It was high hot noon on the Casket
Ridge. Its very scant shade was restricted to
a few dwarf Scotch firs, and was so perpendicularly
cast that Leonidas Boone, seeking shelter from the
heat, was obliged to draw himself up under one of
them, as if it were an umbrella. Occasionally,
with a boy’s perversity, he permitted one bared
foot to protrude beyond the sharply marked shadow
until the burning sun forced him to draw it in again
with a thrill of satisfaction. There was no earthly
reason why he had not sought the larger shadows of
the pine-trees which reared themselves against the
Ridge on the slope below him, except that he was a
boy, and perhaps even more superstitious and opinionated
than most boys. Having got under this tree with
infinite care, he had made up his mind that he would
not move from it until its line of shade reached and
touched a certain stone on the trail near him!
Why he did this he did not know, but he clung
to his sublime purpose with the courage and tenacity
of a youthful Casabianca. He was cramped, tickled
by dust and fir sprays; he was supremely uncomfortable but
he stayed! A woodpecker was monotonously tapping
in an adjacent pine, with measured intervals of silence,
which he always firmly believed was a certain telegraphy
of the bird’s own making; a green-and-gold lizard
flashed by his foot to stiffen itself suddenly with
a rigidity equal to his own. Still he stirred
not. The shadow gradually crept nearer the mystic
stone and touched it. He sprang up,
shook himself, and prepared to go about his business.
This was simply an errand to the post-office at the
cross-roads, scarcely a mile from his father’s
house. He was already halfway there. He
had taken only the better part of one hour for this
desultory journey!
However, he now proceeded on his way,
diverging only to follow a fresh rabbit-track a few
hundred yards, to note that the animal had doubled
twice against the wind, and then, naturally, he was
obliged to look closely for other tracks to determine
its pursuers. He paused also, but only for a
moment, to rap thrice on the trunk of the pine where
the woodpecker was at work, which he knew would make
it cease work for a time as it did.
Having thus renewed his relations with nature, he
discovered that one of the letters he was taking to
the post-office had slipped in some mysterious way
from the bosom of his shirt, where he carried them,
past his waist-band into his trouser-leg, and was about
to make a casual delivery of itself on the trail.
This caused him to take out his letters and count
them, when he found one missing. He had been
given four letters to post he had only three.
There was a big one in his father’s handwriting,
two indistinctive ones of his mother’s, and a
smaller one of his sister’s that
was gone! Not at all disconcerted, he calmly
retraced his steps, following his own tracks minutely,
with a grim face and a distinct delight in the process,
while looking perfunctorily for
the letter. In the midst of this slow progress
a bright idea struck him. He walked back to the
fir-tree where he had rested, and found the lost missive.
It had slipped out of his shirt when he shook himself.
He was not particularly pleased. He knew that
nobody would give him credit for his trouble in going
back for it, or his astuteness in guessing where it
was. He heaved the sigh of misunderstood genius,
and again started for the post-office. This time
he carried the letters openly and ostentatiously in
his hand.
Presently he heard a voice say, “Hey!”
It was a gentle, musical voice, a stranger’s
voice, for it evidently did not know how to call him,
and did not say, “Oh, Leonidas!” or “You look
here!” He was abreast of a little clearing,
guarded by a low stockade of bark palings, and beyond
it was a small white dwelling-house. Leonidas
knew the place perfectly well. It belonged to
the superintendent of a mining tunnel, who had lately
rented it to some strangers from San Francisco.
Thus much he had heard from his family. He had
a mountain boy’s contempt for city folks, and
was not himself interested in them. Yet as he
heard the call, he was conscious of a slightly guilty
feeling. He might have been trespassing in following
the rabbit’s track; he might have been seen by
some one when he lost the letter and had to go back
for it all grown-up people had a way of
offering themselves as witnesses against him!
He scowled a little as he glanced around him.
Then his eye fell on the caller on the other side
of the stockade.
To his surprise it was a woman:
a pretty, gentle, fragile creature, all soft muslin
and laces, with her fingers interlocked, and leaning
both elbows on the top of the stockade as she stood
under the checkered shadow of a buckeye.
