing so con-demned foolish and unnecessary&mdash;I can't be
+ reconciled to it noway!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see only one side of it,&rdquo; said Paul. Unspeakable thoughts had kept
+ pace with his father's words. &ldquo;Nothing that happens, happens through us&mdash;or
+ to us&mdash;alone. There was a girl I knew, outside. She was as happy,
+ when I knew her first, as you say my mother used to be. Then she met some
+ one&mdash;a man&mdash;and the shadow of his life crossed hers. He would
+ have wrapped her up in it and put out her sunshine if he had stayed in the
+ same world. Now she can be herself again, after a while. It cannot take
+ long to forget a person you have known only a little over a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer rose on one elbow. He reached across and shook his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is that girl? Answer me! Take your face out of your hands!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At Bisuka Barracks. She is the commandant's daughter. I came out to marry
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What possessed ye not to tell me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why should I tell you? We buried the wedding-day months back, in the
+ snow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boy, boy!&rdquo; the packer groaned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What difference can it make now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>All</i> the difference&mdash;all the difference there is! I thought
+ you were out here touring it with them fool boys and they were all the
+ chance you had for help outside. You suppose her father is going to see
+ her git left? <i>They</i>'ll get in here, if they have to crawl on their
+ bellies or climb through the tree-limbs. They know how! And we've wasted
+ the grub and talked like a couple of women!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don't&mdash;don't torment me!&rdquo; Paul groaned. &ldquo;It was all over. Can't
+ you leave the dead in peace!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not the dead! I 'most wish we were. Boy, I've got a big word to
+ say to you about that. Come closer!&rdquo; The packer's speech hoarsened and
+ failed. They could only hear each other breathe. Then it seemed to the
+ packer that his was the only breath in the darkness. He listened. A faint
+ cheer arose in the forest and a crashing of the dead underlimbs of the
+ pines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned frantically upon his son, but no pledge could be extorted now.
+ Paul's lips were closed. He had lost consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. &mdash; KIND INQUIRIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The colonel's drawing-room was as hot as usual the first hour after
+ dinner, and as usual it was full of kindly participant neighbors who had
+ dropped in to repeat their congratulations on the good news, now almost a
+ week old. Mrs. Bogardus had not come down, and, though asked after by all,
+ the talk was noticeably freer for her absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Creve, in response to a telegram from her brother, had arrived from
+ Fort Sherman on the day before, prepared for anything, from frozen feet to
+ a wedding. She had spent the afternoon in town doing errands for Moya, and
+ being late for dinner had not changed her dress. There never was such a
+ &ldquo;natural&rdquo; person as aunt Annie. At present she was addressing the company
+ at large, as if they were all her promising children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody talks about their star in these days. I used to have a star. I
+ forget which it was. I know it was a pretty lucky one. Now I trust in
+ Providence and the major and wear thick shoes.&rdquo; She exhibited the shoes, a
+ particularly large and sensible kind which she imported from the East.
+ Everybody laughed and longed to embrace her. &ldquo;Has Moya got a star?&rdquo; she
+ asked seriously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The whole galaxy!&rdquo; a male voice replied. &ldquo;Doesn't the luck prove it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moya has got a 'temperament,'&rdquo; said Doctor Fleming, the Post surgeon.
+ &ldquo;That's as good as having a star. You know there are persons who attract
+ misfortune just as sickly children catch all the diseases that are going.
+ I knew that boy was sure to be found. Anything of Moya's would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you think it was Moya's 'temperament' that pulled him out of the
+ snow?&rdquo; said the colonel, wheeling his chair into the discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How about Mr. Winslow's temperament? I prefer to leave a little of the
+ credit to him,&rdquo; said Moya sweetly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young officer, who had been suffering in the corner by the fire, jumped
+ to his feet and bowed, then blushed and sat down again, regretting his
+ rashness. Moya continued to look at him with steadfast friendliness.
+ Winslow had led the rescue that brought her lover home. A glow of sympathy
+ united these friends and neighbors; the air was electrical and full of
+ emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose no date has been fixed for the wedding?&rdquo; Mrs. Dawson, on the
+ divan, murmured to Mrs. Creve. The latter smiled a non-committal assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think they would just put the doctor aside and be married
+ anyhow. My husband says he ought to go to a warmer climate at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear, a young man can't be married in his dressing-gown and slippers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! It's not as bad as that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, not quite. He's up and dressed and walks about, but he doesn't come
+ down to his meals,&mdash;he can eat so very little at a time, and it tires
+ him to sit through a dinner. It isn't one of those ravenous recoveries. It
+ went too far with him for that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His mother was perfectly magnificent through it all, they say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you seen much of Mrs. Bogardus?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; we left them alone, poor things, when the pinch came. But I used to
+ see her walking the porch, up and down, up and down. Moya would go off on
+ the hills. They couldn't walk together! That was after Miss Chrissy went
+ home. Her mother took her back, you know, and then returned alone.
+ Perfectly heroic! They say she dressed every evening for dinner as
+ carefully as if she were in New York, and led the conversation. She used
+ to make Moya read aloud to her&mdash;history, novels&mdash;anything to
+ pretend they were not thinking. The strain must have begun before any of
+ us knew. The colonel kept it so quiet. What is the dear man doing with
+ your bonnet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel had plucked his sister's walking-hat, a pert piece of
+ millinery froward in feathers, from the trunk of the headless Victory,
+ where she had reposed it in her haste before dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mustn't be disrespectful to the household Lar,&rdquo; he kindly reminded her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where am I to put my hats, then? I shall wear them on my head and come
+ down to breakfast in them. Moya, dear, will you please rescue my hat? Put
+ it anywhere, dear,&mdash;under your chair. There is not really a place in
+ this house to put a thing. A wedding that goes off on time is bad enough,
+ but one that hangs on from month to month&mdash;and doesn't even take care
+ of its clothes! Forgive me, dear! The clothes are very pretty. I open a
+ bureau-drawer to put away my middle-aged bonnet&mdash;a puff of violets! A
+ pile of something white, and, behold, a wedding veil! There isn't a hook
+ in the closet that doesn't say, 'Standing-room only,' and the
+ standing-room is all stood on by a regiment of new shoes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear woman, go light on our sore spots. We are only just out of the
+ woods.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it bad to coddle your sore spots, Doctor? Like a saddle-gall, ride
+ them down!&rdquo; Mrs. Creve and Dr. Fleming exchanged a friendly smile on the
+ strength of this nonsense. On the doctor's side it covered a suspicion:
+ &ldquo;'The lady, methinks, protests too much'!&rdquo; The colonel, too, was restless,
+ and Moya's sweet color came and went. She appeared to be listening for
+ steps or sounds from some other part of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men all rose now as Mrs. Bogardus entered; one or two of the ladies
+ rose also, compelled by something in her look certainly not intended. She
+ was careful to greet everybody; she even crossed the room and gave her
+ hand to Lieutenant Winslow, whom she had not seen since the night of his
+ return. The doctor she casually passed over with a bow; they had met
+ before that day. It was in the mind of each person present not of the
+ family, and excepting the doctor, to ask her: 'How is your son this
+ evening?' But for some reason the inquiry did not come off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The company began suddenly to feel itself <i>de trop</i>. Mrs. Dawson, who
+ had come under the doctor's escort, glanced at him, awaiting the moment
+ when it would do to make the first move.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hear you lost a patient from the hospital yesterday?&rdquo; said Lieutenant
+ Winslow, at the doctor's side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>From</i>, did you say? That's right! He was to have been operated on
+ to-day.&rdquo; The doctor shrugged his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two broken ribs. One grown fast to the lung.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wh-ew!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He just walked out. Said I had ordered him to have fresh air. There was a
+ new hall-boy, a greenhorn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can't go far in that shape, can he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, there's no telling. The constitution of those men is beyond anything.
+ You can't kill him. He'll suffer of course, suffer like an animal, and die
+ like one&mdash;away from the herd. Maybe not this time, though.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was he afraid of the operation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't say. He did not seem to be either afraid or anxious for help. Not
+ used to being helped. He would be taken to the Sisters' Hospital. Wouldn't
+ come up here as the guest of the Post, not a bit! I believe from the first
+ he meant to give us the slip, and take his chance in his own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you hear,&rdquo;&mdash;Mrs. Creve spoke up from the opposite side of the
+ room under that hypnotic influence by which a dangerous topic spreads,&mdash;&ldquo;did
+ you hear about the poor guide who ran away from the hospital to escape
+ from our wicked doctor here? What a reputation you must have, Doctor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All talk, my dear; town gossip,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;You gave him his
+ discharge, didn't you, Doctor?&rdquo; The colonel looked hard at the medical
+ officer; he had prepared the way for a statement suited to a mixed
+ company, including ladies. But Doctor Fleming stated things usually to
+ suit himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was a man who left the Sisters' Hospital rather informally
+ yesterday. I won't say he is not just as well off to-day as if he had
+ stayed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was it? Was it our man, father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The doctor has more than one patient at the hospital.&rdquo; Colonel Middleton
+ looked reproachfully at the doctor, who continued to put aside as childish
+ these clumsy subterfuges. &ldquo;I think you ladies frightened him away with
+ your attentions. He knew he was under heavy liabilities for all your
+ flowers and fancy cookery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Attentions! Are we going to let him die on the road somewhere?&rdquo; cried
+ Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Moya?&rdquo; Lieutenant Winslow spoke up with a mixture of embarrassment
+ and resolution to be heard, though every voice in the room conspired
+ against him. &ldquo;Those men are a big fraternity. They have their outfitting
+ places where they put in for repairs. Packer John had his blankets sent to
+ the Green Meadow corral. They know him there. They say he had money at one
+ of the stores. They all have a little money cached here and there. And
+ they <i>can't</i> get lost, you know!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya's eyes shone with a suspicious brightness.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'When the forest shall mislead me;
+ When the night and morning lie.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She turned her swimming eyes upon Paul's mother, who would be sure to
+ remember the quotation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus remained perfectly still, her lips slightly parted. She grew
+ very pale. Then she rose and walked quickly to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just a breath of cold air!&rdquo; she panted. The doctor, Moya, and Mrs. Creve
+ had followed her into the hall. Moya placed herself on the settle beside
+ her and leaned to support her, but she sat back rigidly with her eyes
+ closed. Mrs. Creve looked on in quiet concern. &ldquo;Let me take you into the
+ study, Mrs. Bogardus!&rdquo; the doctor commanded. &ldquo;A glass of water, Moya,
+ please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is she? What is it? Can we do anything?&rdquo; The company crowded around
+ Mrs. Creve on her return to the drawing-room. She glanced at her brother.
+ There was no clue there. He stood looking embarrassed and mystified. &ldquo;It
+ is only the warm welcome we give our friends,&rdquo; she said aloud, smiling
+ calmly. &ldquo;Mrs. Bogardus found the room too hot. I think I should have
+ succumbed myself but for that little recess in the hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel attacked his fire. He thought he was being played with. Things
+ were not right in the house, and no one, not the doctor, or even Annie,
+ was frank with him. His kind face flushed as he straightened up to bid his
+ guests good-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if it's not anything serious, you think. But you'll be sure to let
+ us know?&rdquo; said Mrs. Dawson. &ldquo;Well, good-night, Mrs. Creve. <i>Good</i>-night,
+ Colonel! You'll say good-night to Moya? Do let us know if there is
+ anything we can do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Fleming was in the hall looking for his cape. The colonel touched him
+ on the shoulder. &ldquo;Don't be in a hurry, Doctor. Mrs. Dawson will excuse
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think you need me any more to-night. Moya is with Mrs. Bogardus.
+ She is not ill. The room was a little close.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind the <i>room</i>! Come in here. I want a word with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor laughed oddly, and obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Annie, you needn't leave us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, thank you, dear boy! It's awfully good of you,&rdquo; Annie mocked him.
+ &ldquo;But I must go and relieve Moya.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't believe you are wanted in there,&rdquo; said Doctor Fleming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's more than obvious that I'm not in here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, do sit down,&rdquo; said the teased colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fire sulked and smoked a trifle with its brands apart. Doctor Fleming
+ leaned forward upon his knees and regarded it thoughtfully. The colonel
+ sat fondling the tongs. In a deep chair Mrs. Creve lay back and shaded her
+ face with the end of her lace scarf. By her manner she might have been
+ alone in the room, yet she was keenly observant of the men, for she felt
+ that developments were taking place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with your patient upstairs, Doctor?&rdquo; the colonel began
+ his cross-examination. Doctor Fleming raised his eyebrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's had nothing to eat to speak of for six weeks, at an altitude&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; we know all that. But he's twenty-four years old. They made an easy
+ trip back, and he has been here a week, nearly. He's not as strong as he
+ was when they brought him in, is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was excitement. You have to allow for the reaction. He has had a
+ shock to the entire system,&mdash;nerves, digestion,&mdash;must give him
+ time. Very nervous temperament too much controlled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make it as you like. But I'm disappointed in his rallying powers, unless
+ you are keeping something back. A boy with the grit to do what he did, and
+ stand it as he did&mdash;why isn't he standing it better now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are all suffering from reaction, I think,&rdquo; said Mrs. Creve
+ diplomatically; &ldquo;and we show it by making too much of little things. Tom,
+ we oughtn't to keep the doctor up here talking nonsense. He wants to go to
+ bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i>'m not talking nonsense,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;I should be if I
+ pretended there was anything mysterious about that boy's case upstairs. He
+ has had a tremendous experience, say what you will; and it's pulled him
+ down nervously, and every other way. He isn't ready or able to talk of it
+ yet. And he knows as soon as he comes down there'll be forty people
+ waiting to congratulate him and ask him how it was. I don't wonder he
+ fights shy. If he could take his bride by the hand and walk out of the
+ house with her I believe he could start to-morrow; but if there must be a
+ wedding and a lot of fuss&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Creve nodded her head approvingly. The three had risen and stood
+ around the hearth, while the colonel put the brands delicately together
+ with the skill of an old campaigner. The flames breathed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't offer this as a professional opinion,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;But a
+ case like his is not a disease, it's a condition&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of the mind, perhaps?&rdquo; the colonel added significantly. He glanced at
+ Mrs. Creve. &ldquo;You've thought about that, Doctor? The letter his mother
+ consulted you about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you been worrying about that, Colonel? Why didn't you say so? There
+ is nothing in it whatever. Why, it's so plain a case the other way&mdash;any
+ one can see where the animus comes from!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you <i>are</i> getting mysterious, and I'm going to bed!&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Creve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; we're coming to the point now,&rdquo; said the colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it you want Bogardus to do?&rdquo; asked Doctor Fleming. &ldquo;Want him to
+ get up and walk out of the house as my patient did at the hospital? Dare
+ say he could do it, but what then? Will you let me speak out, Colonel? No
+ regard to anybody's feelings? Now, this may be gossip, but I think it has
+ a bearing on the case upstairs. I'm going to have it off my mind anyhow!
+ When Mrs. Bogardus came to see the guide,&mdash;Packer John,&mdash;day
+ before yesterday, was it?&mdash;he asked to see her alone. Said he had
+ something particular to say to her about her son. We thought it a queer
+ start, but she was willing to humor him. Well, she wasn't in there above
+ ten minutes, but in that time something passed between them that hit her
+ very hard, no doubt of that! Now, Bogardus holds his tongue like a
+ gentleman as to what happened in the woods. He doesn't mention his
+ comrades' names. And the packer has disappeared; so he can't be
+ questioned. Seems to me a little bird told me there was an attachment
+ between one of those Bowen boys and Miss Christine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we, who know what brutes brute fear will make of men, are not going
+ to deny that those boys behaved badly. There are some things that can't be
+ acknowledged among men, you know, if there is a hole to crawl out of.
+ Cowardice is one of them. Well then, they lied, that's the whole of it.
+ The little boys lied. They wrote Mrs. Bogardus a long letter from Lemhi,&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ doctor was reviewing now for Mrs. Creve's benefit,&mdash;&ldquo;when they first
+ got out. They probably judged, by the time they had had, that Paul and the
+ packer would never tell their own story. Very well: it couldn't hurt Paul,
+ it might be the saving of them, if they could show that something had
+ queered him in the woods. They asked his mother if she had heard of the
+ effects of altitude upon highly sensitive organizations. They recounted
+ some instances&mdash;I will mention them later. One of the boys is a
+ lawyer, isn't he? They are a pair of ingenious youths. Bogardus, they
+ claim, avoided them almost from the time they entered the woods,&mdash;almost
+ lived with the packer, behaved like a crank about the shooting. Whereas
+ they had gone there to kill things, he made it a personal matter whenever
+ they pursued this intention in a natural and undisguised manner. He had
+ pangs, like a girl, when the creatures expired. He hated the carcases, the
+ blood&mdash;forgive me, Mrs. Creve. In short, he called the whole business
+ butchery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you make <i>that</i> a sign of lunacy?&rdquo; Mrs. Creve flung in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am quoting, you know.&rdquo; The doctor smiled indulgently. &ldquo;They declare
+ that they offered&mdash;even begged&mdash;to stay behind with him, one of
+ them, at least, but he rejected their company in a manner so unpleasant
+ that they saw it would only be courting a quarrel to remain. And so,
+ treating him perforce like a child <i>or</i> a lunatic <i>pro tem.</i>,
+ and having but little time to decide in, they cut loose and hurried back
+ for help. This is the tale, composed on reflection. They said nothing of
+ this to Winslow&mdash;to save publicity, of course! Mrs. Bogardus's lips
+ are doubly sealed, for her son's sake and for the sake of the young scamp
+ who is to be her son, by and by! I saw she winced at my opinion, which I
+ gave her plainly&mdash;brutally, perhaps. And she asked me particularly to
+ say nothing, which I am particularly not doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, I think, you will find is the bitter drop in the cup of rejoicing
+ upstairs. And they are swallowing it in silence, those two, for the sake
+ of the little girl and the old friends in New York. Of course she has kept
+ from Paul that last shot in the back from those sweet boys! The packer had
+ some unruly testimony he was bursting with, which he had sense enough to
+ keep for her alone, and she doesn't want the case to spread. It is
+ singular how a man in his condition could get out of the way as suddenly
+ as he did. You might think he'd been taken up in a cloud.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doctor, what do you mean by such an insinuation as that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, have I insinuated anything? Did I say she had oiled the wheels
+ of his departure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come! You go too far!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all. That's your own construction. I merely say that I am not
+ concerned about that man's disappearance. I think he'll be looked after,
+ as a valuable witness should be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; the colonel grumbled uneasily, &ldquo;I don't like mysteries myself, and
+ I don't like family quarrels nor skeletons at the feasts of old friends.
+ But I suppose there must be a drop in every cup. What were your altitude
+ cases, Doctor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same old ones; poor Addison, you know. All those stories they tell an
+ Easterner. As I pointed out to Mrs. Bogardus, in every case there was some
+ predisposing cause. Addison had been too long in the mountains, and he was
+ frightfully overworked; short of company officers. He came to me about an
+ insect he said had got into his ear; buzzed, and bothered him day and
+ night. The story got to the men's quarters. They joked about the colonel's
+ 'bug.' I knew it was no joke. I condemned him for duty, but the Sioux were
+ out. They thought at Washington no one but Addison could handle an Indian
+ campaign. He was on the ground, too. So they sent him up higher where it
+ was dry, with a thousand men in his hands. I knew he'd be a madman or a
+ dead man in a month! There were a good many of the dead! By Jove! The boys
+ who took his orders and loved the old fellow and knew he was sending them
+ to their death! Well for him that he'll never know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The 'altitude of heartbreak,'&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Creve. The phrase was her own,
+ for many a reason deeply known unto herself, but she gave it the effect of
+ a quotation before the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you think there is no 'altitude' in ours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; nor 'heartbreak' either,&rdquo; said the doctor, helping himself to one of
+ the colonel's cigars. &ldquo;But I don't say there isn't enough to keep a woman
+ awake nights, and to make those young men avoid the sight of each other
+ for a time. Thanks, I won't smoke now. I'm going to take a look at Mrs.
+ Bogardus as I go out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. &mdash; A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The doctor had taken his look, feeling a trifle guilty under his patient's
+ counter gaze, yet glad to have relieved the good colonel's anxiety. If he
+ loved to gossip, at least he was particular as to whom he gossiped with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya closed the door after him and silently resumed her seat. Mrs.
+ Bogardus helped herself to a sip of water. She was struggling with a dry
+ constriction of the throat, and Moya protested a little, seeing the effort
+ that it cost her to speak, even in the hoarse, unnatural tone which was
+ all the voice she had left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to finish now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and never speak of this again. It was I
+ who accused them first&mdash;and then I asked him:&mdash;if there was
+ anything he could say in their defense, to say it, for Chrissy's sake! 'I
+ will never break bread with them again,' said he,&mdash;'either Banks or
+ Horace. I will not eat with them, or drink with them, or speak with them
+ again!' Think of it! How are we to live? How are they to inhabit the same
+ city? He thinks I have been weak. I am weak! The only power I have is
+ through&mdash;the property. Banks will never marry a poor girl. But that
+ would be a dear-bought victory. Let her keep what faith in him she can.
+ No; in families, the ones who can control themselves have to give in&mdash;to
+ those who can't. If you argue with Christine she simply gives way, and
+ then she gets hysterical, and then she is ill. It's a disease. Mothers
+ know how their children&mdash;Christine was marked&mdash;marked with
+ trouble! I am thankful she has any mind at all. She needs me more than
+ Paul does. I cannot be parted from my power to help her&mdash;such as it
+ is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When she is Banks Bowen's wife she will need you more than ever!&rdquo; said
+ Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will. I could prevent the marriage, but I am afraid to. I am afraid!
