GREEN FIELDS AND PASTURES NEW
The Imperial Limited lurched with
a swing around the last hairpin curve of the Yale
canyon. Ahead opened out a timbered valley, narrow
on its floor, flanked with bold mountains, but nevertheless
a valley, down which the rails lay straight
and shining on an easy grade. The river that
for a hundred miles had boiled and snarled parallel
to the tracks, roaring through the granite sluice
that cuts the Cascade Range, took a wider channel
and a leisurely flow. The mad haste had fallen
from it as haste falls from one who, with time to
spare, sees his destination near at hand; and the
turgid Fraser had time to spare, for now it was but
threescore miles to tidewater. So the great river
moved placidly as an old man moves when
all the headlong urge of youth is spent and his race
near run.
On the river side of the first coach
behind the diner, Estella Benton nursed her round
chin in the palm of one hand, leaning her elbow on
the window sill. It was a relief to look over
a widening valley instead of a bare-walled gorge all
scarred with slides, to see wooded heights lift green
in place of barren cliffs, to watch banks of fern massed
against the right of way where for a day and a night
parched sagebrush, brown tumble-weed, and such scant
growth as flourished in the arid uplands of interior
British Columbia had streamed in barren monotony, hot
and dry and still.
She was near the finish of her journey.
Pensively she considered the end of the road.
How would it be there? What manner of folk and
country? Between her past mode of life and the
new that she was hurrying toward lay the vast gulf
of distance, of custom, of class even. It was
bound to be crude, to be full of inconveniences and
uncouthness. Her brother’s letters had
partly prepared her for that. Involuntarily she
shrank from it, had been shrinking from it by fits
and starts all the way, as flowers that thrive best
in shady nooks shrink from hot sun and rude winds.
Not that Estella Benton was particularly flower-like.
On the contrary she was a healthy, vigorous-bodied
young woman, scarcely to be described as beautiful,
yet undeniably attractive. Obviously a daughter
of the well-to-do, one of that American type which
flourishes in families to which American politicians
unctuously refer as the backbone of the nation.
Outwardly, gazing riverward through the dusty pane,
she bore herself with utmost serenity. Inwardly
she was full of misgivings.
Four days of lonely travel across
a continent, hearing the drumming clack of car wheels
and rail joint ninety-six hours on end, acutely conscious
that every hour of the ninety-six put its due quota
of miles between the known and the unknown, may be
either an adventure, a bore, or a calamity, depending
altogether upon the individual point of view, upon
conditioning circumstances and previous experience.
Estella Benton’s experience
along such lines was chiefly a blank and the conditioning
circumstances of her present journey were somber enough
to breed thought that verged upon the melancholy.
Save for a natural buoyancy of spirit she might have
wept her way across North America. She had no
tried standard by which to measure life’s values
for she had lived her twenty-two years wholly shielded
from the human maelstrom, fed, clothed, taught, an
untried product of home and schools. Her head
was full of university lore, things she had read, a
smattering of the arts and philosophy, liberal portions
of academic knowledge, all tagged and sorted like
parcels on a shelf to be reached when called for.
Buried under these externalities the ego of her lay
unaroused, an incalculable quantity.
All of which is merely by way of stating
that Miss Estella Benton was a young woman who had
grown up quite complacently in that station of life
in which to quote the Philistines it
had pleased God to place her, and that Chance had
somehow, to her astonished dismay, contrived to thrust
a spoke in the smooth-rolling wheels of destiny.
Or was it Destiny? She had begun to think about
that, to wonder if a lot that she had taken for granted
as an ordered state of things was not, after all, wholly
dependent upon Chance. She had danced and sung
and played lightheartedly accepting a certain standard
of living, a certain position in a certain set, a
pleasantly ordered home life, as her birthright, a
natural heritage. She had dwelt upon her ultimate
destiny in her secret thoughts as foreshadowed by
that of other girls she knew. The Prince would
come, to put it in a nutshell. He would woo gracefully.
They would wed. They would be delightfully happy.
Except for the matter of being married, things would
move along the same pleasant channels.
Just so. But a broken steering
knuckle on a heavy touring car set things in a different
light many things. She learned then
that death is no respecter of persons, that a big
income may be lived to its limit with nothing left
when the brain force which commanded it ceases to function.
Her father produced perhaps fifteen to twenty thousand
dollars a year in his brokerage business, and he had
saved nothing. Thus at one stroke she was put
on an equal footing with the stenographer in her father’s
office. Scarcely equal either, for the stenographer
earned her bread and was technically equipped for
the task, whereas Estella Benton had no training whatsoever,
except in social usage. She did not yet fully
realize just what had overtaken her. Things had
happened so swiftly, to ruthlessly, that she still
verged upon the incredulous. Habit clung fast.