“Come here please won’t
you?” she said pleasantly.
It would have been impossible to resist
her voice if Leonidas had wanted to, which he didn’t.
He walked confidently up to the fence. She really
was very pretty, with eyes like his setter’s,
and as caressing. And there were little puckers
and satiny creases around her delicate nostrils and
mouth when she spoke, which Leonidas knew were “expression.”
“I I” she
began, with charming hesitation; then suddenly, “What’s
your name?”
“Leonidas.”
“Leonidas! That’s
a pretty name!” He thought it did sound
pretty. “Well, Leonidas, I want you to
be a good boy and do a great favor for me, a
very great favor.”
Leonidas’s face fell. This
kind of prelude and formula was familiar to him.
It was usually followed by, “Promise me that
you will never swear again,” or, “that
you will go straight home and wash your face,”
or some other irrelevant personality. But nobody
with that sort of eyes had ever said it. So he
said, a little shyly but sincerely, “Yes, ma’am.”
“You are going to the post-office?”
This seemed a very foolish, womanish
question, seeing that he was holding letters in his
hand; but he said, “Yes.”
“I want you to put a letter
of mine among yours and post them all together,”
she said, putting one little hand to her bosom and
drawing out a letter. He noticed that she purposely
held the addressed side so that he could not see it,
but he also noticed that her hand was small, thin,
and white, even to a faint tint of blue in it, unlike
his sister’s, the baby’s, or any other
hand he had ever seen. “Can you read?”
she said suddenly, withdrawing the letter.
The boy flushed slightly at the question.
“Of course I can,” he said proudly.
“Of course, certainly,”
she repeated quickly; “but,” she added,
with a mischievous smile, “you mustn’t
now! Promise me! Promise me that you
won’t read this address, but just post the letter,
like one of your own, in the letter-box with the others.”
Leonidas promised readily; it seemed
to him a great fuss about nothing; perhaps it was
some kind of game or a bet. He opened his sunburnt
hand, holding his own letters, and she slipped hers,
face downward, between them. Her soft fingers
touched his in the operation, and seemed to leave
a pleasant warmth behind them.
“Promise me another thing,”
she added; “promise me you won’t say a
word of this to any one.”
“Of course!” said Leonidas.
“That’s a good boy, and
I know you will keep your word.” She hesitated
a moment, smilingly and tentatively, and then held
out a bright half-dollar. Leonidas backed from
the fence. “I’d rather not,”
he said shyly.
“But as a present from me?”
Leonidas colored he was
really proud; and he was also bright enough to understand
that the possession of such unbounded wealth would
provoke dangerous inquiry at home. But he didn’t
like to say it, and only replied, “I can’t.”
She looked at him curiously.
“Then thank you,” she said,
offering her white hand, which felt like a bird in
his. “Now run on, and don’t let me
keep you any longer.” She drew back from
the fence as she spoke, and waved him a pretty farewell.
Leonidas, half sorry, half relieved, darted away.
He ran to the post-office, which he
never had done before. Loyally he never looked
at her letter, nor, indeed, at his own again, swinging
the hand that held them far from his side. He
entered the post-office directly, going at once to
the letter-box and depositing the precious missive
with the others. The post-office was also the
“country store,” and Leonidas was in the
habit of still further protracting his errands there
by lingering in that stimulating atmosphere of sugar,
cheese, and coffee. But to-day his stay was brief,
so transitory that the postmaster himself inferred
audibly that “old man Boone must have been tanning
Lee with a hickory switch.” But the simple
reason was that Leonidas wished to go back to the
stockade fence and the fair stranger, if haply she
was still there. His heart sank as, breathless
with unwonted haste, he reached the clearing and the
empty buckeye shade. He walked slowly and with
sad diffidence by the deserted stockade fence.
But presently his quick eye discerned a glint of white
among the laurels near the house. It was she,
walking with apparent indifference away from him towards
the corner of the clearing and the road. But
this he knew would bring her to the end of the stockade
fence, where he must pass and it did.
She turned to him with a bright smile of affected
surprise. “Why, you’re as swift-footed
as Mercury!”