+ So, as the family is cut in two&mdash;in three, for I&mdash;&rdquo; Mrs.
+ Bogardus stopped and moistened her lips again. &ldquo;So&mdash;I think you and
+ Paul had better make your arrangements and go as soon as you can wherever
+ it suits you, without minding about the rest of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya gave a little sobbing laugh. &ldquo;You don't expect me to make the first
+ move!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doesn't he say anything to you&mdash;anything at all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is too ill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not ill!&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus denied it fiercely. &ldquo;Who says he is ill? He
+ is starved and frozen. He is just out of the grave. You must be good to
+ him, Moya. Warm him, comfort him! You can give him the life he needs. Your
+ hands are as soft as little birds. They comfort even me. Oh, don't you
+ understand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I understand!&rdquo; Moya answered, her face aflame. &ldquo;But I cannot
+ marry Paul. He has got to marry me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What nonsense that is! People say to a girl: 'You can't be too cold
+ before you are married or too kind after!' That does not mean you and
+ Paul. If you are not kind to him <i>now</i>, you will make a great
+ mistake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not thinking of marriage,&rdquo; said Moya. &ldquo;Something weighs on him all
+ the time. I cannot ask him questions. If he wanted to tell me he would.
+ That is why I come downstairs and leave him. But he won't come down! Is it
+ not strange? If we could believe such things I would say a Presence came
+ with, him out of that place. It is with him when I find him alone. It is
+ in his eyes when he looks at me. It is not something past and done with,
+ it is here&mdash;now&mdash;in this house! <i>What</i> is it? What do <i>you</i>
+ believe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eyes she sought to question hardened under her gaze. Here, too, was a
+ veil. Mrs. Bogardus sat with her hands clasped in her lap. She was
+ motionless, but the creaking of her silks could be heard as her bosom rose
+ and fell. After a moment she said: &ldquo;Paul's tray is on the table in the
+ dining-room. Will you take it when you go up?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya altered her own manner instantly. &ldquo;But you?&rdquo; she hesitated. &ldquo;I must
+ not crowd you out of all your mother privileges. You have handed over
+ everything to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mother's privilege is to see herself no longer needed. I can do nothing
+ more for my son&rdquo;&mdash;her smile was hard&mdash;&ldquo;except take care of his
+ money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul's mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear, do you suppose we mind? It is a very great privilege to be
+ allowed to step aside when your work is done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul's <i>mother!</i>&rdquo; Moya insisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus rose. &ldquo;You don't remember your own mother, my dear. You have
+ an exaggerated idea of the&mdash;the importance of mothers. They are only
+ a temporary arrangement.&rdquo; She put out her hands and the girl's cheek
+ touched hers for an instant; then she straightened herself and walked
+ calmly out of the room. Moya remained a little longer, afraid to follow
+ her. &ldquo;If she would not smile! If she would do anything but smile!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was walking about his room, half an hour later, when Moya stopped
+ outside his door. She placed the tray on a table in the hall. The door was
+ opened from within. Paul had heard his mother go up before, heard her
+ pause at the stairs, and, after a silence, enter her own room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She knows that I know,&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;That knowledge will be
+ always between us; we can never look each other in the face again.&rdquo; To
+ Moya he endeavored to speak lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It sounded very gay downstairs to-night. You must have had a houseful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been with your mother the last hour,&rdquo; answered Moya, vaguely on
+ the defensive. Since Paul's return there had been little of the old free
+ intercourse in words between them, and without this outlet their mutual
+ consciousness became acute. Often as they saw each other during the day,
+ the keenest emotion attached to the first meeting of their eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was unnerved by his sudden recall from death to life. Its contrasts
+ were overwhelming to his starved senses: from the dirt and dearth and
+ grimy despair of his burial hutch in the snow to this softly lighted,
+ close-curtained room, warm and sweet with flowers; from the gaunt,
+ unshaven spectre of the packer and his ghostly revelations, to Moya,
+ meekly beautiful, her bright eyes lowered as she trailed her soft skirts
+ across the carpet; Moya seated opposite, silent, conscious of him in every
+ look and movement. Her lovely hands lay in her lap, and the thought of
+ holding them in his made him tremble; and when he recalled the last time
+ he had kissed her he grew faint. He longed to throw off this exhausting
+ self-restraint, but feared to betray his helpless passion which he deemed
+ an insult to his soul's worship of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she was thinking: &ldquo;Is this all it is going to mean&mdash;his coming
+ home&mdash;our being together? And I was almost his wife!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it was my mother you were talking to in the study? I thought I heard a
+ man's voice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the doctor. Your mother was not quite herself this evening. He
+ came in to see her, but he does not think she is ill. 'Rest and change,'
+ he says she needs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul gave the words a certain depth of consideration. &ldquo;Are you as well as
+ usual, Moya?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I am always well,&rdquo; she answered cheerlessly. &ldquo;I seem to thrive on
+ anything&mdash;everything,&rdquo; she corrected herself, and blushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blush made him gasp. &ldquo;You are more beautiful than ever. I had
+ forgotten that beauty is a physical fact. The sight of you confuses me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always told you you were morbid.&rdquo; Moya's happy audacity returned. &ldquo;Now,
+ how long are you going to sit and think about that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I sit and think about things?&rdquo; His reluctant, boyish smile, which all
+ women loved, captured his features for a moment. &ldquo;It is very rude of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose I should ask you what you are thinking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I am afraid you would say 'morbid' again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Try me! You ought to let me know at once if you are going to break out in
+ any new form of morbidness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish it might amuse you, but it wouldn't. Let me put you a case&mdash;seriously.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya smiled. &ldquo;Once we were serious&mdash;ages ago. Do you remember?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I remember!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well? You are you, and I am I, still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; and as full of fateful surprises for each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I bar 'fateful'! That word has the true taint of morbidness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you can't 'bar' fate. Listen: this is a supposing, you know. Suppose
+ that an accident had happened to our leader on the way home&mdash;to your
+ Lieutenant Winslow, we'll say&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>My</i> lieutenant!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father's&mdash;the regiment's&mdash;Lieutenant Winslow 'of ours.'
+ Suppose we had brought him back in a state to need a surgeon's help; and
+ without a word to any one he should get up and walk out of the hospital
+ with his hurts not healed, and no one knew why, or where he had gone?
+ There would be a stir about it, would there not? And if such a poor
+ spectre of a bridegroom as I were allowed to join the search, no one would
+ think it strange, or call it a slight to his bride if the fellow went?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take your case,&rdquo; said Moya with a beaming look. &ldquo;You want to go after
+ that poor man who suffered with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who went with us to save us from our own headstrong folly, and would have
+ died there alone&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; oh, yes!&mdash;before you begin to think about yourself, or me.
+ Because he is nobody 'of ours,' and no one seems to feel responsible, and
+ we go on talking and laughing just the same!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do they talk of this downstairs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-night they were talking&mdash;oh, with such philosophy! But how came
+ you to know it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul did not answer this question. &ldquo;Then&rdquo;&mdash;he drew a long breath,&mdash;&ldquo;then
+ you could bear it, dear?&mdash;the comment, even if they called it a
+ slight to you and a piece of quixotic lunacy? Others will not take my
+ case, remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What others?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They will say: 'Why doesn't he send a better man? He is no trailer.' It
+ is true. Money might find him and bring him back, but all the money in the
+ world could not teach him to trust his friends. There is a
+ misunderstanding here which is too bitter to be borne. It is hard to
+ explain,&mdash;the intimacy that grows up between men placed as we were.
+ But as soon as help reached us, the old lines were drawn. I belonged with
+ the officers, he with the men. We could starve together, but we could not
+ eat together. He accepted it&mdash;put himself on that basis at once. He
+ would not come up here as the guest of the Post. He is done with us
+ because he thinks we are done with him. And he knows that I must know his
+ occupation is gone. He will never guide nor pack a mule again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother and my father, they will understand. What do the others
+ matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must tell you, dear, that I do not propose to tell them&mdash;especially
+ them&mdash;why I go. For I am going. I must go! There are reasons I cannot
+ explain.&rdquo; He sighed, and looked wildly at Moya, whose smile was becoming
+ mechanical. &ldquo;I hate the excuse, but it will have to be said that I go for
+ a change&mdash;for my health. My health! Great God! But it's 'orders,'
+ dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your orders are my orders. You are never going anywhere again without
+ me,&rdquo; said Moya slowly. Her smile was gone. She stood up and faced him,
+ pale and beautiful. He rose, too, and stooped above her, taking her hands
+ and gazing into her full blue eyes arched like the eyes of angels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought she was a girl! But she is a woman,&rdquo; he said in a voice of
+ caressing wonder. &ldquo;A woman, and not afraid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid. I will not be left&mdash;I will not be left again! Oh, you
+ won't take me, even when I offer myself to you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't&mdash;don't tempt me!&rdquo; Paul caught her to him with a groan. &ldquo;You
+ don't know me well enough to be afraid of <i>me!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You! You will not let me know you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, hush, dear&mdash;hush, my darling! This isn't thinking. We must think
+ for our lives. I must take care of you, precious. We don't know where this
+ search may take us, or where it will end, or what the end will be.&rdquo; He
+ kissed the sleeve of her dress, and put her gently from him, so that he
+ could look her in the eyes. She gave him her full pure gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the poor man again. You said he would spoil our lives.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is <i>our</i> poor man. You didn't go out of your way to find him. And
+ your way is mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so heavenly to be convinced! Who taught you to see things at a
+ glance,&mdash;things I have toiled and bungled over and don't know now if
+ I am right! <i>Who</i> taught you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think I stood still while you were away! Oh, my heart was sifted
+ out by little pieces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall sift mine. You shall tell me what to do. For I know nothing!
+ Not even if I may dare to take this angel at her word!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew you would not take me!&rdquo; the girl whispered wildly. &ldquo;But I shall
+ go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI. &mdash; THE NATURE OF AN OATH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your tray! It is after ten o'clock. Your 'angel' is a bad nurse.&rdquo; Moya
+ brought the tray and set it on a little stand beside Paul's chair. He
+ watched her shy, excited preparations as she moved about, conscious of his
+ eyes. The saucepan staggered upon the coals and they both sprang to save
+ the broth, and pouring it she burnt her thumb a little, and he behaved
+ quite like any ordinary young man. They were ecstatic to find themselves
+ at ease with each other once more. Moya became disrespectful to her
+ charge; such sweet daring looked from her eyes into his as made him
+ riotous with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you take some with me?&rdquo; He turned the cup towards her and watched
+ her as she sipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'It was roast with fire,'&rdquo; he pronounced softly and dreamily, 'because of
+ the dreadful pains. It was to be eaten with bitter herbs'&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What <i>are</i> you saying?&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'To remind them of their bondage.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I object to your talking about bondage and bitter herbs when you are
+ eating aunt Annie's delicious consommé.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gravely sipped in turn, still with his eyes in hers. &ldquo;Can you remember
+ what you were doing on the second of November?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I remember!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; tell me. I have a reason for asking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell <i>me</i> the reason first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May we have a little more fire, darling? It gives me chills to think of
+ that day. It was the last of my wretched pot-hunting. There was nothing to
+ hunt for&mdash;the game had all gone down, but I did not know that.
+ Somewhere in the woods, a long way from the cabin, it began to occur to me
+ that I should not make shelter that night. A fool and his strength are
+ soon parted. It was a little hollow with trees all around so deep that in
+ the distance their trunks closed in like a wall. Snow can make a wonderful
+ silence in the woods. I seemed to hear the thoughts of everybody I loved
+ in the world outside. There had been a dullness over me for weeks. I could
+ not make it true that I had ever been happy&mdash;that you really loved
+ me. All that part of my life was a dream. Now, in that silence suddenly I
+ felt you! I knew that you cared. It was cruel to die so if you did love
+ me! It brought the 'pang and spur'! I fought the drowsiness that was
+ taking away my pain. I had begun to lean on it as a comfortable breast. I
+ woke up and tore myself away from that siren sleep. It was my darling,&mdash;her
+ love that saved me. Without that thought of you, I never would have
+ stirred again. Where were you, what were you thinking that brought you so
+ close to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Moya in a whisper. &ldquo;I was in that room across the hall, alone.
+ They were good to me that day; they made excuses and left me to myself. In
+ the afternoon a box came,&mdash;from poor father,&mdash;white roses, oh,
+ sweet and cold as snow! I took them up to that room and forced myself to
+ go in. It was where my things were kept, the trunks half packed, all the
+ drawers and closets full. And my wedding dress laid out on the bed. We
+ girls used to go up there at first and look at the things, and there was
+ laughing and joking. Sometimes I went up alone and tried on my hats before
+ the glass, and thought where I should be when I wore them, and&mdash;Well!
+ all that stopped. I dreaded to pass the door. Everything was left just as
+ it was; the shutters open, the poor dress covered with a sheet on the bed.
+ The room was a death-chamber. I went in. I carried the roses to my dead. I
+ drew down the sheet and put my face in that empty dress. It was my selfish
+ self laid out there&mdash;the girl who knew just what she wanted and was
+ going to get it if she could. Happiness I dared not even pray for&mdash;only
+ remembrance&mdash;everlasting remembrance. That we might know each other
+ again when no more life was left to part us&mdash;<i>my</i> life. It
+ seemed long to wait, but that was my&mdash;marriage vow. I gave you all I
+ could, remembrance, faith till death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you are my own!&rdquo; said Paul, his face transformed. &ldquo;God was our
+ witness. Life of my life&mdash;for life and death!&rdquo; Solemnly he took a
+ bridegroom's kiss from her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do <i>you</i> know that it is life that parts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak so I can understand you!&rdquo; Moya cried. &ldquo;Ah, if I might! A man must
+ not have secrets from his wife. Secrets are destruction, don't you think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya waited in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we come to this bondage!&rdquo; He let the words fall like a load from his
+ breast. &ldquo;This is a hideous thing to tell you, but it will cut us apart
+ unless you know it. It compels me to do things.&rdquo; He paused, and they heard
+ a door down the passage open,&mdash;the door of his mother's room. A step
+ came forward a few paces. Silence; it retreated, and the door closed again
+ stealthily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has not slept,&rdquo; Paul murmured. &ldquo;Poor soul, poor soul! Now, in what I
+ am going to say, please listen to the facts, Moya dear. Try not to infer
+ anything from my way of putting things. I shall contradict myself, but the
+ facts do that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The&mdash;the guide&mdash;John, we will call him, had a long fever in the
+ woods. It would come on worse at night, and then&mdash;he talked&mdash;words,
+ of a shocking intimacy. They say that nothing the mind has come in contact
+ with under strong emotion is ever lost, no matter how long in the past. It
+ will return under similar excitement. This man had kept stored away in his
+ mind, under some such pressure, the words of a woman's message, a woman in
+ great distress. Over and over, as his pulse rose, countless times he would
+ repeat that message. I went out of the hut at night and stood outside in
+ the snow not to hear it, but I knew it as well as he did before we got
+ through. Now, this was what he said, word for word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Do not blame me, my dear husband. I have held out in this place as long
+ as I can. Don't wait for anything. Don't worry about anything. Come back
+ to me with your bare hands. Come!&mdash;to your loving Emmy!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Come, come!' he would shout out loud. Then in another voice he would
+ whisper, 'Come back to me with your bare hands!' And he would stare at his
+ hands and his face would grow awful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya drew a long sigh of scared attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those words were all over the cabin walls. I heard them and saw them
+ everywhere. There was no rest from them. I could have torn the roof down
+ to stop his talking, but the words it was not possible to forget. And
+ where was the horror of it? Was not this what we had asked, for years, to
+ know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not explain to me,&rdquo; said Moya, shuddering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but all one's meanest motives were unearthed in a place like that.
+ Would I have felt so with a different man? Some one less uncouth? Was it
+ the man himself, or his&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul, if anything could make you a snob, it would be your deadly fear of
+ being one!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if they had found us then, God knows how that fight would have
+ ended. But I won it&mdash;when there was nothing left to fight for. I
+ owned him&mdash;in the grave. We owned each other and took a bashful sort
+ of comfort in it, after we had shuffled off the 'Mister' and 'John.' I
+ grew quite fond of him, when we were so near death that his English didn't
+ matter, or his way of eating. I thought him a very remarkable man, you
+ remember, when he was just material for description. He was, he is
+ remarkable. Most remarkable in this, he was not ashamed of his son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do please let that part alone. I want to know what he was doing, hiding
+ away by himself all these years? I believe he is an impostor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We came to that, of course; though somehow I forgave him before he could
+ answer the question. In the long watch beside him I got very close to him.
+ It was not possible to believe him a deserter, a sneak. Can you take my
+ word for his answer? It was given as a death-bed confession and he is
+ living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would take your word for anything except yourself!&rdquo; Moya did not smile,
+ or think what she was saying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That answer cleared him, in my mind, with something over to the credit of
+ blind, stupid heroism. He is not a clever man. But, speaking as one who
+ has teen face to face with the end of things, I can say that I know of no
+ act of his that should prevent his returning to his family&mdash;if he had
+ a family&mdash;not even his deserting them for twenty years. <i>If</i>, I
+ say!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the soldiers found us we were too far gone to realize the issue that
+ was upon us. He was the first to take it in. It was on the march home, at
+ night, he touched me and began speaking low in our corner of the tent. 'As
+ we came in here, so we go out again, and so we stay,' he said. I told him
+ it could not be. To suppress what I had learned would make the whole of
+ life a lie, a coward's lie. That knowledge belonged to my mother. I must
+ render it up to her. To do otherwise would be to treat her like a child
+ and to meddle with the purposes of God. 'No honest man robs another of his
+ secrets,' he said. He was very much excited. She was the only one now to
+ be considered&mdash;and what did I know about God's purposes? He refused
+ to take my scruples into consideration, except such as concerned her. But,
+ after a long argument, very painful, weak as we were and whispering in the
+ dark, he yielded this much. If I were bent on digging up the dead, as he
+ called it, it must be done in such a way as to leave her free. Free she
+ was in law, and she must be given a chance to claim her freedom without
+ talk or publicity. Absolute secrecy he demanded of me in the mean time. I
+ begged him to see how unfair it was to her to bring her face to face with
+ such a discovery without one word of preparation, of excuse for him. She
+ would condemn him on the very fact of his being alive. So she would, he
+ said, if she were going to judge him; not if she felt towards him as&mdash;as
+ a wife feels to her husband. It was that he wanted to know. It was that or
+ nothing he would have from her. 'Bring me face to face with her alone, and
+ as sudden as you like. If she knows me, I am the man. And if she wants me
+ back, she will know me&mdash;and that way I'll come and no other way.' Was
+ not that wonderful? A gentleman could hardly have improved on that.
+ Whatever feeling he might be supposed to have towards her in the matter we
+ could never touch upon. But I think he had his hopes. That decision was
+ hanging over us&mdash;and I trembled for her. Day before yesterday, was
+ it, I persuaded her to see the sick guide. She wondered why I was faint as
+ she kissed me good-by. I ought to have prepared her. It was a horrible
+ snare. And yet he meant it all in delicacy, a passionate consideration for
+ her. Poor fool. How could I prepare <i>him!</i> How could he keep pace
+ with the changes in her! After all, it is externals that make us,&mdash;habits,
+ clothes. Great God! Things you could not speak of to a naked soul like
+ him. But he would have it 'straight,' he said&mdash;and straight he got
+ it. And he is gone; broke away like an animal out of a trap. And I am
+ going to find him, to see at least that he has a roof over his head. God
+ knows, he may not die for years!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has got years before her too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She!&mdash;What am I saying! We have plunged into those damnable
+ inferences and I haven't given you the facts. Wait. I shall contradict all
+ this in a moment. I thought, she must have done this for her children. She
+ must be given another chance. And I approached the thing on my very knees&mdash;not
+ to let her know that I knew, only to hint that I was not unprepared, had
+ guessed&mdash;could meet it, and help her to meet the problems it would
+ bring into our lives. Help her! She stood and faced me as if I had
+ insulted her. 'I have been your father's widow for twenty-two years. If
+ that fact is not sacred to you, it is to me. Never dare to speak of this
+ to me again!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Moya in a long-drawn sigh, &ldquo;then she did not&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, she did, explicitly! For I went on to speak of it. It was my last
+ chance. I asked her how she&mdash;we&mdash;could possibly go through with
+ it; how with this knowledge between us we could look each other in the
+ face&mdash;and go on living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Put this hallucination out of your mind,' she said. 'That man and I are
+ strangers.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was that&mdash;would you call that a lie?&rdquo; asked Moya fearfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can see your answer in her face. I do not say that hers was the first
+ lie. It must always be foolish, I think, to evade the facts of life as we
+ make them for ourselves. He refused to meet his facts, from the noblest
+ motives;&mdash;but now I'm tangling you all up again! Rest your head here,
+ darling. This is such a business! It is a pity I cannot tell you his whole
+ story. Half the meaning of all this is lost. But&mdash;here is a solemn
+ declaration in writing, signed John Hagar, in which this man we are
+ speaking of says that Adam Bogardus was his partner, who died in the woods
+ and was buried by his hand; that he knew his story, all the scenes and
+ circumstances of his life in many a long talk they had together, as well
+ as he knew his own. In his delirium he must have confused himself with his
+ old partner, and half in dreams, he said, half in the crazy satisfaction
+ of pretending to himself he had a son, he allowed the delusion to go on;
+ saw it work upon me, and half feared it, half encouraged it. Afterwards he
+ was frightened at the thought of meeting my mother, who would know him for
+ an impostor. His seeming scruples were fear of exposure, not consideration
+ for her. This was why he guarded their interview so carefully. 'No harm's
+ been done,' he says, 'if you'll act now like a sensible man. I'll be
+ disappointed in you if you make your mother any trouble about this. You've
+ treated me as square as any man could treat another. Remember, I say so,
+ and think as kindly as you can of a harmless, loony old impostor'&mdash;and
+ he signs himself 'John Hagar,'&mdash;which shows again how one lie leads
+ to another. We go to find 'John Hagar.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you shown your mother this letter? You have not? Paul, you will not
+ rob her of her just defense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not heap coals of fire on her head! This letter simply completes
+ his renunciation, and he meant it for her defense. But when a man signs
+ himself 'John Hagar' in the handwriting of my father, it shows that
+ somebody is not telling the truth. I used to pore over the old farm
+ records in my father's hand at Stone Ridge in the old account books stowed
+ away in places where a boy loves to poke and pry. I know it as well as I
+ know yours. Do you suppose she would not know it? When a man writes as few
+ letters as he does, the handwriting does not change.&rdquo; Paul laid the letter
+ upon the coals. &ldquo;It is the only witness against her, but it loses the
+ case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She never could have loved him. I never believed she did!&rdquo; said Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She thinks she can live out this deep-down, deliberate&mdash;But it will
+ kill her, Moya. Her life is ended from this on. How could I have driven
+ her to that excruciating choice! I ought to have listened to him
+ altogether or not at all. There is a hell for meddlers, and the ones who
+ meddle for conscience' sake are the deepest damned, I think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya came and wreathed her arm in his, and they paced the room in silence.