But she had begun to think, to try and establish some
working relation between herself and things as she
found them. She had discovered already that certain
theories of human relations are not soundly established
in fact.
She turned at last in her seat.
The Limited’s whistle had shrilled for a stop.
At the next stop she wondered what lay in
store for her just beyond the next stop. While
she dwelt mentally upon this, her hands were gathering
up some few odds and ends of her belongings on the
berth.
Across the aisle a large, smooth-faced
young man watched her with covert admiration.
When she had settled back with bag and suitcase locked
and strapped on the opposite seat and was hatted and
gloved, he leaned over and addressed her genially.
“Getting off at Hopyard?
Happen to be going out to Roaring Springs?”
Miss Benton’s gray eyes rested
impersonally on the top of his head, traveled slowly
down over the trim front of his blue serge to the
polished tan Oxfords on his feet, and there
was not in eyes or on countenance the slightest sign
that she saw or heard him. The large young man
flushed a vivid red.
Miss Benton was partly amused, partly
provoked. The large young man had been her vis-a-vis
at dinner the day before and at breakfast that morning.
He had evinced a yearning for conversation each time,
but it had been diplomatically confined to salt and
other condiments, the weather and the scenery.
Miss Benton had no objection to young men in general,
quite the contrary. But she did not consider it
quite the thing to countenance every amiable stranger.
Within a few minutes the porter came
for her things, and the blast of the Limited’s
whistle warned her that it was time to leave the train.
Ten minutes later the Limited was a vanishing object
down an aisle slashed through a forest of great trees,
and Miss Estella Benton stood on the plank platform
of Hopyard station. Northward stretched a flat,
unlovely vista of fire-blackened stumps. Southward,
along track and siding, ranged a single row of buildings,
a grocery store, a shanty with a huge sign proclaiming
that it was a bank, dwelling, hotel and blacksmith
shop whence arose the clang of hammered iron.
A dirt road ran between town and station, with hitching
posts at which farmers’ nags stood dispiritedly
in harness.
To the Westerner such spots are common
enough; he sees them not as fixtures, but as places
in a stage of transformation. By every side track
and telegraph station on every transcontinental line
they spring up, centers of productive activity, growing
into orderly towns and finally attaining the dignity
of cities. To her, fresh from trim farmsteads
and rural communities that began setting their houses
in order when Washington wintered at Valley Forge,
Hopyard stood forth sordid and unkempt. And as
happens to many a one in like case, a wave of sickening
loneliness engulfed her, and she eyed the speeding
Limited as one eyes a departing friend.
“How could one live in a place
like this?” she asked herself.
But she had neither Slave of the Lamp
at her beck, nor any Magic Carpet to transport her
elsewhere. At any rate, she reflected, Hopyard
was not her abiding-place. She hoped that her
destination would prove more inviting.
Beside the platform were ranged two
touring cars. Three or four of those who had
alighted entered these. Their baggage was piled
over the hoods, buckled on the running boards.
The driver of one car approached her. “Hot
Springs?” he inquired tersely.
She affirmed this, and he took her
baggage, likewise her trunk check when she asked how
that article would be transported to the lake.
She had some idea of route and means, from her brother’s
written instruction, but she thought he might have
been there to meet her. At least he would be
at the Springs.
So she was whirled along a country
road, jolted in the tonneau between a fat man from
Calgary and a rheumatic dame on her way to take hot
sulphur baths at St. Allwoods. She passed seedy
farmhouses, primitive in construction, and big barns
with moss plentifully clinging on roof and gable.
The stretch of charred stumps was left far behind,
but in every field of grain and vegetable and root
great butts of fir and cedar rose amid the crops.
Her first definitely agreeable impression of this land,
which so far as she knew must be her home, was of those
huge and numerous stumps contending with crops for
possession of the fields. Agreeable, because
it came to her forcibly that it must be a sturdy breed
of men and women, possessed of brawn and fortitude
and high courage, who made their homes here.
Back in her country, once beyond suburban areas, the
farms lay like the squares of a chess board, trim
and orderly, tamely subdued to agriculture. Here,
at first hand, she saw how man attacked the forest
and conquered it. But the conquest was incomplete,
for everywhere stood those stubborn roots, six and
eight and ten feet across, contending with man for
its primal heritage, the soil, perishing slowly as
perish the proud remnants of a conquered race.
Then the cleared land came to a stop
against heavy timber. The car whipped a curve
and drove into what the fat man from Calgary facetiously
remarked upon as the tall uncut. Miss Benton sighted
up these noble columns to where a breeze droned in
the tops, two hundred feet above. Through a gap
in the timber she saw mountains, peaks that stood bold
as the Rockies, capped with snow. For two days
she had been groping for a word to define, to sum
up the feeling which had grown upon her, had been
growing upon her steadily, as the amazing scroll of
that four-day journey unrolled. She found it
now, a simple word, one of the simplest in our mother
tongue bigness. Bigness in its most
ample sense, that was the dominant note.