Leonidas understood her perfectly.
Mercury was the other name for quicksilver and
that was lively, you bet! He had often spilt some
on the floor to see it move. She must be awfully
cute to have noticed it too cuter than
his sisters. He was quite breathless with pleasure.
“I put your letter in the box
all right,” he burst out at last.
“Without any one seeing it?” she asked.
“Sure pop! nary one! The
postmaster stuck out his hand to grab it, but I just
let on that I didn’t see him, and shoved it in
myself.”
“You’re as sharp as you’re
good,” she said smilingly. “Now, there’s
just one thing more I want you to do. Forget
all about this won’t you?”
Her voice was very caressing.
Perhaps that was why he said boldly: “Yes,
ma’am, all except you.”
“Dear me, what a compliment! How old are
you?”
“Goin’ on fifteen,” said Leonidas
confidently.
“And going very fast,”
said the lady mischievously. “Well, then,
you needn’t forget me. On the contrary,”
she added, after looking at him curiously, “I
would rather you’d remember me. Good-by or,
rather, good-afternoon if I’m to
be remembered, Leon.”
“Good-afternoon, ma’am.”
She moved away, and presently disappeared
among the laurels. But her last words were ringing
in his ears. “Leon” everybody
else called him “Lee” for brevity; “Leon” it
was pretty as she said it.
He turned away. But it so chanced
that their parting was not to pass unnoticed, for,
looking up the hill, Leonidas perceived his elder sister
and little brother coming down the road, and knew that
they must have seen him from the hilltop. It
was like their “snoopin’”!
They ran to him eagerly.
“You were talking to the stranger,” said
his sister breathlessly.
“She spoke to me first,” said Leonidas,
on the defensive.
“What did she say?”
“Wanted to know the eleckshun
news,” said Leonidas with cool mendacity, “and
I told her.”
This improbable fiction nevertheless
satisfied them. “What was she like?
Oh, do tell us, Lee!” continued his sister.
Nothing would have delighted him more
than to expatiate upon her loveliness, the soft white
beauty of her hands, the “cunning” little
puckers around her lips, her bright tender eyes, the
angelic texture of her robes, and the musical tinkle
of her voice. But Leonidas had no confidant,
and what healthy boy ever trusted his sister in such
matter! “You saw what she was like,”
he said, with evasive bluntness.
“But, Lee”
But Lee was adamant. “Go and ask her,”
he said.
“Like as not you were sassy
to her, and she shut you up,” said his sister
artfully. But even this cruel suggestion, which
he could have so easily flouted, did not draw him,
and his ingenious relations flounced disgustedly away.
But Leonidas was not spared any further
allusion to the fair stranger; for the fact of her
having spoken to him was duly reported at home, and
at dinner his reticence was again sorely attacked.
“Just like her, in spite of all her airs and
graces, to hang out along the fence like any ordinary
hired girl, jabberin’ with anybody that went
along the road,” said his mother incisively.
He knew that she didn’t like her new neighbors,
so this did not surprise nor greatly pain him.
Neither did the prosaic facts that were now first
made plain to him. His divinity was a Mrs. Burroughs,
whose husband was conducting a series of mining operations,
and prospecting with a gang of men on the Casket Ridge.
As his duty required his continual presence there,
Mrs. Burroughs was forced to forego the civilized
pleasures of San Francisco for a frontier life, for
which she was ill fitted, and in which she had no interest.
All this was a vague irrelevance to Leonidas, who knew
her only as a goddess in white who had been familiar
to him, and kind, and to whom he was tied by the delicious
joy of having a secret in common, and having done
her a special favor. Healthy youth clings to its
own impressions, let reason, experience, and even
facts argue ever to the contrary.
So he kept her secret and his intact,
and was rewarded a few days afterwards by a distant
view of her walking in the garden, with a man whom
he recognized as her husband. It is needless to
say that, without any extraneous thought, the man
suffered in Leonidas’s estimation by his propinquity
to the goddess, and that he deemed him vastly inferior.