+ At length she said, &ldquo;If we go to find John Hagar, shall we not be meddling
+ again? A man who respects a woman's freedom must love his own. It is the
+ last thing left him. Don't hunt him down. I believe nothing could hurt him
+ now like seeing you again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He shall not see me unless he wants to, but he shall know where I stand
+ on this question of the Impostor. It shall be managed so that even he can
+ see I am protecting her. No, call himself what he will, the tie between
+ him and me is another of those facts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do you love him, Paul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh&mdash;I cannot forget him! He is&mdash;just as he used to be&mdash;'poor
+ father out there in the cold.' We must find him and comfort him somehow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For our own peace of mind? Forgive me for arguing when everything is so
+ difficult. But he is a man&mdash;a brave man who would rather be forever
+ out in the cold than be a burden. Do not rob him of his right to <i>be</i>
+ John Hagar if he wants to, for the sake of those he loves. You do not tell
+ me it was love, but I am sure it was, in some mistaken way, that drove him
+ into exile. Only love as pure as his can be our excuse for dragging him
+ back. He did not want shelter and comfort from her. Only one thing. Have
+ we got that to give him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well then, I go for my own sake&mdash;it is a physical necessity; and I
+ go for hers. She has put it out of her own power to help him. It will ease
+ her a little to know I am trying to reach him in his forlorn disguise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you were not going to tell her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In words, no. But she will understand. There is a strange clairvoyance
+ between us, as if we were accomplices in a crime!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya reflected silently. This search which Paul had set his heart upon
+ would equally work his own cure, she saw. Nor could she now imagine for
+ themselves any lover's paradise inseparable from this moral tragedy, which
+ she saw would be fibre of their fibre, life of their life. A family is an
+ organism; one part may think to deny or defy another, but with strange
+ pains the subtle union exerts itself; distance cannot break the thread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They kissed each other solemnly like little children on the eve of a long
+ journey full of awed expectancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus stood holding her door ajar as Moya passed on her way
+ downstairs. &ldquo;You are very late,&rdquo; she uttered hoarsely. &ldquo;Is nothing settled
+ yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything!&rdquo; Moya hesitated and forced a smile, &ldquo;everything but where we
+ shall go. We will start&mdash;and decide afterwards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You go together? That is right. Moya, you have a genius for happiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I had a genius for making people sleep who lie awake hours in the
+ night thinking about other people!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you mean me, people of my age need very little sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I kiss you good-night, Paul's mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may kiss me because I am Paul's mother, not because I do not sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya's lips touched a cheek as white and almost as cold as the frosted
+ window-panes through which the moon was glimmering. She thought of the icy
+ roses on her wedding dress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Downstairs her father was smoking his bedtime cigar. Mrs. Creve, very
+ sleepy and cosy and flushed, leaned over the smouldering bed of coals. She
+ held out her plump, soft hand to Moya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come here and be scolded! We have been scolding you steadily for the last
+ hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you want that young man to get his strength back, you'd better not
+ keep him up talking half the night,&rdquo; the colonel growled softly. &ldquo;Do you
+ see what time it is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya knelt and leaned her head against her father. She reached one hand to
+ Mrs. Creve. They did not speak again till her weak moment had passed. &ldquo;It
+ will be very soon,&rdquo; she said, pressing the warm hand that stroked her own.
+ &ldquo;You will help me pack, aunt Annie; and then you'll stay&mdash;with
+ father? I know you are glad to have me out of the way at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII. &mdash; THE HIDDEN TRAIL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Because they had set forth on a grim and sorrowful quest, it need not be
+ supposed that Paul and Moya were a pair of sorrowful pilgrims. It was
+ their wedding journey. At the outset Moya had said: &ldquo;We are doing the best
+ we know. For what we don't know, let us leave it and not brood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did not enter at once upon the more eccentric stages of the search.
+ They went by way of the Great Northern to Portland, descending from snow
+ to roses and drenching rains. At Pendleton, which is at the junction of
+ three great roads, Paul sent tracers out through express agents and train
+ officials along the remotest slender feeders of these lines. Through the
+ same agents it was made known that for any service rendered or expense
+ incurred on behalf of the person described, his friends would hold
+ themselves gratefully responsible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Portland, Paul searched the steamer lists and left confidential orders
+ in the different transportation offices; and Moya wrote to his mother&mdash;a
+ woman's letter, every page shining with happiness and as free from
+ apparent forethought as a running brook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They returned by the Great Northern and Lake Coeur d'Alene, stopping over
+ at Fort Sherman to visit Mrs. Creve, who was giddy with joy over the
+ wholesome change in Paul. She, too, wrote a woman's letter concerning that
+ visit, to the colonel, which cleared a crowd of shadows from his lonely
+ hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thence again to Pendleton came the seekers, and Paul gathered in his
+ lines, but found nothing; so cast them forth again. But through all these
+ distant elaborations of the search, in his own mind he saw the old man
+ creeping away by some near, familiar trail and lying hid in some warm
+ valley in the hills, his prison and his home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now the last week in March. The travelers' bags were in the office,
+ the carriage at the door, when a letter&mdash;pigeon-holed and forgotten
+ since received some three weeks before&mdash;was put into Paul's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I run up against your ad. in the Silver City Times [the communication
+ began]. If you haven't found your man yet, maybe I can put you onto the
+ right lead. I'm driving a jerky on the road from Mountain Home to Oriana,
+ but me and the old man we don't jibe any too well. I've got a sort of
+ disgust on me. Think I'll quit soon and go to mining. Jimmy Breen he runs
+ the Ferry, he can tell you all I know. Fifty miles from Mountain Home good
+ road can make it in one day. Yours Respecfully,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ J. STRATTON.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It was in following up this belated clue that the pilgrims had come to the
+ Ferry inn, crossing by team from valley to valley, cutting off a great
+ bend of the Oregon Short Line as it traverses the Snake River desert;
+ those bare high plains escarped with basalt bluffs that open every fifty
+ miles or so to let a road crawl down to some little rope-ferry supported
+ by sheep-herders, ditch contractors, miners, emigrants, ranchmen, all the
+ wild industries of a country in the dawn of enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Business at the Ferry had shrunk since the railroad went through. The
+ house-staff consisted of Jimmy Breen, a Chinese cook of the bony, tartar
+ breed, sundry dogs, and a large bachelor cat that mooned about the empty
+ piazzas. In a young farming country, hungry for capital, Jimmy could not
+ do a cash business, but everything was grist that came to his mill; and he
+ was quick to distinguish the perennial dead beat from a genuine case of
+ hard luck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's a good axe ye have there,&rdquo; pointing suggestively to a new one
+ sticking out of the rear baggage of an emigrant outfit. &ldquo;Ye better l'ave
+ that with me for the dollar that's owing me. If ye have money to buy new
+ axes ye can't be broke entirely.&rdquo; Or: &ldquo;Slip the halter on that calf behind
+ there. The mother hasn't enough to keep it alive. There's har'ly a
+ dollar's wort' of hide on its bones, but I'll take it to save it droppin'
+ on the road.&rdquo; Or, he would try sarcasm: &ldquo;Well, we'll be shuttin' her down
+ in the spring. Then ye can go round be Walter's Ferry and see if they'll
+ trust ye there.&rdquo; Or: &ldquo;Why wasn't ye workin' on the Ditch last winter?
+ Settin' smokin' your poipe in the tules, the wife and young ones packin'
+ sagebrush to kape ye warm!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning after their distinguished arrival, Jimmy's guests came down
+ late to a devastated breakfast-table. Little heaps of crumbs here and
+ there showed where earlier appetites had had their destined hour and gone
+ their way. At an impartial distance from the top and the foot of the table
+ stood the familiar group of sauce and pickle bottles, every brand dear to
+ the cowboy, including the &ldquo;surrup-jug&rdquo; adhering to its saucer. There was a
+ fresh-gathered bunch of wild phlox by Moya's plate in a tumbler printed
+ round the edge with impressions of a large moist male thumb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Catchee plenty,&rdquo; the Chinaman grinned, pointing to the plain outside
+ where the pale sage-brush quivered stiffly in the wind. &ldquo;Bymbye plenty
+ come. Pretty col' now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll be getting a large hump on yourself, Han, me boy. 'T is a cash
+ crowd we have here&mdash;and a lady, by me sowl!&rdquo; Thus Jimmy exhorted his
+ household. Times were looking up. They would be a summer resort before the
+ Ditch went through; it should be mentioned in the Ditch company's
+ prospectus. Jimmy had put his savings into land-office fees and had a
+ hopeful interest in the Ditch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A spur in the head is worth two in the heel. Without a word from &ldquo;the
+ boss&rdquo; Han had found time to shave and powder and polish his brown forehead
+ and put on his whitest raiment over his baggiest trousers. There was loud
+ panic among the fowls in the corral. The cat had disappeared; the jealous
+ dogs hung about the doors and were pushed out of the way by friends of
+ other days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seated by the office fire, Paul was conferring with Jimmy, who was happy
+ with a fresh pipe and a long story to tell to a patient and paying
+ listener. He rubbed the red curls back from his shining forehead, took the
+ pipe from his teeth, and guided a puff of smoke away from his auditor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I seen him settin' over there on his blankets,&rdquo;&mdash;he pointed with his
+ pipe to the opposite shore plainly visible through the office windows,&mdash;&ldquo;but
+ he niver hailed me, so I knowed he was broke. Some, whin they're broke,
+ they holler all the louder. Ye would think they had an appointment wit'
+ the Governor and he sint his car'iage to meet them. But he was as humble,
+ he was, as a yaller dog.&mdash;Out! Git out from here&mdash;the pack of
+ yez! Han, shut the dure an' drive thim bloody curs off the piazzy. They're
+ trackin' up the whole place.&mdash;As I was sayin', sor, there he stayed
+ hunched up in the wind, waitin' on the chanst of a team comin', and I seen
+ he was an ould daddy. I stud the sight of him as long as I cud, me comin'
+ and goin'. He fair wore me out. So I tuk the boat over for 'im. One of his
+ arrums he couldn't lift from the shoulder, and I give him a h'ist wit' his
+ bundle. Faith, it was light! 'Twinty years a-getherin',' he cackles,
+ slappin' it. 'Ye've had harrud luck,' I says. ''T is not much of a sheaf
+ ye are packin' home.' 'That's as ye look at it,' he says.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I axed him what way was he goin'. He was thinking to get a lift as far as
+ Oriana, if the stages was runnin' on that road. 'Then ye 'll have to bide
+ here till morning,' I says, 'for ye must have met the stage goin' the
+ other way.' 'I met nothing,' says he; 'I come be way of the bluffs,'&mdash;which
+ is a strange way for one man travelin' afoot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The grub was on the table, and I says, 'Sit by and fill yourself up.' His
+ cheeks was fallin' in wit' the hunger. With that his poor ould eye begun
+ to water. 'Twas one weak eye he had that was weepin' all the time. 'I've
+ got out of the habit of reg'lar aitin',' he says. 'It don't take much to
+ kape me goin'.' 'Niver desave yourself, sor! 'T is betther feed three
+ hungry men than wan &ldquo;no occasion.&rdquo;' His appetite it grew on him wit' every
+ mouthful. There was a boundless emptiness to him. He lay there on the
+ bench and slep' the rest of the evening, and I left him there wit' a big
+ fire at night. And the next day at noon we h'isted him up beside of Joe
+ Stratton. A rip-snorter of a wind was blowin' off the Silver City peaks.
+ His face was drawed like a winter apple, but he wint off happy. I think he
+ was warm inside of himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ask him his name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure. Why not? John Treagar he called himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treagar? Hagar, you mean!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was Treagar he said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John Hagar is the man I am looking for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treagar&mdash;Hagar? 'T is comin' pretty close to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About what height and build was he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was not to say a tall man; and he wasn't so turrible short neither.
+ His back was as round as a Bible. A kind of pepper and saltish beard he
+ had, and his hair was blacker than his beard but white in streaks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A <i>dark</i> man, was he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would be a <i>dark</i> man if he was younger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man I want is blue-eyed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His eyes was blue&mdash;a kind of washed-out gray that maybe was blue
+ wanst; and one of them always weepin' wit' the cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And light brown hair mixed with gray, like sand and ashes&mdash;mostly
+ ashes; and a thin straggling beard, thinner on the cheeks? A high head and
+ a tall stooping figure&mdash;six feet at least; hands with large joints
+ and a habit of picking at them when&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are goin' too fast for me now, sor. He was not that description of a
+ man, nayther the height nor the hair of him. Sure't is a pity for ye
+ comin' this far, and him not the man at all. Faith, I wish I was the man
+ meself! I wonder at Joe Stratton anyhow! He's a very hasty man, is Joe. He
+ jumps in wit' both feet, so he does. I could have told ye that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya, always helplessly natural, and now very tired as well, when Paul
+ described with his usual gravity this anti-climax, fell below all the
+ dignities at once in a burst of childish giggling. Paul looked on with an
+ embarrassed smile, like a puzzled affectionate dog at the incomprehensible
+ mirth of humans. Paul was certainly deficient in humor and therefore in
+ breadth. But what woman ever loved her lover the less for having
+ discovered his limitations? Humor runs in families of the intenser
+ cultivation. The son of the soil remains serious in the face of life's and
+ nature's ironies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII. &mdash; THE STAR IN THE EAST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So the search paused, while the searchers rested and revised their plans.
+ Spring opened in the valley as if for them alone. There were mornings
+ &ldquo;proud and sweet,&rdquo; when the humblest imagination could have pictured
+ Aurora and her train in the jocund clouds that trooped along the sky,&mdash;wind-built
+ processions which the wind dispersed. Wild flowers spread so fast they
+ might have been spilled from the rainbow scarf of Iris fleeting overhead.
+ The river was in flood, digging its elbows into its muddy banks. The
+ willow and wild-rose thickets stooped and washed their spring garments in
+ its tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primeval life and love were all around them. Meadow larks flung their
+ brief jets of song into the sunlight; the copses rustled with wings;
+ wood-doves cooed from the warm sunny hollows, and the soft booming of
+ their throaty call was like a beating in the air,&mdash;the pulse of
+ spring. They had found their Garden. Humanity in the valley passed before
+ them in forms as interesting and as alien as the brother beasts to Adam:
+ the handsome driver of the jerky, Joe Stratton's successor, who sat at
+ dinner opposite and combed his flowing mustache with his fork in a lazy,
+ dandified way; the darkened faces of sheep-herders enameled by sun and
+ wind, their hair like the winter coats of animals; the slow-eyed farmers
+ with the appetites of horses; the spring recruits for the ranks of labor
+ footing it to distant ranches, each with his back-load of bedding, and the
+ dust of three counties on his garments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweet forces of Nature shut out, for a season, Paul's <i>cri du coeur</i>.
+ One may keep a chamber sacred to one's sadder obligations and yet the
+ house be filled with joy. Further ramifications of the search were mapped
+ out with Jimmy's indifferent assistance. For good reasons of his own,
+ Jimmy did little to encourage an early start. He would explain that his
+ maps were of ancient date and full of misinformation as to stage routes.
+ &ldquo;See that now! The stages was pulled off that line five year ago, on
+ account of the railroad cuttin' in on them. Ye couldn't make it wid'out ye
+ took a camp outfit. There's ne'er a station left, and when ye come to it,
+ it's ruins ye'll find. A chimbly and a few rails, if the mule-skinners
+ hasn't burned them. 'Tis a country very devoid of fuel; sagebrush and
+ grease-wood, and a wind, bedad! that blows the grass-seeds into the next
+ county.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When these camping-trips were proposed to Moya, she hesitated and
+ responded languidly; but when Paul suggested leaving her even for a day,
+ her fears fluttered across his path and wiled him another way. Vaguely he
+ felt that she was unlike herself&mdash;less buoyant, though often
+ restless; and sometimes he fancied she was pale underneath her sun-burned
+ color like that of rose-hips in October. Various causes kept him inert,
+ while strength mounted in his veins, and life seemed made for the pure joy
+ of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon of May in that valley is the moon of roses, for the heats once
+ due come on apace. The young people gave up their all-day horseback rides
+ and took morning walks instead, following the shore-paths lazily to shaded
+ coverts dedicated to those happy silences which it takes two to make. Or,
+ they climbed the bluffs and gazed at the impenetrable vast horizon, and
+ thought perhaps of their errand with that pang of self-reproach which,
+ when shared, becomes a subtler form of self-indulgence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at night, all the teeming life of the plain rushed up into the sky and
+ blazed there in a million friendly stars. After the languor of the sleepy
+ afternoons, it was like a fresh awakening&mdash;the dawn of those white
+ May nights. The wide plain stirred softly through all its miles of sage.
+ The river's cadenced roar paused beyond the bend and outbroke again. All
+ that was eerie and furtive in the wild dark found a curdling voice in the
+ coyote's hunting-call.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a hollow concealed by sage, not ten minutes' walk from the Ferry inn,
+ unknown to the map-maker and innocent of all use, lay a perfect floor for
+ evening pacing with one's eyes upon the stars. It was the death mask of an
+ ancient lake, done in purest alkali silt, and needing only the shadows
+ cast by a low moon to make the illusion almost unbelievable. Slow
+ precipitation, season after season, as the water dried, had left the lake
+ bed smooth as a cast in plaster. Subsequent warpings had lifted the alkali
+ crust into thin-lipped wavelets. But once upon the floor itself the
+ resemblance to water vanished. The warpings and Grumblings took the shape
+ of earth as made by water and baked by fire. Moya compared it to a bit of
+ the dead moon fallen to show us what we are coming to. They paced it
+ soft-footed in tennis shoes lest they should crumble its talc-like
+ whiteness. But they read no horoscopes, for they were shy of the future in
+ speaking to each other,&mdash;and they made no plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening Moya had said to Paul: &ldquo;I can understand your mother so much
+ better now that I am a wife. I think most women have a tendency towards
+ the state of being <i>un</i>married. And if one had&mdash;children, it
+ would increase upon one very fast. A widow and a mother&mdash;for twenty
+ years. How could she be a wife again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul made no reply to this speech which long continued to haunt him;
+ especially as Moya wrote more frequently to his mother and did not offer
+ to show him her letters. In their evening walks she seemed distrait, and
+ during the day more restless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night of their nightly pacings she stopped and stood long, her head
+ thrown back, her eyes fixed upon the dizzy star-deeps. Paul waited a step
+ behind her, touching her shoulders with his hands. Suddenly she reeled and
+ sank backwards into his arms. He held her, watching her lovely face grow
+ whiter; her eyelids closed. She breathed slowly, leaning her whole weight
+ upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coming to herself, she smiled and said it was nothing. She had been that
+ way before. &ldquo;But&mdash;we must go home. We must have a home&mdash;somewhere.
+ I want to see your mother. Paul, be good to her&mdash;forgive her&mdash;for
+ my sake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX. &mdash; PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly Lewis was disappointed in the latest of her beneficiaries. It
+ was nine years since her husband had locked up his savings in the Mud
+ Springs ranch, a neglected little health-plant at the mouth of the
+ Bruneau. If you were troubled with rheumatism, or a crick in the back, or
+ your &ldquo;pancrees&rdquo; didn't act or your blood was &ldquo;out o' fix, why, you'd
+ better go up to Looanders' for a spell and soak yourself in that blue mud
+ and let aunt Polly diet ye and dost ye with yerb tea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Leander courted aunt Polly in the interests of his sanitarium, she
+ was reputed the best nurse in Ada County. The widow&mdash;by desertion&mdash;of
+ a notorious quack doctor of those parts: it was an open question whether
+ his medicine had killed or her nursing had cured the greater number of
+ confiding sick folk. Leander drove fifty miles to catechise this notable
+ woman, and finding her sound on the theory of packs hot and cold, and
+ skilled in the practice of rubbing,&mdash;and having made the incidental
+ discovery that she was a person not without magnetism,&mdash;he decided on
+ the spot to add her to the other attractions of Mud Springs ranch; and she
+ drove home with him next day, her trunk in the back of his wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place was no sinecure. Bricks without straw were a child's pastime to
+ the cures aunt Polly and the Springs effected without a pretense to the
+ comforts of life in health, to say nothing of sickness. Modern
+ conveniences are costly, and how are you to get the facilities for &ldquo;pay
+ patients&rdquo; when you have no patients that pay! Prosperity had overlooked
+ the Bruneau, or had made false starts there, through detrimental schemes
+ that gave the valley a bad name with investors. The railroad was still
+ fifty miles away, and the invalid public would not seek life itself, in
+ these days of luxurious travel, at the cost of a twelve hours' stage-ride.