Immensities of distance, vastness of rolling plain,
sheer bulk of mountain, rivers that one crossed, and
after a day’s journey crossed again, still far
from source or confluence. And now this unending
sweep of colossal trees!
At first she had been overpowered
with a sense of insignificance utterly foreign to
her previous experience. But now she discovered
with an agreeable sensation of surprise she could
vibrate to such a keynote. And while she communed
with this pleasant discovery the car sped down a straight
stretch and around a corner and stopped short to unload
sacks of mail at a weather-beaten yellow edifice,
its windows displaying indiscriminately Indian baskets,
groceries, and hardware. Northward opened a broad
scope of lake level, girt about with tremendous peaks
whose lower slopes were banked with thick forest.
Somewhere distant along that lake
shore was to be her home. As the car rolled over
the four hundred yards between store and white-and-green
St. Allwoods, she wondered if Charlie would be there
to meet her. She was weary of seeing strange
faces, of being directed, of being hustled about.
But he was not there, and she recalled
that he never had been notable for punctuality.
Five years is a long time. She expected to find
him changed for the better, in certain
directions. He had promised to be there; but,
in this respect, time evidently had wrought no appreciable
transformation.
She registered, was assigned a room,
and ate luncheon to the melancholy accompaniment of
a three-man orchestra struggling vainly with Bach in
an alcove off the dining room. After that she
began to make inquiries. Neither clerk nor manager
knew aught of Charlie Benton. They were both
in their first season there. They advised her
to ask the storekeeper.
“MacDougal will know,”
they were agreed. “He knows everybody around
here, and everything that goes on.”
The storekeeper, a genial, round-bodied
Scotchman, had the information she desired.
“Charlie Benton?” said
he. “No, he’ll be at his camp up the
lake. He was in three or four days back.
I mind now, he said he’d be down Thursday; that’s
to-day. But he isn’t here yet, or his boat’d
be by the wharf yonder.”
“Are there any passenger boats
that call there?” she asked.
MacDougal shook his head.
“Not reg’lar. There’s
a gas boat goes t’ the head of the lake now an’
then. She’s away now. Ye might hire
a launch. Jack Fyfe’s camp tender’s
about to get under way. But ye wouldna care to
go on her, I’m thinkin’. She’ll
be loaded wi’ lumberjacks every man
drunk as a lord, most like. Maybe Benton’ll
be in before night.”
She went back to the hotel. But
St. Allwoods, in its dual capacity of health-and-pleasure
resort, was a gilded shell, making a brave outward
show, but capitalizing chiefly lake, mountains, and
hot, mineral springs. Her room was a bare, cheerless
place. She did not want to sit and ponder.
Too much real grief hovered in the immediate background
of her life. It is not always sufficient to be
young and alive. To sit still and think that
way lay tears and despondency. So she went out
and walked down the road and out upon the wharf which
jutted two hundred yards into the lake.
It stood deserted save for a lone
fisherman on the outer end, and an elderly couple
that preceded her. Halfway out she passed a slip
beside which lay moored a heavily built, fifty-foot
boat, scarred with usage, a squat and powerful craft.
Lakeward stretched a smooth, unrippled surface.
Overhead patches of white cloud drifted lazily.
Where the shadows from these lay, the lake spread
gray and lifeless. Where the afternoon sun rested,
it touched the water with gleams of gold and pale,
delicate green. A white-winged yacht lay offshore,
her sails in slack folds. A lump of an island
lifted two miles beyond, all cliffs and little, wooded
hills. And the mountains surrounding in a giant
ring seemed to shut the place away from all the world.
For sheer wild, rugged beauty, Roaring Lake surpassed
any spot she had ever seen. Its quiet majesty,
its air of unbroken peace soothed and comforted her,
sick with hurry and swift-footed events.
She stood for a time at the outer
wharf end, mildly interested when the fisherman drew
up a two-pound trout, wondering a little at her own
subtle changes of mood. Her surrounding played
upon her like a virtuoso on his violin. And this
was something that she did not recall as a trait in
her own character. She had never inclined to the
volatile perhaps because until the motor
accident snuffed out her father’s life she had
never dealt in anything but superficial emotions.
After a time she retraced her steps.
Nearing the halfway slip, she saw that a wagon from
which goods were being unloaded blocked the way.
A dozen men were stringing in from the road, bearing
bundles and bags and rolls of blankets. They
were big, burly men, carrying themselves with a reckless
swing, with trousers cut off midway between knee and
ankle so that they reached just below the upper of
their high-topped, heavy, laced boots. Two or
three were singing. All appeared unduly happy,
talking loudly, with deep laughter. One threw
down his burden and executed a brief clog. Splinters
flew where the sharp calks bit into the wharf planking,
and his companions applauded.