It was a still greater reward to his
fidelity that she seized an opportunity when her husband’s
head was turned to wave her hand to him. Leonidas
did not approach the fence, partly through shyness
and partly through a more subtle instinct that this
man was not in the secret. He was right, for
only the next day, as he passed to the post-office,
she called him to the fence.
“Did you see me wave my hand
to you yesterday?” she asked pleasantly.
“Yes, ma’am; but” he
hesitated “I didn’t come up,
for I didn’t think you wanted me when any one
else was there.”
She laughed merrily, and lifting his
straw hat from his head, ran the fingers of the other
hand through his damp curls. “You’re
the brightest, dearest boy I ever knew, Leon,”
she said, dropping her pretty face to the level of
his own, “and I ought to have remembered it.
But I don’t mind telling you I was dreadfully
frightened lest you might misunderstand me and come
and ask for another letter before him.”
As she emphasized the personal pronoun, her whole
face seemed to change: the light of her blue
eyes became mere glittering points, her nostrils grew
white and contracted, and her pretty little mouth seemed
to narrow into a straight cruel line, like a cat’s.
“Not a word ever to him, of all men!
Do you hear?” she said almost brusquely.
Then, seeing the concern in the boy’s face,
she laughed, and added explanatorily: “He’s
a bad, bad man, Leon, remember that.”
The fact that she was speaking of
her husband did not shock the boy’s moral sense
in the least. The sacredness of those relations,
and even of blood kinship, is, I fear, not always
so clear to the youthful mind as we fondly imagine.
That Mr. Burroughs was a bad man to have excited this
change in this lovely woman was Leonidas’s only
conclusion. He remembered how his sister’s
soft, pretty little kitten, purring on her lap, used
to get its back up and spit at the postmaster’s
yellow hound.
“I never wished to come unless
you called me first,” he said frankly.
“What?” she said, in her
half playful, half reproachful, but wholly caressing
way. “You mean to say you would never come
to see me unless I sent for you? Oh, Leon! and
you’d abandon me in that way?”
But Leonidas was set in his own boyish
superstition. “I’d just delight in
being sent for by you any time, Mrs. Burroughs, and
you kin always find me,” he said shyly, but
doggedly; “but” He stopped.
“What an opinionated young gentleman!
Well, I see I must do all the courting. So consider
that I sent for you this morning. I’ve got
another letter for you to mail.” She put
her hand to her breast, and out of the pretty frillings
of her frock produced, as before, with the same faint
perfume of violets, a letter like the first. But
it was unsealed. “Now, listen, Leon; we
are going to be great friends you and I.”
Leonidas felt his cheeks glowing. “You
are going to do me another great favor, and we are
going to have a little fun and a great secret all by
our own selves. Now, first, have you any correspondent you
know any one who writes to you any
boy or girl from San Francisco?”
Leonidas’s cheeks grew redder alas!
from a less happy consciousness. He never received
any letters; nobody ever wrote to him. He was
obliged to make this shameful admission.
Mrs. Burroughs looked thoughtful.
“But you have some friend in San Francisco some
one who might write to you?” she suggested
pleasantly.
“I knew a boy once who went
to San Francisco,” said Leonidas doubtfully.
“At least, he allowed he was goin’ there.”
“That will do,” said Mrs.
Burroughs. “I suppose your parents know
him or of him?”
“Why,” said Leonidas, “he used to
live here.”
“Better still. For, you
see, it wouldn’t be strange if he did write.
What was the gentleman’s name?”
“Jim Belcher,” returned
Leonidas hesitatingly, by no means sure that the absent
Belcher knew how to write. Mrs. Burroughs took
a tiny pencil from her belt, opened the letter she
was holding in her hand, and apparently wrote the
name in it. Then she folded it and sealed it,
smiling charmingly at Leonidas’s puzzled face.
“Now, Leon, listen; for here
is the favor I am asking. Mr. Jim Belcher” she
pronounced the name with great gravity “will
write to you in a few days. But inside of your
letter will be a little note to me, which you will
bring me. You can show your letter to your family,
if they want to know who it is from; but no one must
see mine. Can you manage that?”
“Yes,” said Leonidas.