+ However, as long as the couple had a roof over their heads and the Springs
+ continued to plop and vomit their strange, chameleon-colored slime,
+ Leander would continue to bring home the sick and the suffering for Polly
+ and the Springs to practice on. Health became his hobby, and in time, with
+ isolation thrown in, it began to invade his common sense. He tried in
+ succession all the diet fads of the day and wound up a convert to the
+ &ldquo;Ralston&rdquo; school of eating. Aunt Polly had clung a little longer to the
+ flesh-pots, but the charms of a system that abolished half the labor of
+ cooking prevailed with her at last, and in the end she kept a sharper eye
+ upon Leander at mealtime than ever he had upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ignorant gorgings of their neighbors were a head-shaking and a warning
+ to them, and more than once Leander's person was in jeopardy through his
+ zealous but unappreciated concern for the brother who eats in darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had started out one winter morning from Bisuka, a virtuous man. His
+ team had breakfasted, but not he. A Ralstonite does not load up his
+ stomach at dawn after the manner of cattle, and such pious substitutes for
+ a cup of coffee as are permitted the faithful cannot always be had for a
+ price. At Indian Creek he hauled up to water his team, and to make for
+ himself a cinnamon-colored decoction by boiling in hot water a preparation
+ of parched grains which he carried with him. This he accomplished in an
+ angle of the old corral fence out of the wind. There is no comfort nor
+ even virtue in eating cold dust with one's sandwiches. Leander sunk his
+ great white tushes through the thick slices of whole-wheat bread and
+ tasted the paste of peanut meal with which they were spread. He ate
+ standing and slapped his leg to warm his driving hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A flutter of something colored, as a garment, caught his eye, directing it
+ to the shape of a man, rolled in an old blue blanket, lying motionless in
+ a corner of the tumble-down wall. &ldquo;Drunk, drunk as a hog!&rdquo; pronounced
+ Leander. For no man in command of himself would lie down to sleep in such
+ a place. As if to refute this accusation, the wind turned a corner of the
+ blanket quietly off a white face with closed eyelids,&mdash;an old, worn,
+ gentle face, appealing in its homeliness, though stamped now with the
+ dignity of death. Leander knelt and handled the body tenderly. It was long
+ before he satisfied himself that life was still there. Another case for
+ Polly and the Springs. A man worth saving, if Leander knew a man; one of
+ the trustful, trustworthy sort. His heart went out to him on the instant
+ as to a friend from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was closing in for dusk when he reached the Ferry. Jimmy was away, and
+ Han, in high dudgeon, brought the boat over in answer to Leander's hail.
+ He had grouse to dress for supper, inconsiderately flung in upon him at
+ the last moment by the stage, four hours late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Huh! Why you no come one hour ago? All time 'Hullo, hullo'! Je' Cli'! me
+ no dam felly-man&mdash;me dam cook! Too much man say 'Hullo'!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prospect was not good for help at the Ferry inn, so, putting his trust
+ in Polly and the Springs, Leander pushed on up the valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Aunt Polly's patients were of the right sort, they stayed on after
+ their recovery and helped Leander with the ranch work. But for the most
+ part they &ldquo;hit the trail&rdquo; again as soon as their ills were healed, not
+ forgetting to advertise the Springs to other patients of their own class.
+ The only limit to this unenviable popularity was the size of the house.
+ Leander saw no present advantage in building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in case they ever did build&mdash;and the time was surely coming!&mdash;here
+ was the very person they had been looking for. Cast your bread upon the
+ waters. The winter's bread and care and shelter so ungrudgingly bestowed
+ had returned to them many-fold in the comfortable sense of dependence and
+ unity they felt in this last beneficiary, the old man of Indian Creek whom
+ they called &ldquo;Uncle John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The kindest old creetur' ever lived! Some forgitful, but everybody's
+ liable to forgit. Only tell him one thing at once, and don't confuse him,
+ and he'll git through an amazin' sight of chores in a day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just the very one we'll want to wait on the men patients,&rdquo; Aunt Polly
+ chimed in. &ldquo;He can carry up meals and keep the bathrooms clean, and wash
+ out the towels, and he's the best hand with poultry. He takes such good
+ care of the old hens they're re'lly ashamed not to lay!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was spring again; old hopes were putting forth new leaves. Leander had
+ heard of a capitalist in the valley; a young one, too, more prone to
+ enthusiasm if shown the right thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm going down to Jimmy's to fetch them up here!&rdquo; Leander announced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are there two of them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has brought his wife out with him. They are a young couple. He's the
+ only son of a rich widow in New York, and Jimmy says they've got money to
+ burn. Jimmy don't take much stock in this 'ere 'wounded guide' story&mdash;thinks
+ it's more or less of a blind. He's feeling around for a good investment&mdash;desert
+ land or mining claims. Jimmy thinks he represents big interests back
+ East.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly considered, and the corners of her mouth moistened as she
+ thought of the dinner she would snatch from the jaws of the system on the
+ day these young strangers should visit the ranch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Gum!&rdquo; Leander shouted. &ldquo;I wonder if Uncle John wouldn't know something
+ about the party they're advertising for. That'd be the way to find out if
+ they're really on the scent. I'll take him down with me&mdash;that's what
+ I'll <i>do</i>&mdash;and let him have a talk with the young man himself.
+ It'll make a good opening. Are you listening, Polly?&rdquo; She was not. &ldquo;I wish
+ you'd git him to fix himself up a little. Layout one o' my clean shirts
+ for him, and I'll take him down with me day after to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll have a fresh churning to-morrow,&rdquo; Aunt Polly mused. &ldquo;You can take a
+ little pat of it with you. I won't put no salt in it, and I'll send along
+ a glass or two of my wild strawberry jam. It takes an awful time to pick
+ the berries, but I guess it'll be appreciated after the table Jimmy sets.
+ I don't believe Jimmy'll be offended?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bogardus is their name,&rdquo; continued Leander. &ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Bogardus, from
+ New York. Jimmy's got it down in his hotel book and he's showing it to
+ everybody. Jimmy's reel childish about it. I tell him one swallow don't
+ make a summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John had come into the room and sat listening, while a yellow pallor
+ crept over his forehead and cheeks. He moved to get up once, and then sat
+ down again weakly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the matter, Uncle?&rdquo; Aunt Polly eyed him sharply. &ldquo;You been out
+ there chopping wood too long in this hot sun. What did I tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She cleared the decks for action. Paler and paler the old man grew. He was
+ not able to withstand her vigorous sympathies. She had him tucked up on
+ the calico lounge and his shoes off and a hot iron at his feet; but while
+ she was hurrying up the kettle to make him a drink of something hot, he
+ rose and slipped up the outside stairs to his bedroom in the attic. There
+ he seated himself on the side of his neat bed which he always made himself
+ camp fashion,&mdash;the blankets folded lengthwise with just room for one
+ quiet sleeper to crawl inside; and there he sat, opening and clinching his
+ hands, a deep perplexity upon his features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly called to him and began to read the riot act, but Leander said:
+ &ldquo;Let him be! He gits tired o' being fussed over. You're at him about
+ something or other the whole blessed time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I have to! My gracious! He'd forgit to come in to his meals if I
+ didn't keep him on my mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It just strikes me&mdash;what am I going to call him when I introduce him
+ to those folks? Did he ever tell you what his last name is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn't be surprised,&rdquo; Aunt Polly lowered her voice, &ldquo;if he couldn't
+ remember it himself! I've heard of such cases. Whenever I try to draw him
+ out to talk about himself and what happened to him before you found him,
+ it breaks him all up; seemingly gives him a back-set every time. He sort
+ of slinks into himself in that queer, lost way&mdash;just like he was when
+ he first come to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's had a powerful jar to his constitution, and his mind is taking a
+ rest.&rdquo; Leander was fond of a diagnosis. &ldquo;There wasn't enough life left in
+ him to keep his faculties and his bod'ly organs all a-going at once. The
+ upper story's to let.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you'd go upstairs, and see what he is doing up there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aw, no! Let him be. He likes to go off by himself and do his thinking. I
+ notice it rattles him to be talked to much. He sets out there on the
+ choppin'-block, looking at the bluffs&mdash;ever notice? He looks and
+ don't see nothin', and his lips keep moving like he was learning a
+ spellin'-lesson. If I speak to him sharp, he hauls himself together and
+ smiles uneasy, but he don't know what I said. I tell you he's waking up;
+ coming to his memories, and trying to sort 'em out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's just what <i>I</i> say,&rdquo; Aunt Polly retorted, &ldquo;but he's got to eat
+ his meals. He can't live on memories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John was restless that evening, and appeared to be excited. He
+ waited upon Aunt Polly after supper with a feverish eagerness to be of
+ use. When all was in order for bedtime, and Leander rose to wind the
+ clock, he spoke. It was getting about time to roll up his blankets and
+ pull out, he said. Leander felt for the ledge where the clock-key
+ belonged, and made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was saying&mdash;I guess it's about time for me to be moving on. The
+ grass is starting&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you cal'latin' to live on grass?&rdquo; Leander drawled with cutting irony.
+ &ldquo;Gettin' tired of the old woman's cooking? Well, she ain't much of a
+ cook!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John remained silent, working at his hands. His mouth, trembled
+ under his thin straggling beard. &ldquo;I never was better treated in my life,
+ and you know it. It ain't handsome of you, Lewis, to talk that way!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He don't mean nothing, Uncle John! What makes you so foolish, Looander!
+ He just wants you to know there's no begrudgers around here. You're
+ welcome, and more than welcome, to settle down and camp right along with
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Winter and summer!&rdquo; Leander put in, &ldquo;if you're satisfied. There's nobody
+ in a hurry to see the last of ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle John's mild but determined resistance was a keen disappointment to
+ his friends. Leander thought himself offended. &ldquo;What fly's stung you,
+ anyhow! Heard from any of your folks lately?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got any money salted down that needs turning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looander! Quit teasing of him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let him have his fun, ma'am. It's all he's likely to get out of me. I
+ have got a little money,&rdquo; he pursued. &ldquo;'T would be an insult to name it in
+ the same breath with what you've done for me. I'd like to leave it here,
+ though. You could pass it on. You'll have chances enough. 'T ain't likely
+ I'll be the last one you'll take in and do for, and never git nothing out
+ of it in return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a mild sensation, as the speaker, fumbling in his loose
+ trousers, appeared to be seeking for that money. Aunt Polly's eyes flamed
+ indignation behind her tears. She was a foolish, warm-hearted creature,
+ and her eyes watered on the least excuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looander, you shouldn't have taunted him,&rdquo; she admonished her husband,
+ who felt he had been a little rough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here, Uncle John, d'you ever know anybody who wasn't by way of
+ needing help some time in their lives? We don't ask any one who comes
+ here&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't come!&rdquo; Aunt Polly corrected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, who was brought, then! We don't ask for their character, nor their
+ private history, nor their bank account. I don't know but you're the first
+ one for years I've ever took a real personal shine to, and we've h'isted a
+ good many up them stairs that wasn't able to walk much further. I'd like
+ you to stay as a favor to us, dang it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leander delivered this invitation as if it were a threat. His straight-cut
+ mustache stiffened and projected itself by the pressure of his big lips;
+ his dark red throat showed as many obstinate creases as an old
+ snapping-turtle's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm much obliged to you both. I want you to remember that. We&mdash;I&mdash;I'll
+ talk with ye in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That means he's going all the same,&rdquo; said Leander, after Uncle John had
+ closed the outside door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough, next morning he had made up his little pack, oiled his boots,
+ and by breakfast-time was ready for the road. They argued the point long
+ and fiercely with him whether he should set out on foot or wait a day and
+ ride with Leander to the Ferry. It was not supposed he could be thinking
+ of any other road. By to-morrow, if he would but wait, Aunt Polly would
+ have comfortably outfitted him after the custom of the house; given his
+ clothes a final &ldquo;going over&rdquo; to see everything taut for the journey,
+ shoved a week's rations into a corn-sack, choosing such condensed forms of
+ nourishment as the system allowed&mdash;nay, straining a point and
+ smuggling in a nefarious pound or two of real miner's coffee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Polly's distress so weighed with her patient that he consented to
+ remain overnight and ride with Leander as far as the dam across the
+ Bruneau, at its junction with the Snake. There he would cross and take the
+ trail down the river, cutting off several miles of the road to the Ferry.
+ As for going on to see Jimmy or Jimmy's &ldquo;folks,&rdquo; the nervous resistance
+ which this plan excited warned the good couple not to press the old man
+ too far, or he might give them the slip altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strangeness in his manner which this last discussion had brought out,
+ lay heavy on aunt Polly's mind all day after the departure of the team for
+ the Ferry. She watched the two men drive off in silence, Leander's bush
+ beard reddening in the sun, his big body filling more than his half of the
+ seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, by Gum! If he ain't the blamedest, most per-sistent old fool!&rdquo; he
+ complained to his wife that night. Their first words were of the old man,
+ already missed like one of the family from the humble place he had made
+ for himself. Leander was still irritable over his loss. &ldquo;I set him down
+ with his grub and blankets, and I watched him footing it acrost the dam.
+ He done it real handsome, steady on his pins. Then he set down and waited,
+ kind o' dreaming, like he used to, settin' on the choppin'-block. I hailed
+ him. 'What's the matter?' I says. 'Left anything?' No: every time I hailed
+ he took off his hat and waved to me real pleasant. Nothing the matter.
+ There he set. Well, thinks I, I can't stay here all day watching ye take
+ root. So I drove on a piece. And, by Gum! when I looked back going around
+ the bend, there he went a-pikin' off up the bluffs&mdash;just a-humping
+ himself for all he was worth. I wouldn't like to think he was cunning, but
+ it looked that way for sure,&mdash;turning me off the scent and then
+ taking to the bluffs like he was sent for! Where in thunder is he making
+ for? He knows just as well as I do&mdash;you have heard me tell him a
+ dozen times&mdash;the stages were hauled off that Wood River road five
+ year and more ago. He won't git nowhere! And he won't meet up with a team
+ in a week's walking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His food will last him a week if he's careful; he's no great eater. I
+ ain't afraid his feet will get lost; he's to home out of doors almost
+ anywhere;&mdash;it's his head I'm afraid of. He's got some sort of a skew
+ on him. I used to notice if he went out for a little walk anywhere, he'd
+ always slope for the East.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX. &mdash; A STATION IN THE DESERT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That forsworn identity which Adam Bogardus had submitted to be clothed in
+ as a burial garment was now become a thing for the living to flee from. He
+ had seen a woman in full health whiten and cower before it;&mdash;she who
+ stood beside his bed and looked at him with dreadful eyes, eyes of his
+ girl-wife growing old in the likeness of her father. Hard, reluctant eyes
+ forced to own the truth which the ashen lips denied. Are we responsible
+ for our silences? He had not spoken to her. Nay, the living must speak
+ first, or the ghostly dead depart unquestioned. He asked only that he
+ might forget her and be himself forgotten. If it were that woman's right
+ to call herself Emily Bogardus, then was there no Adam her husband. Better
+ the old disguise which left him free to work out his own sentence and pay
+ his forfeit to the law. He had never desired that one breath of it should
+ be commuted, or wished to accept an enslaving pardon from those for whose
+ sake he had put himself out of the way. If he could have taken his own
+ comparative spiritual measurement, he might have smiled at the humor of
+ that forgiveness promised him in the name of the Highest by his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many peaceful years solitude had been the habit of his soul. Gently as
+ he bore with human obligations, he escaped from them with a sense of
+ relief which shamed him somewhat when he thought of the good friends to
+ whom he owed this very blessed power to flee. It was quite as Leander had
+ surmised. He could not command his faculties&mdash;memory especially&mdash;when
+ a noise of many words and questions bruised his brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stillness of the desert closed about him with delicious healing. He
+ was a world-weary child returned to the womb of Nature. His old camp-craft
+ came back; his eye for distance, his sense of the trail, his little pet
+ economies with food and fire. There was no one to tell him what to eat and
+ when to eat it. He was invisible to men. Each day's march built up his
+ muscle, and every night's deep sleep under the great high stars steadied
+ his nerves and tightened his resolve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thought of the young man&mdash;his son&mdash;with a mixture of pain and
+ tenderness. But Paul was not the baby-boy he had put out of his arms with
+ a father's smile at One Man station. Paul was himself a man now; he had
+ coerced him at the last, neither did he understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blind instinct of flight began after a while to shape its own
+ direction. It was no new leaning with the packer. As many times as he had
+ crossed this trail he never had failed to experience the same pull. He
+ resisted no longer. He gave way to strange fancies and made them his
+ guides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At some time during his flight from the hospital, in one of those blanks
+ that overtook him, he knew not how, he had met with a great loss. The
+ words had slipped from his memory&mdash;of that message which had kept him
+ in fancied touch with his wife all these many deluding years. Without them
+ he was like a drunkard deprived of his habitual stimulant. The craving to
+ connect and hold them&mdash;for they came to him sometimes in tantalizing
+ freaks of memory, and slipped away again like beads rolling off a broken
+ thread&mdash;was almost the only form of mental suffering he was now
+ conscious of. What had become of the message itself? Had they left it
+ exposed to every heartless desecration in that abandoned spot?&mdash;a
+ scrap of paper driven like a bit of tumble-weed before the wind, snatched
+ at by spikes of sage, trampled into the mire of cattle, nuzzled by wild
+ beasts? Or, had they put it away with that other beast where he lay with
+ the scoff on his dead face? Out of dreams and visions of the night that
+ place of the parting ways called to him, and the time was now come when he
+ must go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He approached it by one of those desert trails that circle for miles on
+ the track of water and pounce as a bird drops upon its prey into the
+ trampled hollow at One Man station&mdash;a place for the gathering of
+ hoofs in the midst of the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could trace what might have been the foundation of a house, a few
+ blackened stones, a hearthstone showing where a chimney perhaps had stood,
+ but these evidences of habitation would never have been marked except by
+ one who knew where to look. He searched the ground over for signs of the
+ tragedy that bound him to that spot&mdash;a smiling desolation, a sunny
+ nothingness. The effect of this careless obliteration was quieting. Nature
+ had played here once with two men and a woman. One of the toy men was
+ lost, the other broken. She had forgotten where she put the broken one.
+ There were mounds which looked like graves, but the seeker knew that
+ artificial mounds in a place like this soon sink into hollows; and there
+ were hollows like open graves, filled with unsightly human rubbish, washed
+ in by the yearly rains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spent three days in the hollow, doing nothing, steeped in sunshine,
+ lying down to rest broad awake in the tender twilight, making his peace
+ with this place of bitter memory before bidding it good-by. His thoughts
+ turned eastward as the planets rose. Time he was working back towards
+ home. He would hardly get there if he started now, before his day was
+ done. He saw his mother's grave beside his father's, in the southeast
+ corner of the burying-ground, where the trees were thin. All who drove in
+ through the big gate of funerals could see the tall white shafts of the
+ Beviers and Brodericks and Van Eltens, but only those who came on foot
+ could approach his people in the gravelly side-hill plots. &ldquo;I'd like to be
+ put there alongside the old folks in that warm south corner.&rdquo; He could see
+ their names on the plain gray slate stones, rain-stained and green with
+ moss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the third May evening of his stay the horizon became a dust-cloud, the
+ setting sun a ball of fire. Loomed the figure of a rider topping the
+ heaving backs of his herd. All together they came lumbering down the
+ slopes, all heading fiercely for the water. The rider plunged down a
+ side-draw out of the main cloud. Clanking bells, shuffling hoofs, the
+ &ldquo;Whoop-ee-youp!&rdquo; came fainter up the gulch. The cowboy was not pleased as
+ he dashed by to see an earlier camp-fire smoking in the hollow. But he was
+ less displeased, being half French, than if he had been pure-bred
+ American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man, squatting by his cooking-fire, gave him a civil nod, and he
+ responded with a flourish of his quirt. The reek of sage smoke, the smell
+ of dust and cattle rose rank on the cooling air. It was good to Boniface,
+ son of the desert; it meant supper and bed, or supper and talk, for
+ &ldquo;Bonny&rdquo; Maupin (&ldquo;Bonny Moppin,&rdquo; it went in the vernacular) would talk
+ every other man to sleep, full or empty, with songs thrown in. To-night,
+ however, he must talk on an empty stomach, for his chuck wagon was not in
+ sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;W'ich way you travelin'?&rdquo; he began, lighting up after a long pull at his
+ flask. The old man had declined, though he looked as if he needed a drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;East about,&rdquo; was the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goin' far?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; summer's before us. I cal'late to keep moving till snow falls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shucks! You ain' pressed for time. Maybe you got some friend back there.