It dawned upon Stella Benton that
these might be Jack Fyfe’s drunken loggers,
and she withdrew until the way should be clear, vitally
interested because her brother was a logging man, and
wondering if these were the human tools he used in
his business, if these were the sort of men with whom
he associated. They were a rough lot and
some were very drunk. With the manifestations
of liquor she had but the most shadowy acquaintance.
But she would have been little less than a fool not
to comprehend this.
Then they began filing down the gangway
to the boat’s deck. One slipped, and came
near falling into the water, whereat his fellows howled
gleefully. Precariously they negotiated the slanting
passage. All but one: he sat him down at
the slip-head on his bundle and began a quavering
chant. The teamster imperturbably finished his
unloading, two men meanwhile piling the goods aboard.
The wagon backed out, and the way
was clear, save for the logger sitting on his blankets,
wailing his lugubrious song. From below his fellows
urged him to come along. A bell clanged in the
pilot house. The exhaust of a gas engine began
to sputter through the boat’s side. From
her after deck a man hailed the logger sharply, and
when his call was unheeded, he ran lightly up the
slip. A short, squarely-built man he was, light
on his feet as a dancing master.
He spoke now with authority, impatiently.
“Hurry aboard, Mike; we’re waiting.”
The logger rose, waved his hand airily,
and turned as if to retreat down the wharf. The
other caught him by the arm and spun him face to the
slip.
“Come on, Slater,” he said evenly.
“I have no time to fool around.”
The logger drew back his fist.
He was a fairly big man. But if he had in mind
to deal a blow, it failed, for the other ducked and
caught him with both arms around the middle.
He lifted the logger clear of the wharf, hoisted him
to the level of his breast, and heaved him down the
slip as one would throw a sack of bran.
The man’s body bounced on the
incline, rolled, slid, tumbled, till at length he
brought up against the boat’s guard, and all
that saved him a ducking was the prompt extension
of several stout arms, which clutched and hauled him
to the flush after deck. He sat on his haunches,
blinking. Then he laughed. So did the man
at the top of the slip and the lumberjacks clustered
on the boat. Homeric laughter, as at some surpassing
jest. But the roar of him who had taken that inglorious
descent rose loudest of all, an explosive, “Har har har!”
He clambered unsteadily to his feet,
his mouth expanded in an amiable grin.
“Hey, Jack,” he shouted.
“Maybe y’ c’n throw m’ blankets
down too, while y’r at it.”
The man at the slip-head caught up
the roll, poised it high, and cast it from him with
a quick twist of his body. The woolen missile
flew like a well-put shot and caught its owner fair
in the breast, tumbling him backwards on the deck and
the Homeric laughter rose in double strength.
Then the boat began to swing, and the man ran down
and leaped the widening space as she drew away from
her mooring.
Stella Benton watched the craft gather
way, a trifle shocked, her breath coming a little
faster. The most deadly blows she had ever seen
struck were delivered in a more subtle, less virile
mode, a curl of the lip, an inflection of the voice.
These were a different order of beings. This,
she sensed was man in a more primitive aspect, man
with the conventional bark stripped clean off him.
And she scarcely knew whether to be amused or frightened
when she reflected that among such her life would
presently lie. Charlie had written that she would
find things and people a trifle rougher than she was
used to. She could well believe that. But they
were picturesque ruffians.
Her interested gaze followed the camp
tender as it swung around the wharf-end, and so her
roaming eyes were led to another craft drawing near.
This might be her brother’s vessel. She
went back to the outer landing to see.
Two men manned this boat. As
she ranged alongside the piles, one stood forward,
and the other aft with lines to make fast. She
cast a look at each. They were prototypes of
the rude crew but now departed, brown-faced, flannel-shirted,
shod with calked boots, unshaven for days, typical
men of the woods. But as she turned to go, the
man forward and almost directly below her looked her
full in the face.
“Stell!”
She leaned over the rail.
“Charlie Benton for Heaven’s
sake.”
They stared at each other.
“Well,” he laughed at
last. “If it were not for your mouth and
eyes, Stell, I wouldn’t have known you.
Why, you’re all grown up.”
He clambered to the wharf level and
kissed her. The rough stubble of his beard pricked
her tender skin and she drew back.
“My word, Charlie, you certainly
ought to shave,” she observed with sisterly
frankness. “I didn’t know you until
you spoke. I’m awfully glad to see you,
but you do need some one to look after you.”
Benton laughed tolerantly.
“Perhaps. But, my dear
girl, a fellow doesn’t get anywhere on his appearance
in this country. When a fellow’s bucking
big timber, he shucks off a lot of things he used
to think were quite essential. By Jove, you’re
a picture, Stell. If I hadn’t been expecting
to see you, I wouldn’t have known you.”
“I doubt if I should have known
you either,” she returned drily.