Then, as the whole idea flashed upon his quick intelligence,
he smiled until he showed his dimples. Mrs. Burroughs
leaned forward over the fence, lifted his torn straw
hat, and dropped a fluttering little kiss on his forehead.
It seemed to the boy, flushed and rosy as a maid,
as if she had left a shining star there for every
one to see.
“Don’t smile like that,
Leon, you’re positively irresistible! It
will be a nice little game, won’t it? Nobody
in it but you and me and Belcher!
We’ll outwit them yet. And, you see, you’ll
be obliged to come to me, after all, without my asking.”
They both laughed; indeed, quite a
dimpled, bright-eyed, rosy, innocent pair, though
I think Leonidas was the more maidenly.
“And,” added Leonidas,
with breathless eagerness, “I can sometimes write
to to Jim, and inclose your letter.”
“Angel of wisdom! certainly.
Well, now, let’s see have you got
any letters for the post to-day?” He colored
again, for in anticipation of meeting her he had hurried
up the family post that morning. He held out
his letters: she thrust her own among them.
“Now,” she said, laying her cool, soft
hand against his hot cheek, “run along, dear;
you must not be seen loitering here.”
Leonidas ran off, buoyed up on ambient
air. It seemed just like a fairy-book. Here
he was, the confidant of the most beautiful creature
he had seen, and there was a mysterious letter coming
to him Leonidas and no one to
know why. And now he had a “call”
to see her often; she would not forget him he
needn’t loiter by the fencepost to see if she
wanted him and his boyish pride and shyness
were appeased. There was no question of moral
ethics raised in Leonidas’s mind; he knew that
it would not be the real Jim Belcher who would write
to him, but that made the prospect the more attractive.
Nor did another circumstance trouble his conscience.
When he reached the post-office, he was surprised to
see the man whom he knew to be Mr. Burroughs talking
with the postmaster. Leonidas brushed by him
and deposited his letters in the box in discreet triumph.
The postmaster was evidently officially resenting some
imputation on his carelessness, and, concluding his
defense, “No, sir,” he said, “you
kin bet your boots that ef any letter hez gone
astray for you or your wife Ye said your
wife, didn’t ye?”
“Yes,” said Burroughs
hastily, with a glance around the shop.
“Well, for you or anybody at
your house it ain’t here that’s
the fault. You hear me! I know every letter
that comes in and goes outer this office, I reckon,
and handle ’em all,” Leonidas
pricked up his ears, “and if anybody
oughter know, it’s me. Ye kin paste that
in your hat, Mr. Burroughs.” Burroughs,
apparently disconcerted by the intrusion of a third
party Leonidas upon what was
evidently a private inquiry, murmured something surlily,
and passed out.
Leonidas was puzzled. That big
man seemed to be “snoopin’” around
for something! He knew that he dared not touch
the letter-bag, Leonidas had heard somewhere
that it was a deadly crime to touch any letters after
the Government had got hold of them once, and he had
no fears for the safety of hers. But ought he
not go back at once and tell her about her husband’s
visit, and the alarming fact that the postmaster was
personally acquainted with all the letters? He
instantly saw, too, the wisdom of her inclosing her
letter hereafter in another address. Yet he finally
resolved not to tell her to-day, it would
look like “hanging round” again; and another
secret reason he was afraid that any allusion
to her husband’s interference would bring back
that change in her beautiful face which he did not
like. The better to resist temptation, he went
back another way.
It must not be supposed that, while
Leonidas indulged in this secret passion for the beautiful
stranger, it was to the exclusion of his boyish habits.
It merely took the place of his intellectual visions
and his romantic reading. He no longer carried
books in his pocket on his lazy rambles. What
were mediaeval legends of high-born ladies and their
pages to this real romance of himself and Mrs. Burroughs?
What were the exploits of boy captains and juvenile
trappers and the Indian maidens and Spanish senoritas
to what was now possible to himself and his divinity
here upon Casket Ridge! The very ground
around her was now consecrated to romance and adventure.