+ Goin' back to git married?&rdquo; He winked genially to point the jest and the
+ old man smiled indulgently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you set up and take a bite with me? You don't look to have much of
+ a show for supper along.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks, very much! I had bully breakfast at Rock Spring middlin' late
+ this morning. They butcherin' at that place. Five fat hog. My chuck wagon
+ he stay behin' for chunk of fresh pig. I won' spoil my appetide for that
+ tenderloin. Hol' on yourself an' take supper wis me. No?&mdash;That fellah
+ be 'long 'bout Chris'mas if he don' git los'! He always behin', pig or no
+ pig!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bonny strolled away collecting fire-wood. Presently he called back,
+ pointing dramatically with his small-toed boot. &ldquo;Who's been coyotin' round
+ here?&rdquo; The hard ground was freshly disturbed in spots as by the paws of
+ some small inquisitive animal. There was no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you say? Whose surface diggin's is these? I never know anybody do
+ some mining here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was me&rdquo;&mdash;Bonny backed a little nearer to catch the old man's
+ words. &ldquo;I was looking round here for something I lost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What luck you have? You fin' him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, now, doos it reely matter to you, sonny?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardner, it don' matter to me a d&mdash;n, if you say so! I was jus'
+ askin' myself what a man <i>would</i> look for if he los' it here. Since I
+ strike this 'ell of a place the very groun' been chewed up and spit out
+ reg'lar, one hundred times a year. 'T'is a gris' mill!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't gretly expect to find what I was lookin' for. I was just foolin'
+ around to satisfy myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That satisfy me!&rdquo; said Bonny pleasantly; and yet he was a trifle
+ discomfited. He strolled away again and began to sing with a boyish show
+ of indifference to having been called &ldquo;sonny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sally is the gal for me! Oh, Sally's the gal for me! On moonlight
+ night when the star is bright&mdash;Oh&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halloa! This some more your work, oncle? You ain' got no chicken wing for
+ arm if you lif' this.&mdash;Ah, be dam! I see what you lif' him with. All
+ same stove-lid.&rdquo; Talking and swearing to himself cheerfully, Bonny applied
+ the end of a broken whiffletree to the blunt lip of the old hearthstone
+ which marked the stage-house chimney. He had tried a step-dance on it and
+ found it hollow. More fresh digging, and marks upon the stone where some
+ prying tool had taken hold and slipped, showed he was not the first who
+ had been curious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There you go, over on you' back, like snap' turtle; I see where you lay
+ there before. What the dev'! I say!&rdquo; Bonny, much excited with his find,
+ extracted a rusty tin tobacco-box from the hole, pried open the spring lid
+ and drew forth its contents: a discolored canvas bag bulging with coin and
+ whipped around the neck with a leather whang. The canvas was rotten; Bonny
+ supported its contents tenderly as he brought it over to the old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oncle, I ask you' pardon for tappin' that safe. Pretty good lil'
+ nest-egg, eh? But now you got to find her some other place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That don't belong to me,&rdquo; said the old man indifferently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aw&mdash;don't be bashful! I onderstan' now what you los'. You dig here&mdash;there&mdash;migs
+ up the scent. I just happen to step on that stone&mdash;ring him, so, with
+ my boot-heel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That ain't my pile,&rdquo; the other persisted. &ldquo;I started to build a fire on
+ that stone two nights ago. It rung hollow like you say. I looked and found
+ what you found&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And put her back! My soul to God! An' you here all by you'self!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not? The stuff ain't mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who <i>is</i> she? How long since anybody live here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know,&mdash;good while, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sar! Look here! I open that bag. I count two hondre' thirteen
+ dolla'&mdash;make it twelve for luck, an' call it you' divvee! You strike
+ her first. What you say: we go snac'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't got any use for that money. You needn't talk to me about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got no h'use!&mdash;are you a reech man? Got you' private car waitin' for
+ you out in d' sagebrush? Sol' a mine lately?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know why it strikes you so funny. It's no concern of mine if a
+ man puts his money in the ground and goes off and leaves it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goes off and die! There was one man live here by himself&mdash;he die,
+ they say, 'with his boots on.' He, I think, mus' be that man belong to
+ this money. What an old stiff want with two hondre' thirteen dolla'? That
+ money goin' into a live man's clothes.&rdquo; Bonny slapped his chappereros, and
+ the dust flew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've no objection to its going into <i>your</i> clothes,&rdquo; said the old
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You thing I ain' particular, me? Well, eef the party underground was my
+ frien', and I knew his fam'ly, and was sure the money was belong to him&mdash;I'd
+ do differend&mdash;perhaps. Mais,&mdash;it is going&mdash;going&mdash;gone!
+ You won' go snac'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man smiled and looked steadily away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blas' me to h&mdash;l! but you aire the firs' man ever I strike that jib
+ at the sight of col' coin. She don' frighten me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bonny always swore when he felt embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sar! Look here! You fin' you'self so blame indifferend&mdash;s'pose
+ you <i>so</i> indifferend not to say nothing 'bout this, when my swamper
+ fellah git in. I don' wish to go snac' wis him. I don' feel oblige'. See?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you want to pester me about this money for!&rdquo; The old man was weary.
+ &ldquo;I didn't come here, lookin' for money, and I don't expect to take none
+ away with me. So I'll say good-night to ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hol' on, hol' on! Don' git mad. What time you goin' off in the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before you do, I shouldn't wonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But hol'! One fine idea&mdash;blazin' good idea&mdash;just hit me now in
+ the head! Wan' to come on to Chicago wis me? I drop this fellah at Felton.
+ He take the team back, and I get some one to help me on the treep. Why not
+ you? Ever tek' care of stock?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some consid'able years ago I used to look after stock. Guess I'd know an
+ ox from a heifer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ever handle 'em on cattle-car?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all there is, you feed 'em, and water 'em, and keep 'em on their
+ feets. If one fall down, all the others they have too much play. They
+ rock&rdquo;&mdash;Bonny exhibited&mdash;&ldquo;and fall over and pile up in heap. I
+ like to do one turn for you. We goin' the same way&mdash;you bring me the
+ good luck, like a bird in the han'. This is my clean-up, you understand.
+ You bring me the beautiful luck. You turn me up right bower first slap.
+ Now it's goin' be my deal. I like to do by you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packer turned over and looked up at the cool sky, pricked through with
+ early stars. He was silent a long time. His pale old face was like a fine
+ bit of carving in the dusk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you think?&rdquo; asked Moppin, almost tenderly. &ldquo;I thing you better come
+ wis me. You too hold a man to go like so&mdash;alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll have to think about it first;&mdash;let you know in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI. &mdash; INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A Rush of wheels and a spatter of hoofs coming up the drive sent Mrs.
+ Dunlop to the sitting-room window. She tried to see out through streaming
+ showers that darkened the panes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't that Mrs. Bogardus? Why, it is! Put on your shoes, Chauncey, quick!
+ Help her in 'n' take her horse to the shed. Take an umbrella with you.&rdquo;
+ Chauncey the younger, meekly drying his shoes by the kitchen fire, put
+ them on, not stopping to lace them, and slumped down the porch steps,
+ pursued by his mother's orders. She watched him a moment struggling with a
+ cranky umbrella, and then turned her attention to herself and the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus made her calls in the morning, and always plainly on
+ business. She had not seen the inside of Cerissa's parlor for ten years.
+ This was a grievance which Cerissa referred to spasmodically, being seized
+ with it when she was otherwise low in her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sakes! Can't I remember my mother telling how <i>her</i> mother used
+ to drive over and spend the afternoon, and bring her sewing and the baby&mdash;whichever
+ one was the baby. They called each other Chrissy and Angevine, and now she
+ don't even speak of her own children to us by their first names. It's
+ 'Mrs. Bowen' and 'Mr. Paul;' just as if she was talking to her servants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's that to us? We've got a good home here for as long as we want to
+ stay. She's easy to work for, if you do what she says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey respected Mrs. Bogardus's judgment and her straightforward
+ business habits. Other matters he left alone. But Cerissa was ambitious
+ and emotional, and she stayed indoors, doing little things and thinking
+ small thoughts. She resented her commanding neighbor's casual manners.
+ There was something puzzling and difficult to meet in her plainness of
+ speech, which excluded the personal relation. It was like the cut and
+ finish of her clothes&mdash;mysterious in their simplicity, and not to be
+ imitated cheaply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the two met, Cerissa was immediately reduced to a state of flimsy
+ apology which she made up for by being particularly hot and self-assertive
+ in speaking of the lady afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is the parlor, in perfect order,&rdquo; she fretted, as she stood waiting
+ to open the front door; &ldquo;but of course she wouldn't let me take her in
+ there&mdash;that would be too much like visiting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next moment she had corrected her facial expression, and was offering
+ smiling condolences to Mrs. Bogardus on the state of her attire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is only my jacket. You might put that somewhere to dry,&rdquo; said the lady
+ curtly. Raindrops sparkled on the wave of thick iron-gray hair that lifted
+ itself, with a slight turn to one side, from her square low brow. Her eyes
+ shone dark against the fresh wind color in her cheeks. She had the
+ straight, hard, ophidian line concealing the eyelid, which gives such a
+ peculiar strength to the direct gaze of a pair of dark eyes. If one
+ suspects the least touch of tenderness, possibly of pain, behind that iron
+ fold, it lends a fascination equal to the strength. There was some
+ excitement in Mrs. Bogardus's manner, but Cerissa did not know her well
+ enough to perceive it. She merely thought her looking handsomer, and, if
+ possible, more formidable than usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sat by the fire, folding her skirts across her knees, and showing the
+ edges of the most discouragingly beautiful petticoats,&mdash;a taste
+ perhaps inherited from her wide-hipped Dutch progenitresses. Mrs. Bogardus
+ reveled in costly petticoats, and had an unnecessary number of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How nice it is in here!&rdquo; she said, looking about her. Cerissa, with the
+ usual apologies, had taken her into the kitchen to dry her skirts. There
+ was a slight taint of steaming shoe leather, left by Chauncey when driven
+ forth. Otherwise the kitchen was perfection,&mdash;the family room of an
+ old Dutch farmhouse, built when stone and hardwood lumber were cheap,&mdash;thick
+ walls; deep, low window-seats; beams showing on the ceiling; a modern
+ cooking-stove, where Emily Bogardus could remember the wrought brass
+ andirons and iron backlog, for this room had been her father's
+ dining-room. The brick tiled hearth remained, and the color of those
+ century and a half old bricks made a pitiful thing of Cerissa's new
+ oil-cloth. The woodwork had been painted&mdash;by Mrs. Bogardus's orders,
+ and much to Cerissa's disgust&mdash;a dark kitchen green,&mdash;not that
+ she liked the color herself, but it was the artistic demand of the moment,&mdash;and
+ the place was filled with a green golden light from the cherry-trees close
+ to the window, which a break in the clouds had suddenly illumined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You keep it beautifully,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus, her eyes shedding
+ compliments as she looked around. &ldquo;I should not dare go in my own kitchen
+ at this time of day. There are no women nowadays who know how to work in
+ the way ladies used to work. If I could have such a housekeeper as you,
+ Cerissa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa flushed and bridled. &ldquo;What would Chauncey do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't expect you to be my housekeeper,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus smiled. &ldquo;But I
+ envy Chauncey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has come to ask a favor,&rdquo; thought Cerissa. &ldquo;I never knew her so
+ pleasant, for nothing. She wants me to do up her fruit, I guess.&rdquo; Cerissa
+ was mistaken. Mrs. Bogardus simply was happy&mdash;or almost happy&mdash;and
+ deeply stirred over a piece of news which had come to her in that
+ morning's mail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have telephoned Bradley not to send his men over on Monday. My son is
+ bringing his wife home. They may be here all summer. The place belongs to
+ them now. Did Chauncey tell you? Mr. Paul writes that he has some building
+ plans of his own, and he wishes everything left as it is for the present,
+ especially this house. He wants his wife to see it first just as it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, to be sure! They've been traveling a long time, haven't they? And
+ how is his health now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he is very well indeed. You will be glad not to have the trouble of
+ those carpenters, Cerissa? Pulling down old houses is dirty work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, dear! I wouldn't mind the dirt. Anything to get rid of that old rat's
+ nest on top of the kitchen chamber. I hate to have such out of the way
+ places on my mind. I can't get around to do every single thing, and it's
+ years&mdash;years, Mrs. Bogardus, since I could get a woman to do a
+ half-day's cleaning up there in broad daylight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus stared. What was the woman talking about!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I call it a regular eyesore on the looks of the house besides. And it
+ keeps all the old stories alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What stories?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, of course your father wasn't out of his head&mdash;we all know that&mdash;when
+ he built that upstairs room and slep' there and locked himself in every
+ night of his life. It was only on one point he was a little warped: the
+ fear of bein' robbed. A natural fear, too,&mdash;an old man over eighty
+ livin' in such a lonesome place and known to be well off. But&mdash;you'll
+ excuse my repeating the talk&mdash;but the story goes now that he re'ly
+ went insane and was confined up there all the last years of his life. And
+ that's why the windows have got bars acrost them. Everybody notices it,
+ and they ask questions. It's real embarrassin', for of course I don't want
+ to discuss the family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who asks questions?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus's eyes were hard to meet when her
+ voice took that tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the city folks out driving. They often drive in the big gate and
+ make the circle through the grounds, and they're always struck when they
+ see that tower bedroom with windows like a prison. They say, 'What's the
+ story about that room, up there?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When people ask you questions about the house, you can say you did not
+ live here in the owner's time and you don't know. That's perfectly simple,
+ isn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I do know! Everybody knows,&rdquo; said Cerissa hotly. &ldquo;It was the talk of
+ the whole neighborhood when that room was put up; and I remember how
+ scared I used to be when mother sent me over here of an errand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus rose and shook out her skirts. &ldquo;Will Chauncey bring my horse
+ when it stops raining? By the way, did you get the furniture down that was
+ in that room, Cerissa?&mdash;the old secretary? I am going to have it put
+ in order for Mr. Paul's room. Old furniture is the fashion now, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa caught her breath nervously. &ldquo;Mrs. Bogardus&mdash;I couldn't do a
+ thing about it! I wanted Chauncey to tell you. All last week I tried to
+ get a woman, or a man, to come and help me clear out that place, but just
+ as soon as they find out what's wanted&mdash;'You'll have to get somebody
+ else for that job,' they say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's the room, Mrs. Bogardus; if I was you&mdash;I'm doing now just as
+ I'd be done by&mdash;I would not take Mrs. Paul Bogardus up into that room&mdash;not
+ even in broad daylight; not if it was my son's wife, in the third month of
+ her being a wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, upon my word!&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus, smiling coldly. &ldquo;Do you mean to
+ say these women are afraid to go up there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was old Mary Hornbeck who started the talk. She got what she called
+ her 'warning' up there. And the fact is, she was a corpse within six
+ months from that day. Chauncey and me, we used to hear noises, but old
+ houses are full of noises. We never thought much about it; only, I must
+ say I never had any use for that part of the house. Chauncey keeps his
+ seeds and tools in the lower room, and some of the winter vegetables, and
+ we store the parlor stove in there in summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, about this 'warning'?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes! It was three years ago in May, and I remember it was some such a day
+ as this&mdash;showery and broken overhead, and Mary disappointed me; but
+ she came about noon, and said she'd put in half a day anyhow. She got her
+ pail and house-cloths; but she wasn't gone not half an hour when down she
+ come white as a sheet, and her mouth as dry as chalk. She set down all of
+ a shake, and I give her a drink of tea, and she said: 'I wouldn't go up
+ there again, not for a thousand dollars.' She unlocked the door, she said,
+ and stepped inside without thinkin'. Your father's old rocker with the
+ green moreen cushions stood over by the east window, where he used to sit.
+ She heard a creak like a heavy step on the floor, and that empty chair
+ across the room, as far as from here to the window, begun to rock as if
+ somebody had just rose up from them cushions. She watched it till it
+ stopped. Then she took another step, and the step she couldn't see
+ answered her, and the chair begun to rock again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was that all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma'am; that wasn't all. I don't know if you remember an old wall
+ clock with a brass ball on top and brass scrolls down the sides and a
+ painted glass door in front of the pendulum with a picture of a castle and
+ a lake? The paint's been wore off the glass with cleaning, so the pendulum
+ shows plain. That clock has not been wound since we come to live here. I
+ don't believe a hand has touched it since the night he was carried feet
+ foremost out of that room. But Mary said she could count the strokes go
+ tick, tick, tick! She listened till she could have counted fifty, for she
+ was struck dumb, and just as plain as the clock before her face she could
+ see the minute-hand and the pendulum, both of 'em dead still. Now, how do
+ you account for that!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told Chauncey about it, and he said it was all foolishness. Do all I
+ could he would go up there himself, that same evening. But he come down
+ again after a while, and he was almost as white as Mary. 'Did you see
+ anything?' I says. 'I saw what Mary said she saw,' says he, 'and I heard
+ what she heard.' But no one can make Chauncey own up that he believes it
+ was anything supernatural. 'There is a reason for everything,' he says.
+ 'The miracles and ghosts of one generation are just school-book learning
+ to the next; and more of a miracle than the miracles themselves.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chauncey shows his sense,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was real disturbed, though, I could see; and he told me particular not
+ to make any talk about it. I never have opened the subject to a living
+ soul. But when Mary died, within six months, folks repeated what she had
+ been saying about her 'warning.' The 'death watch' she called it. We can't
+ all of us control our feelings about such things, and she was a lonely
+ widow woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, do you believe that ticking is going on up there now?&rdquo; asked Mrs.
+ Bogardus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa looked uneasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is the door locked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I re'ly couldn't say,&rdquo; she confessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say that all you sensible people in this house have
+ avoided that room for three years? And you don't even know if the door is
+ locked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;I don't use that part for anything, and cleaning is wasted on a
+ place that's never used, and I can't <i>get</i> anybody&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not criticising your housekeeping. Will you go up there with me now,
+ Cerissa? I want to understand about this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, just now, do you mean? I'm afraid I haven't got the time this
+ morning, Mrs. Bogardus. Dinner's at half-past twelve. It's a quarter to
+ eleven&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well. You think the door is not locked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it is, the key must be in the door. Oh, don't go, please, Mrs.
+ Bogardus. Wait till Chauncey conies in&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you'd send Chauncey up when he does come in. Ask him to bring a
+ screw-driver.&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus rose and examined her jacket. It was still
+ damp. She asked for a cape, or some sort of wrap, as her waist was thin,
+ and the rain had chilled the morning air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of decency, Cerissa escorted her visitor across the hall
+ passage into the loom-room&mdash;a loom-room in name only for upwards of
+ three generations. Becky had devoted it to the rough work of the house,
+ and to certain special uses, such as the care of the butchering products,
+ the making of soft soap and root beer. Here the churning was done, by
+ hand, with a wooden dasher, which spread a circle of white drops, later to
+ become grease-spots. The floor of the loom-room was laid in large brick
+ tiles, more or less loose in their sockets, with an occasional earthy
+ depression marking the grave of a missing tile. Becky's method of cleaning
+ was to sluice it out and scrub it with an old broom. The seepage of
+ generations before her time had thus added their constant quota to the old
+ well's sum of iniquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus had not visited this part of the old house for many years.
+ After her father's death she had shrunk from its painful associations.
+ Later she grew indifferent; but as she passed now into the gloomy place&mdash;doubly
+ dark with the deep foliage of June on a rainy morning&mdash;she was afraid
+ of her own thoughts. Henceforth she was a woman with a diseased
+ consciousness. &ldquo;What can't be cured must be <i>seared</i>,&rdquo; flashed over
+ her as she set her face to the stairway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These stairs, leading up into the back attic or &ldquo;kitchen chamber,&rdquo; being
+ somewhat crowded for space, advanced two steps into the room below. As the
+ stair door opened outward, and the stairs were exceedingly steep and dark,
+ every child of the house, in turn, had suffered a bad fall in consequence;
+ but the arrangement remained in all its natural depravity, for &ldquo;children
+ must learn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little Emmy of the old days had loved to sit upon these steps, a trifle
+ raised above the kitchen traffic, yet cognizant of all that was going on,
+ and ready to descend promptly if she smelled fresh crullers frying, or
+ baked sweet apples steaming hot from the oven. If Becky's foot were heard
+ upon the stairs above, she would jump quick enough; but if the step had a
+ clumping, boyish precipitancy, she sat still and laughed, and planted her
+ back against the door. Often she had teased Adam in this way, keeping him
+ prisoner from his duties, helpless in his good nature either to scold her
+ or push her off. But once he circumvented her, slipping off his shoes and
+ creeping up the stairs again, and making his escape by the roof and the
+ boughs of the old maple. Then it was Emmy who was teased, who sat a
+ foolish half hour on the stairs alone and missed a beautiful ride to the
+ wood lot; but she would not speak to Adam for two days afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becky's had been the larger of the two bedrooms in the attic, Adam's the
+ smaller&mdash;tucked low under the eaves, and entered by crawling around
+ the big chimney that came bulking up to the light like a great tree caught
+ between house walls. The stairs hugged the chimney and made use of its
+ support. Adam would warm his hands upon it coming down on bitter mornings.
+ From force of habit, Emily Bogardus laid her smooth white hand upon the
+ clammy bricks. No tombstone could be colder than that heart of house
+ warmth now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The roof of the kitchen chamber had been raised a story higher, and the
+ chimney as it went up contracted to quite a modern size. This elevation
+ gave room for the incongruous tower bedroom that had hurt the symmetry of
+ the old house, spoiled its noble sweep of roof, and given rise to so much
+ unpleasant conjecture as to its use. It was this excrescence, the record
+ of those last unloved and unloving years of her father's life, which Mrs.
