Great women belong to history
and to self-sacrifice.
Leigh
Hunt.
For sufficient reasons of my own,
which have been explained, I did not care to mingle
more than was necessary with the party of the Hudson
Bay folk who made their quarters with the missionary
families. I kept close to my own camp when not
busy with my inquiries in the neighborhood, where
I now began to see what could be done in the preparation
of a proper outfit for the baroness. Herself
I did not see for the next two days; but one evening
I met her on the narrow log gallery of one of the
mission houses. Without much speech we sat and
looked over the pleasant prospect of the wide flats,
the fringe of willow trees, the loom of the mountains
off toward the east.
“Continually you surprise me,
Madam,” I began, at last. “Can we
not persuade you to abandon this foolish plan of your
going east?”
“I see no reason for abandoning
it,” said she. “There are some thousands
of your people, men, women and children, who have crossed
that trail. Why should not I?”
“But they come in large parties;
they come well prepared. Each helps his neighbor.”
“The distance is the same, and the method is
the same.”
I ceased to argue, seeing that she
would not be persuaded. “At least, Madam,”
said I, “I have done what little I could in securing
you a party. You are to have eight mules, two
carts, six horses, and two men, beside old Joe Meek,
the best guide now in Oregon. He would not go
to save his life. He goes to save yours.”
“You are always efficient,”
said she. “But why is it that we always
have some unpleasant argument? Come, let us have
tea!”
“Many teas together, Madam,
if you would listen to me. Many a pot brewed
deep and black by scores of camp-fires.”
“Fie! Monsieur proposes a scandal.”
“No, Monsieur proposes only
a journey to Washington with you, or close
after you.”
“Of course I can not prevent your following,”
she said.
“Leave it so. But as to
pledges at least I want to keep my little
slipper. Is Madam’s wardrobe with her?
Could she humor a peevish friend so much as that?
Come, now, I will make fair exchange. I will trade
you again my blanket clasp for that one little shoe!”
I felt in the pocket of my coat, and
held out in my hand the remnants of the same little
Indian ornament which had figured between us the first
night we had met. She grasped at it eagerly, turning
it over in her hand.
“But see,” she said, “one of the
clasps is gone.”
“Yes, I parted with it. But come, do I
have my little slipper?”
“Wait!” said she, and
left me for a moment. Presently she returned,
laughing, with the little white satin foot covering
in her hand.
“I warrant it is the only thing
of the sort ever was seen in these buildings,”
she went on. “Alas! I fear I must leave
most of my possessions here! I have already disposed
of the furnishings of my apartment to Mr. James Douglas
at Fort Vancouver. I hear he is to replace this
good Doctor McLaughlin. Well, his half-breed wife
will at least have good setting up for her household.
Tell me, now,” she concluded, “what became
of the other shell from this clasp?”
“I gave it to an old man in
Montreal,” I answered. I went on to show
her the nature of the device, as it had been explained
to me by old Doctor von Rittenhofen.
“How curious!” she mused,
as it became more plain to her. “Life, love,
eternity! The beginning and the end of all this
turmoil about passing on the torch of life. It
is old, old, is it not? Tell me, who was the wise
man who described all this to you?”
“Not a stranger to this very
country, I imagine,” was my answer. “He
spent some years here in Oregon with the missionaries,
engaged, as he informed me, in classifying the butterflies
of this new region. A German scientist, I think,
and seemingly a man of breeding.”
“If I were left to guess,”
she broke out suddenly, “I would say it must
have been this same old man who told you about the
plans of the Canadian land expedition to this country.”
“Continually, Madam, we find
much in common. At least we both know that the
Canadian expedition started west. Tell me, when
will it arrive on the Columbia?”
“It will never arrive.
It will never cross the Rockies. Word has gone
up the Columbia now that for these men to appear in
this country would bring on immediate war. That
does not suit the book of England more than it does
that of America.”
“Then the matter will wait until you see Mr.
Pakenham?”
She nodded. “I suppose so.”
“You will find facts enough.
Should you persist in your mad journey and get far
enough to the east, you will see two thousand, three
thousand men coming out to Oregon this fall.
It is but the beginning. But you and I, sitting
here, three thousand miles and more away from Washington,
can determine this question. Madam, perhaps yet
you may win your right to some humble home, with a
couch of husks or straw. Sleep, then, by our
camp-fires across America, and let our skies cover
you at night. Our men will watch over you faithfully.
Be our guest our friend!”
“You are a good special pleader,”
said she; “but you do not shake me in my purpose,
and I hold to my terms. It does not rest with
you and me, but with another. As I have told
you as we have both agreed ”
“Then let us not speak her name,” said
I.
Again her eyes looked into mine, straight,
large and dark. Again the spell of her beauty
rose all around me, enveloped me as I had felt it do
before. “You can not have Oregon, except
through me,” she said at last. “You
can not have her except through
me!”
“It is the truth,” I answered.
“In God’s name, then, play the game fair.”