Consequently, he visited a few traps on his way back
which he had set for “jackass-rabbits”
and wildcats, the latter a vindictive reprisal
for aggression upon an orphan brood of mountain quail
which he had taken under his protection. For,
while he nourished a keen love of sport, it was controlled
by a boy’s larger understanding of nature:
a pantheistic sympathy with man and beast and plant,
which made him keenly alive to the strange cruelties
of creation, revealed to him some queer animal feuds,
and made him a chivalrous partisan of the weaker.
He had even gone out of his way to defend, by ingenious
contrivances of his own, the hoard of a golden squirrel
and the treasures of some wild bees from a predatory
bear, although it did not prevent him later from capturing
the squirrel by an equally ingenious contrivance,
and from eventually eating some of the honey.
He was late home that evening.
But this was “vacation,” the
district school was closed, and but for the household
“chores,” which occupied his early mornings,
each long summer day was a holiday. So two or
three passed; and then one morning, on his going to
the post-office, the postmaster threw down upon the
counter a real and rather bulky letter, duly stamped,
and addressed to Mr. Leonidas Boone! Leonidas
was too discreet to open it before witnesses, but
in the solitude of the trail home broke the seal.
It contained another letter with no address clearly
the one she expected and, more marvelous
still, a sheaf of trout-hooks, with delicate gut-snells
such as Leonidas had only dared to dream of.
The letter to himself was written in a clear, distinct
hand, and ran as follows:
Dear Lee, How
are you getting on on old Casket Ridge? It seems
a coon’s age since you and me was together,
and times I get to think I must just run up and see
you! We’re having bully times in ’Frisco,
you bet! though there ain’t anything wild worth
shucks to go to see ’cept the sea
lions at the Cliff House. They’re just stunning big
as a grizzly, and bigger climbing over
a big rock or swimming in the sea like an otter or
muskrat. I’m sending you some snells and
hooks, such as you can’t get at Casket.
Use the fine ones for pot-holes and the bigger ones
for running water or falls. Let me know when
you’ve got ’em. Write to Lock Box
N. That’s where dad’s letters
come. So no more at present.
From yours truly,
Jim Belcher.
Not only did Leonidas know that this
was not from the real Jim, but he felt the vague contact
of a new, charming, and original personality that
fascinated him. Of course, it was only natural
that one of her friends as he must
be should be equally delightful. There
was no jealousy in Leonidas’s devotion; he knew
only a joy in this fellowship of admiration for her
which he was satisfied that the other boy must feel.
And only the right kind of boy could know the importance
of his ravishing gift, and this Jim was evidently
“no slouch”! Yet, in Leonidas’s
new joy he did not forget her! He ran back
to the stockade fence and lounged upon the road in
view of the house, but she did not appear.
Leonidas lingered on the top of the
hill, ostentatiously examining a young hickory for
a green switch, but to no effect. Then it suddenly
occurred to him that she might be staying in purposely,
and, perhaps a little piqued by her indifference,
he ran off. There was a mountain stream hard
by, now dwindled in the summer drouth to a mere trickling
thread among the boulders, and there was a certain
“pot-hole” that he had long known.
It was the lurking-place of a phenomenal trout, an
almost historic fish in the district, which had long
resisted the attempt of such rude sportsmen as miners,
or even experts like himself. Few had seen it,
except as a vague, shadowy bulk in the four feet of
depth and gloom in which it hid; only once had Leonidas’s
quick eye feasted on its fair proportions. On
that memorable occasion Leonidas, having exhausted
every kind of lure of painted fly and living bait,
was rising from his knees behind the bank, when a pink
five-cent stamp dislodged from his pocket fluttered
in the air, and descended slowly upon the still pool.
Horrified at his loss, Leonidas leaned over to recover
it, when there was a flash like lightning in the black
depths, a dozen changes of light and shadow on the
surface, a little whirling wave splashing against
the side of the rock, and the postage stamp was gone.
More than that for one instant the trout
remained visible, stationary and expectant! Whether
it was the instinct of sport, or whether the fish
had detected a new, subtle, and original flavor in
the gum and paper, Leonidas never knew. Alas!
he had not another stamp; he was obliged to leave
the fish, but carried a brilliant idea away with him.