+ Bogardus would have removed, but was prevented by her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You go back now, Cerissa,&rdquo; she said to the panting woman behind her. &ldquo;I
+ see the key is in the lock. You may send Chauncey after a while; there is
+ no hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; gasped Cerissa. &ldquo;Do you see <i>that!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought there was something&mdash;something behind that slit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There isn't. Step this way. There, can't you see the light?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus grasped Cerissa by the shoulders and held her firmly in
+ front of a narrow loophole that pierced the partition close beside the
+ door. Light from the room within showed plainly; but it gave an
+ unpleasantly human expression to the entrance, like a furtive eye on the
+ watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would always be there,&rdquo; Cerissa whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father. If anybody wanted to see him after he shut himself in there
+ for the night, they had to stand to be questioned through that wall-slit
+ before he opened the door. Yes, ma'am! He was on the watch in there the
+ whole time like a thing in a trap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you afraid to go back alone?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus spoke with chilling
+ irony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerissa backed away in silence, her heart thumping. &ldquo;She's putting it on,&rdquo;
+ she said to herself. &ldquo;I never see her turn so pale. Don't tell <i>me</i>
+ she ain't afraid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a hanging shelf against the chimney on which a bundle of dry
+ herbs had been left to turn into dust. Old Becky might have put them there
+ the autumn before she died; or some successor of hers in the years that
+ were blank to the daughter of the house. As she pushed open the door a
+ sighing draught swept past her and seemed to draw her inward. It shook the
+ sere bundle. Its skeleton leaves, dissolving into motes, flickered an
+ instant athwart the light. They sifted down like ashes on the woman's dark
+ head as she passed in. Her color had faded, but not through fear of ghost
+ clocks. It was the searing process she had to face. And any room where she
+ sat alone with certain memories of her youth was to her a torture chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She's been up there an awful long time. I wouldn't wonder if she's
+ fainted away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would she faint at? I guess it's pretty cold, though. Give me some
+ more tea; put plenty of milk so I can drink it quick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey's matter of fact tone always comforted Cerissa when she was
+ nervous. She did not mind that he jeered or that his words were often
+ rude; no man of her acquaintance could say things nicely to women, or ever
+ tried. A certain amount of roughness passed for household wit. Chauncey
+ put the screw-driver in his pocket, his wife and son watching him with
+ respectful anxiety. He thought rather well of his own courage privately.
+ But the familiar details of the loom-room cheered him on his way, the
+ homely tools of his every-day work were like friendly faces nodding at
+ him. He knocked loudly on the door above, and was answered by Mrs.
+ Bogardus in her natural voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bosh&mdash;every bit of it bosh!&rdquo; he repeated courageously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was seated by the window in the chair with the green cushions. Her
+ face was turned towards the view outside. &ldquo;What a pity those cherries were
+ not picked before the rain,&rdquo; she observed. &ldquo;The fruit is bursting ripe;
+ I'm afraid you'll lose the crop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey moved forward awkwardly without answering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop there one moment, will you?&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus rose and demonstrated.
+ &ldquo;You notice those two boards are loose. Now, I put this chair here,&rdquo;&mdash;she
+ laid her hand on the back to still its motion. &ldquo;Step this way. You see?
+ The chair rocks of itself. So would any chair with a spring board under
+ it. That accounts for <i>that</i>, I think. Now come over here.&rdquo; Chauncey
+ placed himself as she directed in front of the high mantel with the clock
+ above it. She stood at his side and they listened in silence to that sound
+ which Mary Hornbeck, deceased, had deemed a spiritual warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you call that a 'ticking'? Is that like any sound an insect could
+ make?&rdquo; the mistress asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should call it more like a 'ting,'&rdquo; said Chauncey. &ldquo;It comes kind o'
+ muffled like through the chimbly&mdash;a person might be mistaken if they
+ was upset in their nerves considerable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What old people call the 'death-watch' is supposed to be an insect that
+ lives in the walls of old houses, isn't it? and gives warning with a
+ ticking sound when somebody is going to be called away? Now to me that
+ sounds like a soft blow struck regularly on a piece of hollow iron&mdash;say
+ the end of a stove-pipe sticking in the chimney. When I first came up
+ here, there was only a steady murmur of wind and rain. Then the clouds
+ thinned and the sun came out and drops began to fall&mdash;distinctly.
+ Your wife says the ticking was heard on a day like this, broken and
+ showery. Now, if you will unscrew that clock, I think you will find
+ there's a stove-pipe hole behind it; and a piece of pipe shoved into the
+ chimney just far enough to catch the drops as they gather and fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey went to work. He sweated in the airless room. The powerful screws
+ blunted the lips of his tool but would not start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess I'll have to give it up for to-day. The screws are rusted in
+ solid. Want I should pry her out of the woodwork?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, don't do that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus. &ldquo;Why should we spoil the panel?
+ This seems a very comfortable room. My son is right. It would be foolish
+ to tear it down. Such a place as this might be very useful if you people
+ would get over your notions about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never had no notions,&rdquo; Chauncey asserted. &ldquo;When the women git talkin'
+ they like to make out a good story, and whichever one sees the most and
+ hears the most makes the biggest sensation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus waited till he had finished without appearing to have heard
+ what he was saying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the key to this door?&rdquo; she laid her hand over a knob to the
+ right of the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess if there is one it's on the other side. Yes, it's in the
+ key-hole.&rdquo; Chauncey turned the knob and shoved and lifted. The door
+ yielded to his full strength, and he allowed Mrs. Bogardus to precede him.
+ She stepped into a room hardly bigger than a closet with one window,
+ barred like those in the outer room. It was fitted up with toilet
+ conveniences according to the best advices of its day. Over all the neat
+ personal arrangements there was the slur of neglect, a sad squalor which
+ even a king's palace wears with time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey tested the plumbing with a noise that was plainly offensive to
+ his companion, but she bore with it&mdash;also with his reminiscences
+ gathered from neighborhood gossip. &ldquo;He wa'n't fond of spending money, but
+ he didn't spare it here: this was his ship cabin when he started on his
+ last voyage. It looked funny&mdash;a man with all his land and houses
+ cooped up in a place like this; but he wanted to be independent of the
+ women. He hated to have 'em fussin' around him. He had a woman to come and
+ cook up stuff for him to help himself to; but she wouldn't stay here
+ overnight, nor he wouldn't let her. As for a man in the house,&mdash;most
+ men were thieves, he thought, or waiting their chance to be. It was real
+ pitiful the way he made his end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open that window and shut the door when you come out,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Bogardus. &ldquo;I will send some one to help you down with that secretary.
+ Cerissa knows about it. It is to be sent up on the Hill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII. &mdash; THE CASE STRIKES IN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Christine's marriage took place while Paul and Moya were lingering in the
+ Bruneau, for Paul's health ostensibly. Banks and Horace had been left to
+ the smiling irony of justice. They never had a straight chance to define
+ their conduct in the woods; for no one accused them. No awkward questions
+ were asked in the city drawing-rooms or at the clubs. For a tough half
+ hour or so at Fort Lemhi they had realized how they stood in the eyes of
+ those unbiased military judges. The shock had a bracing effect for a time.
+ Both boys were said to be much improved by their Western trip and by the
+ hardships of that frightful homeward march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus had matched her gift of Stone Ridge to her son, which was a
+ gift of sentiment, with one of more substantial value to her daughter,&mdash;the
+ income from certain securities settled upon her and her heirs. Banks was
+ carefully unprovided for. The big house in town was full of ghosts&mdash;the
+ ghosts that haunt such homes, made desolate by a breach of hearts. The
+ city itself was crowded with opportunities for giving and receiving pain
+ between mother and daughter. Christine had developed all the latent
+ hardness of her mother's race with a sickly frivolity of her own. She made
+ a great show of faith in her marriage venture. She boomed it in her
+ occasional letters, which were full of scarce concealed bravado as
+ graceful as snapping her fingers in her mother's face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus leased her house in town, and retired before the ghosts, but
+ not escaping them; Stone Ridge must be put in order for its new master and
+ mistress, and Stone Ridge had its own ghosts. She informed her absentees
+ that, before their return, she should have left for Southern California to
+ look after some investments which she had neglected there of late. It was
+ then she spoke of her plan for restoring the old house by pulling down
+ that addition which disfigured it; and Paul had objected to this erasure.
+ It would take from the house's veracity, he said. The words carried their
+ unintentional sting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was Moya's six lines at the bottom of his page that changed and
+ softened everything. Moya&mdash;always blessed when she took the
+ initiative&mdash;contrived, as swiftly as she could set them down, to say
+ the very words that made the home-coming a coming home indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will Madam Bogardus be pleased to keep her place as the head of her son's
+ house?&rdquo; she wrote. &ldquo;This foolish person he has married wants to be
+ anything rather than the mistress of Stone Ridge. She wants to be always
+ out of doors, and she needs to be. Oh, must you go away now&mdash;now when
+ we need you so much? It cannot be said here on paper how much <i>I</i>
+ need you! Am I not your motherless daughter? Please be there when we come,
+ and please stay there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For a little while then,&rdquo; said the lonely woman, smiling at the image of
+ that sweet, foolish person in her thoughts. &ldquo;For a little while, till she
+ learns her mistake.&rdquo; Such mistakes are the cornerstone of family
+ friendship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an uneventful summer on the Hill, but one of rather wearing
+ intensity in the inner relations of the household, one with another; for
+ nothing could be quite natural with a pit of concealment to be avoided by
+ all, and an air of unconsciousness to be carefully preserved in avoiding
+ it. Moya's success in this way was so remarkable that Paul half hated it.
+ How was it possible for her to speak to his mother so lightly; never the
+ least apparent premeditation or fear of tripping; how look at her with
+ such sweet surface looks that never questioned or saw beneath? He could
+ not meet his mother's eyes at all when they were alone together, or endure
+ a silence in her company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both women were of the type called elemental. They understood each other
+ without knowing why. Moya felt the desperate truth contained in the
+ mother's falsehood, and broke forth into passionate defense of her as
+ against her husband's silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered her one day by looking up a little green book of fairy tales
+ and reading aloud this fragment of &ldquo;The Golden Key.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'I never tell lies, even in fun.' (The mysterious Grandmother speaks.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'How good of you!' (says the Child in the Wood.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'I couldn't if I tried. It would come true if I said it, and then I
+ should be punished enough.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya's eyes narrowed reflectively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How constantly you are thinking of this! I think of it only when I am
+ with you. As if a woman like your mother, who has done <i>one thing</i>,
+ should be all that thing, and nothing more to us, her children!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya was giving herself up, almost immorally, Paul sometimes thought, to
+ the fascination Mrs. Bogardus's personality had for her. In a keenly
+ susceptible state herself, at that time, there was something calming and
+ strengthening in the older woman's perfected beauty, her physical poise,
+ and the fitness of everything she did and said and wore to the given
+ occasion. As a dark woman she was particularly striking in summer
+ clothing. Her white effects were tremendous. She did not pretend to study
+ these matters herself, but in years of experience, with money to spend,
+ she had learned well in whom to confide. When women are shut up together
+ in country houses for the summer, they can irritate each other in the most
+ foolish ways. Mrs. Bogardus never got upon your nerves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, for Paul, there was a poison in his mother's beauty, a dread in her
+ influence over his impressionable young wife, thrilled with the awakening
+ forces of her consonant being. Moya would drink deep of every cup that
+ life presented. Motherhood was her lesson for the day. &ldquo;She is a queen of
+ mothers!&rdquo; she would exclaim with an abandon that was painful to Paul; he
+ saw deformity where Moya was ready to kneel. &ldquo;I love her perfect love for
+ you&mdash;for me, even! She is above all jealousy. She doesn't even ask to
+ be understood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And oh, she knows, she knows! She has been through it all&mdash;in such
+ despair and misery&mdash;all that is before me, with everything in the
+ world to make it easy and all the beautiful care she gives me. She is the
+ supreme mother. And I never had a mother to speak to before. Don't, don't,
+ please, keep putting that dreadful thing between us now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Paul took the dreadful thing away with him and was alone with it, and
+ knew that his mother saw it in his eyes when their eyes met and avoided.
+ When, after a brief household absence, he would see her again he wondered,
+ &ldquo;Has she been alone with it? Has it passed into another phase?&rdquo;&mdash;as
+ of an incurable disease that must take its time and course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus did not spare her conscience in social ways all this time.
+ It was a part of her life to remember that she had neighbors&mdash;certain
+ neighbors. She included Paul without particularly consulting him whenever
+ it was proper for him to support her in her introduction of his wife to
+ the country-house folk, many of whom they knew in town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All his mother's friends liked Paul and supposed him to be very clever,
+ but they had never taken him seriously. &ldquo;Now, at last,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;he has
+ done something like other people. He is coming out.&rdquo; Experienced matrons
+ were pleased to flatter him on his choice of a bride. The daughters
+ studied Moya, and decided that she was &ldquo;different,&rdquo; but &ldquo;all right.&rdquo; She
+ had a careless distinction of her own. Some of her &ldquo;things&rdquo; were
+ surprisingly lovely&mdash;probably heirlooms; and army women are so clever
+ about clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would they spend the winter in town?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul replied absently: they had not decided. Probably they would not go
+ down till after the holidays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What an attractive plan? What an ideal family Christmas they would have
+ all together in the country! Christine had not been up all summer, had
+ she? Here Moya came to her husband's relief, through a wife's dual
+ consciousness in company, and covered his want of spirits with a flood of
+ foolish chatter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The smiling way in which women the most sincere can posture and prance on
+ the brink of dissimulation was particularly sickening to Paul at this
+ time. Why need they put themselves in situations where it was required?
+ The situations were of his mother's creation. He imagined she must suffer,
+ but had little sympathy with that side of her martyrdom. Moya seemed a
+ trifle feverish in her acceptance of these affairs of which she was
+ naturally the life and centre. A day of entertaining often faded into an
+ evening of subtle sadness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul would take her out into the moonlight of that deep inland country.
+ The trees were dark with leaves and brooded close above them; old
+ water-fences and milldams cast inky shadows on the still, shallow ponds
+ clasped in wooded hills. No region could have offered a more striking
+ contrast to the empty plains. Moya felt shut in with old histories. The
+ very ground was but moulding sand in which generations of human lives had
+ been poured, and the sand swept over to be reshaped for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not living our own life yet,&rdquo; Paul would say; not adding, &ldquo;We are
+ protecting her.&rdquo; Here was the beginning of punishment helplessly meted out
+ to this proud woman whose sole desire was towards her children&mdash;to
+ give, and not to receive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this is our Garden?&rdquo; Moya would muse. &ldquo;We are as nearly two alone as
+ any two could be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you include the Snake. We can't leave out the Snake, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Snake or Seraph&mdash;I don't believe I know the difference. Paul, I
+ cannot have you thinking things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I?&mdash;what do I think?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are thinking it is bad for me to be so much with her. You, as a man
+ and a husband, resent what she, as a woman and a wife, has dared to do.
+ And I, as another woman and wife, I say she could do nothing else and be
+ true. For, don't you see? She never loved him. The wifehood in her has
+ never been reached. She was a girl, then a mother, then a widow. How could
+ she&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think he would have claimed her as his wife? Oh, you do not know
+ him;&mdash;she has never known him. If we could be brave and face our duty
+ to the whole truth, and leave the rest to those sequences, never dreamed
+ of, that wait upon great acts. Such surprises come straight from God. Now
+ we can never know how he would have risen to meet a nobler choice in her.
+ He had not far to rise! Well, we have our share of blessings, including
+ piazza teas; but as a family we have missed one of the greatest spiritual
+ opportunities,&mdash;such as come but once in a lifetime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, if she was not ready for it, it was not <i>her</i> opportunity. God
+ is very patient with us, I believe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII. &mdash; RESTIVENESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mothers and sons are rarely very personal in their intimacy after the son
+ has taken to himself a wife. Apart from certain moments not appropriate to
+ piazza teas, Paul and his mother were perhaps as comfortable together as
+ the relation averages. It was much that they never talked emotionally.
+ Private judgments which we have refrained from putting into words may die
+ unfruitful and many a bitter crop be spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is Paul's apology for being happy in spite of himself&mdash;and of
+ us!&rdquo; Moya teased, as she admired the beautifully drawn plans for the
+ quarrymen's club-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn't need any apology; it's a very good thing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus,
+ ignoring double meanings. No caps that were flying around ever fitted her
+ head. Paul's dreams and his mother's practical experience had met once
+ more on a common ground of philanthropy. This time it was a workingmen's
+ club in which the interests of social and mental improvement were
+ conjoined with facilities for outdoor sport. Up to date philanthropy is an
+ expensive toy. Paul, though now a landowner, was far from rich in his own
+ right. His mother financed this as she had many another scheme for him.
+ She was more openhanded than heretofore, but all was done with that
+ ennuyéd air which she ever wore as of an older child who has outgrown the
+ game. It was in Moya and Moya's prospective maternity that her pride
+ reinstated itself. Her own history and generation she trod underfoot.
+ Mistakes, humiliations, whichever way she turned. Paul had never satisfied
+ her entirely in anything he did until he chose this girl for the mother of
+ his children. Now their house might come to something. Moya moved before
+ her eyes crowned in the light of the future. And that this noble and
+ innocent girl, with her perfect intuitions, should turn to <i>her</i> now
+ with such impetuous affection was perhaps the sweetest pain the blighted
+ woman had ever known. She lay awake many a night thinking mute blessings
+ on the mother and the child to be. Yet she resisted that generous
+ initiative so dear to herself, aware with a subtle agony of the pain it
+ gave her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day she said to Paul (they were driving home together through a bit of
+ woodland, the horses stepping softly on the mould of fallen leaves)&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ don't expect you to account for every dollar of mine you spend in helping
+ those who can be helped that way. You have a free hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;I have used your money freely&mdash;for a
+ purpose that I never have accounted for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you need more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; there is no need now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why is there not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was silent. &ldquo;I cannot go into particulars. It is a long story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does the purpose still exist?&rdquo; his mother asked sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does; but not as a claim&mdash;for that sort of help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me know if such a claim should ever return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will, mother,&rdquo; said Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came a day when mother and son reaped the reward of their mutual
+ forbearance. There was a night and a day when Paul became a boy again in
+ his mother's hands, and she took the place that was hers in Nature. She
+ was the priestess acquainted with mysteries. He followed her, and hung
+ upon her words. The expression of her face meant life and death to him.
+ The dreadful consciousness passed out of his eyes; tears washed it out as
+ he rose from his knees by Moya's bed, and his mother kissed him, and laid
+ his son in his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following summer saw the club-house and all its affiliations in
+ working order. The beneficiaries took to it most kindly, but were disposed
+ to manage it in their own way: not in all respects the way of the
+ founder's intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To make a gift complete, you must keep yourself out of it,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus
+ advised. &ldquo;You have done your part; now let them have it and run it
+ themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was not hungry for leadership, but he had hoped that his interest in
+ the men's amusements would bring him closer to them and equalize the
+ difference between the Hill and the quarry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have never worked with them; how can you expect to play with them?&rdquo;
+ was another of his mother's cool aphorisms. Alas! Paul, the son of the
+ poor man, had no work, and hence no play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was time to be making winter plans again. Mrs. Bogardus knew that her
+ son's young family was now complete without her presence. Moya had gained
+ confidence in the care of her child; she no longer brought every new
+ symptom to the grandmother. Yet Mrs. Bogardus put off discussing the
+ change, dreading to expose her own isolation, a point on which she was as
+ sensitive as if it were a crime. Paul was never entirely frank with her:
+ she knew he would not be frank in this. They never expressed their wills
+ or their won'ts to each other with the careless rudeness of a sound family
+ faith, and always she felt the burden of his unrelenting pity. She began
+ to take long drives alone, coming in late and excusing herself for dinner.
+ At such times she would send for her grandson in his nurse's arms to bid
+ him good-night. The mother would put off her own good-night, not to
+ intrude at these sessions. One evening, going up later to kiss her little
+ son, she found his crib empty, the nurse gone to her dinner. He was fast
+ asleep in his grandmother's arms, where she had held him for an hour in
+ front of the open fire in her bedroom. She looked up guiltily. &ldquo;He was so
+ comfortable! And his crib is cold. Will he take cold when Ellen puts him
+ back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure he won't,&rdquo; Moya whispered, gathering up the rosy sleeper. But
+ she was disturbed by the breach of bedtime rules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the drawing-room a few nights later she said energetically to Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One might as well be dead as to live with a grudge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good grudge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are no good grudges.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are some honest ones&mdash;honestly come by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't care how they are come by. Grudges 'is p'ison.'&rdquo; She laughed, but
+ her cheeks were hot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know that Christine has been at death's door? Your mother heard of
+ it&mdash;through Mrs. Bowen! Was that why you didn't show me her letter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not in my letter from Mrs. Bowen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think she has known it some time,&rdquo; said Moya, &ldquo;and kept it to herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Bowen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother. Isn't it terrible? Think how Chrissy must have needed her.
+ They need each other so! Christine was her constant thought. How can all
+ that change in one year! But she cannot go to Banks Bowen's house without
+ an invitation. We must go to New York and make her come with us&mdash;we
+ must open the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Paul, &ldquo;I have seen it was coming. In the end we always do the
+ thing we have forsworn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> was the one. I take it back. Your work is there. I know it calls
+ you. Was not Mrs. Bowen's letter an appeal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She must think you a deserter. And there is bigger work for you, too!
+ Here is a great political fight on, and my husband is not in it. Every man
+ must slay his dragon. There is a whole city of dragons!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; smiled Paul; &ldquo;I see. You want me to put my legs under the same
+ cloth with Banks and ask him about his golf score.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you want to fight him, have it out on public grounds; fight him in
+ politics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are on the same side!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moya laughed, but she looked a little dashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Banks comes of gentlemen. He inherited his opinions,&rdquo; said Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He may have inherited a few other things, if we could have patience with
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sorry for Banks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be sorry for him&mdash;when he meets you. He has been spared that
+ too long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dispenser of destinies, I bow as I always do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will speak to your mother at once?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do it beautifully?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As well as I know how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you have had such practice! How good it would be if we could only
+ dare to quarrel in this family! You and I&mdash;of course!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>We</i> quarrel, of course!&rdquo; laughed Paul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I <i>love</i> to quarrel with you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do it beautifully. You have had such practice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am so happy! It is clear to me now that we shall live down this misery.
+ Christine will love to see me again; I know she will. A wife is a very
+ different thing from a girl&mdash;a haughty girl!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think the wife of Banks Bowen might be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And we'll part with our ancient and honorable grudge! We are getting too
+ big for it. <i>We</i> are parents!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul made the proposition to his mother and she agreed to it in every
+ particular save the one. She would remain at Stone Ridge. It was
+ impossible to move her. Moya was in despair. She had cultivated an
+ overweening conscience in her relations with Mrs. Bogardus. It turned upon
+ her now and showed her the true state of her own mind at the thought of
+ being Two once more and alone with the child God had given them. Mrs.
+ Bogardus appeared to see nothing but her own interests in the matter. She
+ had made up her mind. And in spite of the conscientious scruples on all
+ sides, the hedging and pleading and explaining, all were happier in the
+ end for her decision. She herself was softened by it, and she yielded one
+ point in return. Paul had steadily opposed his mother's plan of
+ housekeeping, alone with one maid and a man who slept at the stables. The
+ Dunlops, as it happened, were childless for the winter, young Chauncey
+ attending a &ldquo;commercial college&rdquo; in a neighboring town. After many
+ interviews and a good deal of self-importance on Cerissa's part, the pair
+ were persuaded to close the old house and occupy the servants' wing on the
+ Hill, as a distinct family, yet at hand in case of need. It was late
+ autumn before all these arrangements could be made. Paul and Moya, leaving
+ the young scion aged nineteen months in the care of his nurse and his
+ grandmother, went down the river to open the New York house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV. &mdash; INDIAN SUMMER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The upper fields of Stone Ridge, so the farmers said, were infested that
+ autumn by a shy and solitary vagrant, who never could be met with face to
+ face, but numbers of times had been seen across the width of a lot,
+ climbing the bars, or closing a gate, or vanishing up some crooked lane
+ that quickly shut him from view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would look after that old chap if I was you, Chauncey. He'll be smoking
+ in your hay barns, and burn you out some o' these cold nights.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey took these neighborly warnings with good-humored indifference. &ldquo;I
+ haven't seen no signs of his doin' any harm,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Anybody's at
+ liberty to walk in the fields if there ain't a 'No Trespass' posted. I
+ rather guess he makes his bed among the corn stouks. I see prints of
+ someone's feet, goin' and comin'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus was more herself in those days than she had been at any time
+ since the great North-western wilderness sent her its second message of
+ fear. Old memories were losing their sting. She could bear to review her
+ decision with a certain shrinking hardihood. Had the choice been given her
+ to repeat, her action had been the same. In so far as she had perjured
+ herself for the sake of peace in the family, she owned the sacrifice was
+ vain; but her own personality was the true reason for what she had done.
+ She was free in her unimpeachable widowhood&mdash;a mother who had never
+ been at heart a wife. She feared no ghosts this keen autumn weather, at
+ the summit of her conscious powers. Her dark eye unsheathed its glance of
+ authority. It was an eye that went everywhere, and everywhere was met with
+ signs that praised its oversight. Here was an out-worn inheritance which
+ one woman, in less than a third of her lifetime, had developed into a
+ competence for her son. He could afford to dream dreams of beneficence
+ with his mother to make them good. Yes, he needed her still. His child was
+ in her keeping; and, though brief the lease, that trust was no accident.
+ It was the surest proof he could have given her of his vital allegiance.
+ In the step which Paul and Moya were taking, she saw the first promise of
+ that wisdom she had despaired of in her son. In the course of years he
+ would understand her. And Christine? She rested bitterly secure in her
+ daughter's inevitable physical need of her. Christine was a born parasite.
+ She had no true pride; she was capable merely of pique which would wear
+ itself out and pass into other forms of selfishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This woman had been governed all her life by a habit of decision, and a
+ strong personality rooted in the powers of nature. Therefore she was
+ seldom mistaken in her conclusions when they dealt with material results.
+ Occasionally she left out the spirit; but the spirit leaves out no one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her long dark skirts were sweeping the autumn grass at sunset as she paced
+ back and forth under the red-gold tents of the maples. It was a row of
+ young trees she had planted to grace a certain turf walk at the top of the
+ low wall that divided, by a drop of a few feet, the west lawn at Stone
+ Ridge from the meadow where the beautiful Alderneys were pastured. The
+ maples turned purple as the light faded out of their tops and struck flat
+ across the meadow, making the grass vivid as in spring. Two spots of color
+ moved across it slowly&mdash;a young woman capped and aproned, urging
+ along a little trotting child. Down the path of their united shadows they
+ came, and the shadows had reached already the dividing wall. The waiting
+ smile was sweet upon the grandmother's features; her face was transformed
+ like the meadow into a memory of spring. The child saw her, and waved to
+ her with something scarlet which he held in his free hand. She admired the
+ stride of his brown legs above their crumpled socks, the imperishable look
+ of health on his broad, sweet glowing face. She lifted him high in her
+ embrace and bore him up the hill, his dusty shoes dangling against her
+ silk front breadths, his knees pressed tight against her waist, and over
+ her shoulder he flourished the scarlet cardinal flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where have you been with him so long?&rdquo; she asked the nursemaid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only up in the lane, as far as the three gates, ma'am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then where did he get this flower?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the pretty Irish girl, half scared by her tone, and tempted to
+ prevaricate. &ldquo;Why&mdash;he must have picked it, I guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in the lane. It's a swamp-flower. It doesn't grow anywhere within
+ four miles of the lane!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must have been the old man gev it him then,&rdquo; said the maid. &ldquo;Is it
+ unhealthy, ma'am? I tried to get it from him, but he screamed and fussed
+ so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What old man do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, him that was passin' up the lane. I didn't see him till he was clean
+ by&mdash;and Middy had the flower. I don't know where in the world he
+ could have got it, else, for we wasn't one step out of the lane, was we,
+ Middy! That's the very truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where were you when strangers were giving him flowers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, sure, ma'am, I was only just a step away be the fence, having a word
+ with one o' the boys. I was lookin' in the field, speakin' to him and he
+ was lookin' at me with me back to the lane. 'There's the old man again,'
+ he says, shiftin' his eye. I turned me round and there, so he was, but he
+ was by and walkin' on up the lane. And Middy had the flower. He wouldn't
+ be parted from it and squeezed it so tight I thought the juice might be
+ bad on his hands, and he promised he'd not put it to his mouth. I kep' my
+ eye on him. Ah, the nasty, na-asty flower! Give it here to Katy till I
+ throw it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's no harm in the flower. But there is harm in strangers making up
+ to him when your back is turned. Don't you know the dreadful things we
+ read in the papers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus said no more. It was Middy's supper-time. But later she
+ questioned Katy particularly concerning this old man who was spoken of
+ quite as if his appearance were taken for granted in the heart of the
+ farm. Katy recalled one other day when she had seen him asleep as she
+ thought in a corner of the fence by the big chestnut tree when she and the
+ boy were nutting. They had moved away to the other side of the tree, but
+ while she was busy hunting for nuts Middy had strayed off a bit and
+ foregathered with the old man, who was not asleep at all, but stood with
+ his back to her pouring a handful of big fat chestnuts into the child's
+ little skirt, which he held up. She called to him and the old man had
+ stepped back, and the nuts were spilled. Middy had cried and made her pick
+ them up, and when that was done the stranger was gone quite out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey, too, was questioned, and testified that the old man of the
+ fields was no myth. But he deprecated all this exaggerated alarm. The
+ stranger was some simple-minded old work-house candidate putting off the
+ evil day. In a few weeks he would have to make for shelter in one of the
+ neighboring towns. Chauncey could not see what legal hold they had upon
+ him even if they could catch him. He hardly came under the vagrancy law,
+ since he had neither begged, nor helped himself appreciably to the means
+ of subsistence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is just the point,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus insisted. &ldquo;He has the means&mdash;from
+ somewhere&mdash;to lurk around here and make friends with that child.
+ There may be a gang of kidnappers behind him. He is the harmless looking
+ decoy. I insist that you keep a sharp lookout, Chauncey. There shall be a
+ hold upon him, law or no law, if we catch him on our ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold rain set in. Paul and Moya wrote of delays in the house
+ preparations, and hoped the grandmother was not growing tired of her
+ charge. On the last of the rainy days, in a burst of dubious sunshine,
+ came a young girl on horseback to have tea with Mrs. Bogardus. She was one
+ of that lady's discoverers, so she claimed, Miss Sallie Remsen, very
+ pretty and full of fantastic little affectations founded on her intense
+ appreciation of the picturesque. She called Mrs. Bogardus &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; and
+ likened her to various female personages in history more celebrated for
+ strength of purpose than for the Christian virtues. Mrs. Bogardus, in her
+ restful ignorance of such futilities, went no deeper into these allusions
+ than their intention, which she took to be complimentary. Miss Sallie
+ hugged herself with joy when the rain came down in torrents for a clear-up
+ shower. Her groom was sent home with a note to inform her mother that Mrs.
+ Bogardus wished to keep her overnight. All the mothers were flattered when
+ Mrs. Bogardus took notice of their daughters,&mdash;even much grander
+ dames than she herself could pretend to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had a charming little dinner by themselves to the tune of the rain
+ outside, and were having their coffee by the drawing-room fire; and Miss
+ Sallie was thinking by what phrase one could do justice to the massive,
+ crass ugliness of that self-satisfied apartment, furnished in the hideous
+ sixties, when the word was sent in that Mrs. Dunlop wished to speak with
+ Mrs. Bogardus. Something of Cerissa's injured importance survived the
+ transmission of the message, causing Mrs. Bogardus to smile to herself as
+ she rose. Cerissa was waiting in the dining-room. She kept her seat as
+ Mrs. Bogardus entered. Her eyes did not rise higher than the lady's dress,
+ which she examined with a fierce intentness of comparison while she opened
+ her errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you'd like to know you've got a strange lodger down to the old
+ house. I don't seem to ever get moved!&rdquo; she enlarged. &ldquo;I'm always runnin'
+ down there after first one thing 'n' another we've forgot. This morning 't
+ was my stone batter-pot. Chauncey said he thought it was getting cold
+ enough for buckwheat cakes. I don't suppose you want to have stray tramps
+ in there in the old house, building fires in the loom-room, where, if a
+ spark got loose, it would blaze up them draughty stairs, and the whole
+ house would go in a minute.&rdquo; Cerissa stopped to gain breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Making fires? Are you sure of that? Has any smoke been seen coming out of
+ that chimney?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it's been raining so! And the trees have got so tall! But I could
+ show you the shucks an' shells he's left there. I know how we left it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had better speak&mdash;No; I will see Chauncey in the morning.&rdquo; Mrs.
+ Bogardus never, if she could avoid it, gave an order through a third
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I thought I'd just step in. Chauncey said 't was no use disturbing
+ you to-night, but he's just that way&mdash;so easy about everything! I
+ thought you wouldn't want to be harboring tramps this wet weather when
+ most anybody would be tempted to build a fire. I'm more concerned about
+ what goes on down there now we're <i>out</i> of the house! I seem to have
+ it on my mind the whole time. A house is just like a child: the more you
+ don't see it the more you worry about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm glad you have such a home feeling about the place,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Bogardus, avoiding the onset of words. &ldquo;Well, good-evening, Cerissa. Thank
+ you for your trouble. I will see about it in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus mentioned what she had just heard to Miss Sallie, who
+ remarked, with her keen sense of antithesis, what a contrast <i>that</i>
+ fireside must be to <i>this</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which fireside?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, your lodger upon the cold ground,&mdash;making his little bit of a
+ stolen blaze in that cavern of a chimney in the midst of the wet trees!
+ What a nice thing to have an unwatched place like that where a poor bird
+ of passage can creep in and make his nest, and not trouble any one. Think
+ what Jean Valjeans one might shelter&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What 'angels unawares.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be unawares, my dear,&mdash;very much unawares,&mdash;when I
+ shelter any angels of that sort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you wouldn't turn him out, such weather as this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The house is not mine, in the first place,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus explained as to
+ a child. &ldquo;I can't entertain tramps or even angels on my son's premises,
+ when he's away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he! He would build the fires himself, and make up their beds,&rdquo;
+ laughed Miss Sallie. &ldquo;If he were here, I believe he would start down there
+ now, and stock the place with everything you've got in the house to eat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope he'd leave us a little something for breakfast,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Bogardus a trifle coldly. But she did not mention the cause of her
+ uneasiness about this particular visitor. She never defended herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Sallie was delighted with her callousness to the sentimental rebuke
+ which had been rather rubbed in. It was so unmodern; one got so weary of
+ fashionable philanthropy, women who talked of their social sympathies and
+ their principles in life. She almost hoped that Mrs. Bogardus had neither.
+ Certainly she never mentioned them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did she say? Did she tell you what I said to her last night?&rdquo;
+ Cerissa questioned her husband feverishly after his interview with Mrs.
+ Bogardus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She didn't mention your name,&rdquo; Chauncey took some pleasure in stating.
+ &ldquo;If you hadn't told me yourself, I shouldn't have known you'd meddled in
+ it at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's she going to do about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How crazy you women are! 'Cause some poor old Sooner-die-than-work warms
+ his bones by a bit of fire that wouldn't scare a chimbly swaller out of
+ its nest! Don't you s'pose if there'd been any fire there to speak of, I'd
+ 'a' seen it? What am I here for? Now I've got to drop everything, and git
+ a padlock on that door, and lock it up every night, and search the whole
+ place from top to bottom for fear there's some one in there hidin' in a
+ rathole!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chauncey! If you've got to do that I don't want you to go in there alone.
+ You take one of the men with you; and you better have a pistol or one of
+ the dogs anyhow. Suppose you was to ketch some one in there, and corner
+ him! He might turn on you, and shoot you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you wouldn't work yourself up so about nothin' at all! Want me to
+ make a blame jackass of myself raisin' the whole place about a potato-peel
+ or a bacon-rind!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you might have some little regard for my feelings,&rdquo; Cerissa
+ whimpered. &ldquo;If you ain't afraid, I'm afraid for you; and I don't see
+ anything to be ashamed of either. I wish you <i>wouldn't</i> go <i>alone</i>
+ searching through that spooky old place. It just puts me beside myself to
+ think of it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well! That's enough about it anyhow. I ain't going to do anything
+ foolish, and you needn't think no more about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether it was the effect of his wife's fears, or his promise to her, or
+ the inhospitable nature of his errand founded on suspicion, certainly
+ Chauncey showed no spirit of rashness in conducting his search. He knocked
+ the mud off his boots loudly on the doorsill before proceeding to attach
+ the padlock to the outer door. He searched the loom-room, lighting a
+ candle and peering into all its cobwebbed corners. He examined the rooms
+ lately inhabited, unlocking and locking doors behind him noisily with
+ increasing confidence in the good old house's emptiness. Still, in the
+ fireplace in the loom-room there were signs of furtive cooking which a
+ housekeeper's eye would infallibly detect. He saw that the search must
+ proceed. It was not all a question of his wife's fears, as he opened the
+ stair-door cautiously and tramped slowly up towards the tower bedroom. He
+ could not remember who had gone out last, on the day the old secretary was
+ moved down. There had been four men up there, and&mdash;yes, the key was
+ still in the lock outside. He clutched it and it fell rattling on the
+ steps. He swung the door open and stared into the further darkness beyond
+ his range of vision. He waved his candle as far as his arm would reach.
+ &ldquo;Anybody <i>in</i> here?&rdquo; he shouted. The silence made his flesh prick.
+ &ldquo;I'm goin' to lock up now. Better show up. It's the last chance.&rdquo; He
+ waited while one could count ten. &ldquo;Anybody in here that wants to be let
+ free? Nobody's goin' to hurt ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his anxious relief there was no reply. But as he listened, he heard the
+ loud, measured tick, tick, of the old clock, appalling in the darkness, on
+ the silence of that empty room. Chauncey could not have told just how he
+ got the door to, nor where he found strength to lock it and drag his feet
+ downstairs, but the hand that held the key was moist with cold
+ perspiration as he reached the open air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if that's rain I'd like to know where it comes from!&rdquo; He looked up
+ at the moon breaking through drifting clouds. The night was keen and
+ clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I was to tell that to Cerissa she'd never go within a mile o' that
+ house again! Maybe I was mistaken&mdash;but I ain't goin' back to see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning on calmer reflection he changed his mind about removing the
+ lawn-mower and other hand-tools from the loom-room as he had determined
+ overnight should be done. The place continued to be used as a storeroom,
+ open by day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At night it was Chauncey's business to lock it up, and he was careful to
+ repeat his search&mdash;as far as the stair-door. Never did the silent
+ room above give forth a protest, a sound of human restraint or occupation.
+ He reported to the mistress that all was snug at the old house, and nobody
+ anywhere about the place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV. &mdash; THE FELL FROST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After the rain came milder days. The still white mornings slowly
+ brightened into hazy afternoons. The old moon like a sleep walker stood
+ exposed in the morning sky. The roads to Stone Ridge were deep in fallen
+ leaves. Soft-tired wheels rustled up the avenue and horses' feet fell
+ light, as the last of the summer neighbors came to say good-by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a party of four&mdash;Miss Sallie and a good-looking youth of the
+ football cult on horseback, her mother and an elder sister, the delicate
+ Miss Remsen, in a hired carriage. Their own traps had been sent to town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tea was served promptly, as the visitors had a long road home before their
+ dinner-hour. In the reduced state of the establishment it was Katy who
+ brought the tea while Cerissa looked after her little charge. Cerissa sat
+ on the kitchen porch sewing and expanding under the deep attention of the
+ cook; they could see Middy a little way off on the tennis-court wiping the
+ mud gravely from a truant ball he had found among the nasturtiums. All was
+ as peaceful as the time of day and the season of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Cerissa solemnly. &ldquo;Old Abraham Van Elten was too much cumbered
+ up with this world to get quit of it as easy as some. If his spirit is
+ burdened with a message to anybody it's to <i>her</i>. He died
+ unreconciled to her, and she inherited all this place in spite of him, as
+ you may say. I've come as near believin' in such things since the goings
+ on up there in that room&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She wants Middy fetched in to see the comp'ny,&rdquo; cried Katy, bursting into
+ the sentence. &ldquo;Where is he, till I clean him? And she wants some more
+ bread and butter as quick as ye can spread it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Katy!&rdquo; said Cerissa slowly, with severe emphasis. &ldquo;When I was a
+ girl, my mother used to tell me it wasn't manners to&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haven't got time to hear about yer mother,&rdquo; said Katy rudely. &ldquo;What
+ have ye done with me boy?&rdquo; The tennis-court lay vacant on the terrace in
+ the sun; the steep lawn sloped away and dipped into the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't call,&rdquo; said the cook warily. &ldquo;It'll only scare her. He was there
+ only a minute ago. Run, Katy, and see if he's at the stables.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not noticed, except by Mrs. Bogardus, that no Katy, and no boy, and
+ no bread and butter, had appeared. Possibly the last deficiency had
+ attracted a little playful attention from the young horseback riders, who
+ were accusing each other of eating more than their respective shares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Miss Sallie perceived there was something on her hostess's mind.
+ &ldquo;Where is John Middleton?&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Katy is dressing him all over,
+ from head to foot, isn't she? I hope she isn't curling his hair. John
+ Middleton has such wonderful hair! I refuse to go back to New York till I
+ have introduced you to John Middleton Bogardus,&rdquo; she announced to the
+ young man, who laughed at everything she said. Mrs. Bogardus smiled
+ vacantly and glanced at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me go find Katy,&rdquo; cried Miss Sally. Katy entered as she spoke, and
+ said a few words to the mistress. &ldquo;Excuse me.&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus rose hastily.
+ She asked Miss Sallie to take her place at the tea-tray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The boy&mdash;they cannot find him. Don't say anything.&rdquo; She had turned
+ ashy white, and Katy's pretty flushed face had a wild expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In five minutes the search had begun. Mrs. Bogardus was at the telephone,
+ calling up the quarry, for she was short of men. One order followed
+ another quickly. Her voice was harsh and deep. She had frankly forgotten
+ her guests. Embarrassed by their own uselessness, yet unable to take
+ leave, they lingered and discussed the mystery of this sudden, acute
+ alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the sore spot,&rdquo; said Miss Sally sentimentally. &ldquo;You know her
+ husband was missing for years before she gave him up; and then that
+ dreadful time, three years ago, when they were so frightened about Paul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having spread the alarm, Mrs. Bogardus took the field in person. Her head
+ was bare in the keen, sunset light. She moved with strong, fleet steps,
+ but a look of sudden age stamped her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go back, all of you!&rdquo; she said to the women, who crowded on her heels.