Ever since then he had cherished it and
another extra stamp in his pocket. And now, with
this strong but gossamer-like snell, this new hook,
and this freshly cut hickory rod, he would make the
trial!
But fate was against him! He
had scarcely descended the narrow trail to the pine-fringed
margin of the stream before his quick ear detected
an unusual rustling through the adjacent underbrush,
and then a voice that startled him! It was hers!
In an instant all thought of sport had fled.
With a beating heart, half opened lips, and uplifted
lashes, Leonidas awaited the coming of his divinity
like a timorous virgin at her first tryst.
But Mrs. Burroughs was clearly not
in an equally responsive mood. With her fair
face reddened by the sun, the damp tendrils of her
unwound hair clinging to her forehead, and her smart
little slippers red with dust, there was also a querulous
light in her eyes, and a still more querulous pinch
in her nostrils, as she stood panting before him.
“You tiresome boy!” she
gasped, holding one little hand to her side as she
gripped her brambled skirt around her ankles with the
other. “Why didn’t you wait?
Why did you make me run all this distance after you?”
Leonidas timidly and poignantly protested.
He had waited before the house and on the hill; he
thought she didn’t want him.
“Couldn’t you see that
that man kept me in?” she went on peevishly.
“Haven’t you sense enough to know that
he suspects something, and follows me everywhere,
dogging my footsteps every time the post comes in,
and even going to the post-office himself, to make
sure that he sees all my letters? Well,”
she added impatiently, “have you anything for
me? Why don’t you speak?”
Crushed and remorseful, Leonidas produced
her letter. She almost snatched it from his hand,
opened it, read a few lines, and her face changed.
A smile strayed from her eyes to her lips, and back
again. Leonidas’s heart was lifted; she
was so forgiving and so beautiful!
“Is he a boy, Mrs. Burroughs?” asked Leonidas
shyly.
“Well not exactly,”
she said, her charming face all radiant again.
“He’s older than you. What has he
written to you?”
Leonidas put his letter in her hand for reply.
“I wish I could see him, you
know,” he said shyly. “That letter’s
bully it’s just rats! I like
him pow’ful.”
Mrs. Burroughs had skimmed through
the letter, but not interestedly.
“You mustn’t like him
more than you like me,” she said laughingly,
caressing him with her voice and eyes, and even her
straying hand.
“I couldn’t do that!
I never could like anybody as I like you,” said.
Leonidas gravely. There was such appalling truthfulness
in the boy’s voice and frankly opened eyes that
the woman could not evade it, and was slightly disconcerted.
But she presently started up with a vexatious cry.
“There’s that wretch following me again,
I do believe,” she said, staring at the hilltop.
“Yes! Look, Leon, he’s turning to
come down this trail. What’s to be done?
He mustn’t see me here!”
Leonidas looked. It was indeed
Mr. Burroughs; but he was evidently only taking a
short cut towards the Ridge, where his men were working.
Leonidas had seen him take it before. But it was
the principal trail on the steep hillside, and they
must eventually meet. A man might evade it by
scrambling through the brush to a lower and rougher
trail; but a woman, never! But an idea had seized
Leonidas. “I can stop him,” he said
confidently to her. “You just lie low here
behind that rock till I come back. He hasn’t
seen you yet.”
She had barely time to draw back before
Leonidas darted down the trail towards her husband.
Yet, in her intense curiosity, she leaned out the
next moment to watch him. He paused at last, not
far from the approaching figure, and seemed to kneel
down on the trail. What was he doing? Her
husband was still slowly advancing. Suddenly he
stopped. At the same moment she heard their two
voices in excited parley, and then, to her amazement,
she saw her husband scramble hurriedly down the trail
to the lower level, and with an occasional backward
glance, hasten away until he had passed beyond her
view.
She could scarcely realize her narrow
escape when Leonidas stood by her side. “How
did you do it?” she said eagerly.
“With a rattler!” said the boy gravely.
“With a what?”
“A rattlesnake pizen snake, you know.”
“A rattlesnake?” she said,
staring at Leonidas with a quick snatching away of
her skirts.