+ &ldquo;There are plenty of places to look.&rdquo; Her stern eyes resisted their
+ frightened sympathy. She was not ready to yield to the consciousness of
+ her own fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the old house she went, by some sure instinct that told her the road to
+ trouble. But her trouble stood off from her, and spared her for one moment
+ of exquisite relief; as if the child of Paul and Moya had no part in what
+ was waiting for her. The door at the foot of the stairs stood open. She
+ heard a soft, repeated thud. Panting, she climbed the stairs; and as she
+ rounded the shoulder of the chimney, there, on the top step above her,
+ stood the fair-haired child, making the only light in the place. He was
+ knocking, with his foolish ball, on the door of the chamber of fear. Three
+ generations of the living and the dead were brought together in this coil
+ of fate, and the child, in his happy innocence, had joined the knot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman crouching on the stairs could barely whisper, &ldquo;Middy!&rdquo; lest if
+ she startled him he might turn and fall. He looked down at her,
+ unsurprised, and paused in his knocking. &ldquo;Man&mdash;in there&mdash;won't
+ 'peak to Middy!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She crept towards him and sat below him, coaxing him into her lap. The
+ strange motions of her breast, as she pressed his head against her, kept
+ the boy quiet, and in that silence she heard an inner sound&mdash;the
+ awful pulse of the old clock beating steadily, calling her, demanding the
+ evidence of her senses,&mdash;she who feared no ghosts,&mdash;beating out
+ the hours of an agony she was there to witness. And she was yet in time.
+ The hapless creature entrapped within that room dragged its weight slowly
+ across the floor. The clock, sole witness and companion of its sufferings,
+ ticked on impartially. Neither is this any new thing, it seemed to say. A
+ life was starved in here before&mdash;not for lack of food, but love,&mdash;love,&mdash;love!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She carried the child out into the air, and he ran before her like a
+ breeze. The women who met them stared at her sick and desperate face. She
+ made herself quickly understood, and as each listener drained her meaning
+ the horror spread. There was but one man left on the place, within call,
+ he with the boyish face and clean brown hands, who had ridden across the
+ fields for an afternoon's idle pleasure. He stepped to her side and took
+ the key out of her hand. &ldquo;You ought not to do this,&rdquo; he said gently, as
+ their eyes met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,&rdquo; she counted mechanically. &ldquo;He has been in
+ there six days and seven nights by my orders.&rdquo; She looked straight before
+ her, seeing no one, as she gave her commands to the women: fire and hot
+ water and stimulants, in the kitchen of the old house at once, and another
+ man, if one could be found to follow her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two figures moving across the grass might have stepped out of an
+ illustration in the pages of some current magazine. In their thoughts they
+ had already unlocked the door of that living death and were face to face
+ with the insupportable facts of nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morbid, sickening, prison odor met them at the door&mdash;humanity's
+ helpless protest against bolts and bars. Again the young man begged his
+ companion not to enter. She took one deep breath of the pure outside air
+ and stepped before him. They searched the emptiness of the barely
+ furnished room. The clock ticked on to itself. Mrs. Bogardus's companion
+ stood irresolute, not knowing the place. The fetid air confused his
+ senses. But she went past him through the inner door, guided by
+ remembrance of the sounds she had heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had seen it. She approached it cautiously, stooping for a better view,
+ and closing in upon it warily, as one cuts off the retreat of a creature
+ in the last agonies of flight. Her companion heard her say: &ldquo;Show me your
+ face!&mdash;Uncover his face,&rdquo; she repeated, not moving her eyes as he
+ stepped behind her. &ldquo;He will not let me near him. Uncover it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thing in the corner had some time been a man. There was still enough
+ manhood left to feel her eyes and to shrink as an earthworm from the
+ spade. He had crawled close to the baseboard of the room. An old man's
+ ashen beard straggled through the brown claws wrapped about the face. As
+ the dust of the threshing floor to the summer grain, so was his likeness
+ to one she remembered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must see that man's face!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;He will die if I touch him.
+ Take away his hands.&rdquo; It was done, with set teeth, and the face of the
+ football hero was bathed in sweat. He breathed through tense nostrils, and
+ a sickly whiteness spread backward from his lips. Suddenly he loosed his
+ burden. It fell, doubling in a ghastly heap, and he rushed for the open
+ air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus groaned. She raised herself up slowly, stretching back her
+ head. Her face was like the terrible tortured mask of the Medusa. She had
+ but a moment in which to recover herself. Deliberately she spoke when her
+ companion returned and stood beside her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was my husband. If he lives I am still his wife. You are not to
+ forget this. It is no secret. Are you able to help me now? Get a blanket
+ from the women. I hear some one coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She waited, with head erect and eyes closed and rigid tortured lips apart,
+ till the feet were heard at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI. &mdash; PEACE TO THIS HOUSE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Remsen and her delicate daughter had driven away to avoid excitement
+ and the night air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chauncey hovered round the piazza steps, talking, with but little
+ encouragement, to Miss Sallie and the young man who had become the centre
+ of all eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see how anybody on the face of the earth could blame her, nor me
+ either!&rdquo; Chauncey protested. &ldquo;If the critter wanted to git out, why
+ couldn't he say so? I stood there holdin' the door open much as five
+ minutes. 'Who's in there?' I says. I called it loud enough to wake the
+ dead. 'Nobody wants to hurt ye,' says I. There want nothing to be afraid
+ of. He hadn't done nothing anyway. It's the strangest case ever I heard
+ tell of. And the doctor don't think he was much crazy either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can he live?&rdquo; asked Miss Sallie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's alive now, but doctor don't know how long he'll last. There he comes
+ now. I must go and git his horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor, who seemed nervous,&mdash;he was a young local practitioner,&mdash;asked
+ to speak with Miss Sallie's hero apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Mrs. Bogardus say anything when she first saw that man? Did you
+ notice what she said?&mdash;how she took it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hero, who was also a gentleman, looked at the doctor coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not a nice thing,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I saw just as little as I could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't understand me,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;I want to know if Mrs.
+ Bogardus appeared to you to have made any discovery&mdash;received any
+ shock not to be accounted for by&mdash;by what you both saw?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shouldn't attempt to answer such a question,&rdquo; said the youngster
+ bluntly. &ldquo;I never saw Mrs. Bogardus in my life before to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor colored. &ldquo;Mrs. Bogardus has given me a telegram to send, and I
+ don't know whether to send it or not. It's going to make a whole lot of
+ talk. I am not much acquainted with Mrs. Bogardus myself, except by
+ hearsay. That's partly what surprises me. It looks a little reckless to
+ send out such a message as that, by the first hand that comes along.
+ Hadn't we better give her time to think it over?&rdquo; He opened the telegram
+ for the other to read. &ldquo;The man himself can't speak. But he just pants for
+ breath every time she comes near him: he tries to hide his face. He acts
+ like a criminal afraid of being caught.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He didn't look that way to me&mdash;what was left of him. Not in the
+ least like a criminal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no; that's a fact, too. Now they've got him laid out clean and
+ neat, he looks as if he might have been a very decent sort of man. But <i>that</i>,
+ you know&mdash;that's incredible. If she knows him, why doesn't he know
+ her? Why won't he own her? He's afraid of her. His eyes are ready to burst
+ out of his head whenever she comes near him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Mrs. Bogardus write that telegram herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what did she tell you to do with it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send it to her son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why don't you send it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the disputed message: &ldquo;Come. Your father has been found. Bring
+ Doctor Gainsworth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the local man's opinion, the writer of that dispatch was Doctor
+ Gainsworth's true patient. What could induce a woman in Mrs. Bogardus's
+ position to give such hasty publicity to this shocking disclosure,
+ allowing it were true? The more he dwelt on it the less he liked the
+ responsibility he was taking. He discussed it openly; and, with the best
+ intentions, this much-impressed young man gave out his own counter-theory
+ of the case, hoping to forestall whatever mischief might have been done.
+ He put himself in the place of Mr. Paul Bogardus, whom he liked extremely,
+ and tried to imagine that young gentleman's state of mind when he should
+ look upon this new-found parent, and learn the manner of his resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the explanation he boldly set forth in behalf of those most
+ nearly concerned. [He was getting up his diagnosis for an interesting half
+ hour with the great doctor who had been called in consultation.] The shock
+ of that awful discovery in the locked chamber, he attested, had put Mrs.
+ Bogardus temporarily beside herself. Outwardly composed, her nerves were
+ ripped and torn by the terrible sight that met her eyes. She was the prey
+ of an hallucination founded on memories of former suffering, which had
+ worn a channel for every fresh fear to seek. There was something truly
+ noble and loyal and pathetic in the nature of her possession. It threw a
+ softened light upon her past. How must she have brooded, all these years,
+ for that one thought to have ploughed so deep! It was quite commonly known
+ in the neighborhood that she had come back from the West years ago without
+ her husband, yet with no proof of his death. But who could have believed
+ she would cling for half a lifetime to this forlorn expectancy, depicting
+ her own loss in every sad hulk of humanity cast upon her prosperous
+ shores!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one believed she was deceiving herself, but great honor was hers
+ among the neighbors for the plain truth and courage of her astonishing
+ avowal. They had thought her proud, exclusive, hard in the security of
+ wealth. Here she stood by a pauper's bed in the name of simple constancy,
+ stripping herself of all earthly surplusage, exposing her deepest wound,
+ proclaiming the bond&mdash;herself its only witness&mdash;between her and
+ this speechless wreck, drifting out on the tide of death. She had but to
+ let him go. It was the wild word she had spoken in the name of truth and
+ deathless love that fired the imagination of that slow countryside. It was
+ the touch beyond nature that appeals to the higher sense of a community,
+ and there is no community without a soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The straight demands of justice are frequently hard to meet, but its
+ ironies are crushing. Mrs. Bogardus had fallen back on the line of a
+ mother's duty since that moment of personal accountability. She read the
+ unspoken reverence in the eyes of all around her, but she put in no
+ disclaimer. Her past was not her own. She could not sin alone. Only those
+ who have been honest are privileged under all conditions to remain so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his arrival with the doctor, Paul endeavored first to see his mother
+ alone. For some reason she would not have it so. She took the unspeakable
+ situation as it came. He was shown into the room where she sat, and by her
+ orders Doctor Gainsworth was with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose quietly and came to meet them. Placing her hand in her son's arm,
+ and looking towards the bed, she said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doctor&mdash;my husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam!&rdquo; said Doctor Gainsworth. He had been Mrs. Bogardus's family
+ physician for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My husband,&rdquo; she repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor appeared to accept the statement. As the three approached the
+ bed Mrs. Bogardus leaned heavily upon her son. Paul released his arm and
+ placed it firmly around her. He felt her shudder. &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; he said to her
+ with an indescribable accent that tore her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor began his examination. He addressed his patient as &ldquo;Mr.
+ Bogardus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mistake,&rdquo; said a low, husky voice from the bed. &ldquo;This ain't the man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Gainsworth pursued his investigations. &ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo; he
+ asked the patient suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hunted eyes turned with ghastly appeal upon the faces around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Paul, speak to him! Own your father,&rdquo; Mrs. Bogardus whispered
+ passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is for him to speak now,&rdquo; said Paul. &ldquo;When he is well, Doctor,&rdquo; he
+ added aloud, &ldquo;he will know his own name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man will never be well,&rdquo; the doctor answered. &ldquo;If there is anything
+ to prove, for or against the identity you claim for him, it will have to
+ be done within a very few days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Gainsworth rose and held out his hand. He was a man of delicate
+ perceptions. His respect at that moment for Mrs. Bogardus, though founded
+ on blindest conjecture, was an emotion which the mask of his professional
+ manner could barely conceal. &ldquo;As a friend, Mrs. Bogardus, I hope you will
+ command me&mdash;but you need no doctor here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a friend I ask you to believe me,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;This man <i>is</i> my
+ husband. He came back here because this was his home. I cannot tell you
+ any more, but this we expect you and every one who knows&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dissenting voice from the bed closed her assertion with a hoarse &ldquo;No!
+ Not the man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-by, Mrs. Bogardus,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;Don't trouble to explain. You
+ and I have lived too long and seen too much of life not to recognize its
+ fatalities: the mysterious trend in the actions of men and women that
+ cannot be comprised in&mdash;in the locking of a door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is of little consequence&mdash;what was done, compared to what was not
+ done.&rdquo; This was all the room for truth she could give herself to turn in.
+ The doctor did not try to understand her: yet she had snatched a little
+ comfort from merely uttering the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul and the doctor dined together, Mrs. Bogardus excusing herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There seems to be an impression here,&rdquo; said the doctor, examining the
+ initials on his fish-fork, &ldquo;that your mother is indulging an overstrained
+ fancy in this melancholy resemblance she has traced. It does not appear to
+ have made much headway as a fact, which rather surprises me in a country
+ neighborhood. Possibly your doctor here, who seems a very good fellow, has
+ wished to spare the family any unnecessary explanations. If you'll let me
+ advise you, Paul, I would leave it as it is,&mdash;open to conjecture.
+ But, in whatever shape this impression may reach you from outside, I hope
+ you won't let it disturb you in the least, so far as it describes your
+ mother's condition. She is one of the few well-balanced women I have had
+ the honor to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul did not take advantage of the doctor's period. He went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I do know her. Possibly you may not yourself feel that you
+ altogether understand your mother? She has had many demands upon her
+ powers of adaptation. I should imagine her not one who would adapt herself
+ easily, yet, once she had recognized a necessity of that sort, I believe
+ she would fit herself to its conditions with an exacting thoroughness
+ which in time would become almost, one might say, a second, an external
+ self. The 'lendings' we must all of us wear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There will be no explanations,&rdquo; said Paul, not coldly, but helplessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much the best way,&rdquo; said the doctor relieved, and glad to be done with a
+ difficult undertaking. &ldquo;If we are ever understood in this world, it is not
+ through our own explanations, but in spite of them. My daughters hope to
+ see a good deal of your charming wife this winter. I hear great pleasure
+ expressed at your coming back to town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, Doctor. She will be up this evening. We shall stay here with
+ my mother for a time. It will be her desire to carry out this&mdash;recognition&mdash;to
+ the end. We must honor her wishes in the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The talk then fell upon the patient's condition. The doctor left certain
+ directions and took shelter in professional platitudes, but his eyes
+ rested with candid kindness upon the young man, and his farewell
+ hand-clasp was a second prolonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went away in a state of simple wonderment, deeply marveling at Paul's
+ serenity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Extraordinary poise! Where does it come from? No: the boy is happy! He
+ hides it; but it is the one change in him. He has experienced a great
+ relief. Is it possible&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way down the river the doctor continued to muse upon the dignity,
+ the amazingly beautiful behavior of this rising family in whose somewhat
+ commonplace city fortunes he had taken a friendly interest for years. He
+ owned that he had sounded them with too short a line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watching with the dying man hours when she was with him alone, Emily
+ Bogardus continued to test his resolution. He never retracted by a look&mdash;faithful
+ to the word she had spoken which made them strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the slightest shell of mortality that ever detained a soul on
+ earth. The face, small like the face of an old, old child, waxed finer and
+ more spiritual, yet ever more startlingly did it bear the stamp of that
+ individuality which the spirit had held so cheap&mdash;the earthly so
+ impenetrated with the spiritual part that the face had become a
+ sublimation. As one sees a sheet of paper covered with writing wither in
+ flame and become a quivering ash, yet to the last attenuation of its fibre
+ the human characters will stand forth, till all is blown up chimney to the
+ stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, peaceful, implacable in its peace, settling down for the silence of
+ eternity. Still no sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The younger ones came and went. The little boy stole in alone and pushed
+ against his grandmother's knee,&mdash;she seated always by the bed,&mdash;gazed,
+ puzzled, at the strange, still face, and whispered obediently,
+ &ldquo;Gran'faver.&rdquo; There was no response. Once she took the boy and drew him
+ close and placed his little tender hand within the dry, crumpled husk
+ extended on the bedclothes. The eyes unclosed and rested long and
+ earnestly on the face of the child, who yawned as if hypnotized and flung
+ his head back on the grandmother's breast. She bent suddenly and laid her
+ own hand where the child's had been. The eyes turned inward and shut
+ again, but a sigh, so deep it seemed that another breath might never come,
+ was all her answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Past midnight of the fourth night's watch Paul was awakened by a light in
+ his room. His mother stood beside him, white and worn. &ldquo;He is going,&rdquo; she
+ said. It was the final rally of the body's resistance. A few moments'
+ expenditure, and that stubborn vitality would loose its hold.&mdash;The
+ strength of the soil!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wife stood aside and gave up her place to the children. Her expression
+ was noble, like a queen rebuked before her people. There was comfort in
+ that, too. A great, solemn, mutual understanding drew this death-bed group
+ together. Within the sickle's compass so they stood: the woman God gave
+ this man to found a home; the son who inherited his father's gentleness
+ and purity of purpose; the fair flower of the generations that father's
+ sacrifice had helped him win; the bud of promise on the topmost bough.
+ Those astonished eyes shed their last earthly light on this human group,
+ turned and rested in the eyes of the woman, faded, and the light went out.
+ He died, blessing her in one whispered word. Her name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before daybreak on the morning of the funeral, Paul awoke under pressure
+ of disturbing dreams. There were sounds of hushed movements in the house.
+ He traced them to the door of the room below stairs where his father lay.
+ Some one had softly unlocked that door, and entered. He knew who that one
+ must be. His place was there alone with his mother, before they were
+ called together as a family, and the mask of decency resumed for those
+ ironic rites in the presence of the unaccusing dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The windows had been lowered behind closed curtains, and the air of the
+ death chamber, as he entered, was like the touch of chilled iron to the
+ warm pulse of sleep. Without, a still dark night of November had frosted
+ the dead grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unappeasable curiosity of the living concerning the Great Transition,
+ for the moment appeared to have swept all that was personal out of the
+ watcher's gaze, as she bent above the straightened body. And something of
+ the peace there dawning on the cold, still face was reflected in her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have never seen your father before. There he is.&rdquo; She drew a deep
+ sigh, as if she had been too intent to breathe naturally. All her
+ self-consciousness suddenly was gone. And Paul remembered his dream, that
+ had goaded him out of sleep, and vanished with the shock of waking. It
+ gave him the key to this long-expected moment of confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The old likeness has come back,&rdquo; his mother repeated, with that new
+ quietness which restored her to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed of that likeness,&rdquo; said Paul, &ldquo;only it was much stronger&mdash;startling&mdash;so
+ that the room was full of whispers and exclamations as the neighbors&mdash;there
+ were hundreds of them&mdash;filed past. And you stood there, mother,
+ flushed, and talking to each person who passed and looked at him and then
+ at you; you said&mdash;you&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bogardus raised her head. &ldquo;I know! I have been thinking all night. Am
+ I to do that? Is that what you wish me to do? Don't hesitate&mdash;to
+ spare me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother! I could not imagine you doing such a thing. It was like insanity.
+ I wanted to tell you how horrible, how unseemly it was, because I was sure
+ you had been dwelling on some form&mdash;some outward&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I know how I should face this if it were left to me. But
+ you are my only earthly judge, my son. Judge now between us two. Ask of me
+ anything you think is due to him. As to outsiders, what do they matter! I
+ will do anything you say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> say! Oh, mother! Every hand he loved was against him&mdash;bruising
+ his gentle will. Each one of us has cast a stone upon his grave. But you
+ took the brunt of it. You spoke out plain the denial that was in my
+ coward's heart from the first. And I judged you! I&mdash;who uncovered my
+ father's soul to ease my own conscience, and put him to shame and torture,
+ and you to a trial worse than death. Now let us think of the whole of his
+ life. I have much to tell you. You could not listen before; but now he is
+ listening. I speak for him. This is how he loved us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In hard, brief words Paul told the story of his father's sin and
+ self-judgment; his abdication in the flesh; what he esteemed the rights to
+ be of a woman placed as he had placed his wife; how carefully he had
+ guarded her in those rights, and perjured himself at the last to leave her
+ free in peace and honor with her children. She listened, not weeping, but
+ with her great eyes shining in her pallid face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All that came after,&rdquo; said Paul, taking her cold hands in his&mdash;&ldquo;after
+ his last solemn recantation does not touch the true spirit of his
+ sacrifice. It was finished. My father died to us then as he meant to die.
+ The body remained&mdash;to serve out its time, as he said. But his brain
+ was tired. I do not think he connected the past very clearly with the
+ present. I think you should forget what has happened here. It was a
+ hideous net of circumstance that did it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no such thing as circumstance,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bogardus with
+ loftiness. Her face was calm and sweet in its exaltation. &ldquo;I cannot say
+ things as you can, but this is what I mean. I was the wife of his body&mdash;sworn
+ flesh of his flesh. In the flesh that made us one I denied him, and caused
+ his death. And if I could believe as I used to about punishment, I would
+ lock myself in that room, and for every hour he suffered there, I would
+ suffer two. And no one should prevent me, or hasten the end. And the feet
+ of the young men that carried out my husband who lied to save me, should
+ wait there for me who lied to save myself. All lies are death. But what is
+ a made-up punishment to me! I shall take it as it comes&mdash;drop by drop&mdash;slowly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother&mdash;my mother! The fashion of this world does not last; but one
+ thing does. Is it nothing to you, mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I my son&mdash;after all?&rdquo; she said as one dreaming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night lamp expired in smoke that tainted the cold air. Paul drew back
+ the curtains one by one, and let in the new-born day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Peace to this house,'&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;'not as the world giveth,'&rdquo; his thought
+ concluded.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Desert and The Sown, by Mary Hallock Foote
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
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