The boy, who seemed to have forgotten
her in his other abstraction of adventure, now turned
quickly, with devoted eyes and a reassuring smile.
“Yes; but I wouldn’t let him hurt you,”
he said gently.
“But what did you do?”
He looked at her curiously. “You
won’t be frightened if I show you?” he
said doubtfully. “There’s nothin’
to be afeerd of s’long as you’re with
me,” he added proudly.
“Yes that is” she
stammered, and then, her curiosity getting the better
of her fear, she added in a whisper: “Show
me quick!”
He led the way up the narrow trail
until he stopped where he had knelt before. It
was a narrow, sunny ledge of rock, scarcely wide enough
for a single person to pass. He silently pointed
to a cleft in the rock, and kneeling down again, began
to whistle in a soft, fluttering way. There was
a moment of suspense, and then she was conscious of
an awful gliding something, a movement
so measured yet so exquisitely graceful that she stood
enthralled. A narrow, flattened, expressionless
head was followed by a footlong strip of yellow-barred
scales; then there was a pause, and the head turned,
in a beautifully symmetrical half-circle, towards the
whistler. The whistling ceased; the snake, with
half its body out of the cleft, remained poised in
air as if stiffened to stone.
“There,” said Leonidas
quietly, “that’s what Mr. Burroughs saw,
and that’s why he scooted off the trail.
I just called out William Henry, I call
him William Henry, and he knows his name, and
then I sang out to Mr. Burroughs what was up; and
it was lucky I did, for the next moment he’d
have been on top of him and have been struck, for rattlers
don’t give way to any one.”
“Oh, why didn’t you let” She
stopped herself quickly, but could not stop the fierce
glint in her eye nor the sharp curve in her nostril.
Luckily, Leonidas did not see this, being preoccupied
with his other graceful charmer, William Henry.
“But how did you know it was
here?” said Mrs. Burroughs, recovering herself.
“Fetched him here,” said Leonidas briefly.
“What in your hands?” she said, drawing
back.
“No! made him follow! I
have handled him, but it was after I’d first
made him strike his pizen out upon a stick. Ye
know, after he strikes four times he ain’t got
any pizen left. Then ye kin do anythin’
with him, and he knows it. He knows me, you bet!
I’ve bin three months trainin’ him.
Look! Don’t be frightened,” he said,
as Mrs. Burroughs drew hurriedly back; “see
him mind me. Now scoot home, William Henry.”
He accompanied the command with a
slow, dominant movement of the hickory rod he was
carrying. The snake dropped its head, and slid
noiselessly out of the cleft across the trail and
down the hill.
“Thinks my rod is witch-hazel,
which rattlers can’t abide,” continued
Leonidas, dropping into a boy’s breathless abbreviated
speech. “Lives down your way just
back of your farm. Show ye some day. Suns
himself on a flat stone every day always
cold never can get warm. Eh?”
She had not spoken, but was gazing
into space with a breathless rigidity of attitude
and a fixed look in her eye, not unlike the motionless
orbs of the reptile that had glided away.
“Does anybody else know you keep him?”
she asked.
“Nary one. I never showed him to anybody
but you,” replied the boy.
“Don’t! You must
show me where he hides to-morrow,” she said,
in her old laughing way. “And now, Leon,
I must go back to the house.”
“May I write to him to
Jim Belcher, Mrs. Burroughs?” said the boy timidly.
“Certainly. And come to
me to-morrow with your letter I will have
mine ready. Good-by.” She stopped
and glanced at the trail. “And you say that
if that man had kept on, the snake would have bitten
him?”
“Sure pop! if he’d
trod on him as he was sure to. The
snake wouldn’t have known he didn’t mean
it. It’s only natural,” continued
Leonidas, with glowing partisanship for the gentle
and absent William Henry. “You wouldn’t
like to be trodden upon, Mrs. Burroughs!”
“No! I’d strike out!”
she said quickly. She made a rapid motion forward
with her low forehead and level head, leaving it rigid
the next moment, so that it reminded him of the snake,
and he laughed. At which she laughed too, and
tripped away.
Leonidas went back and caught his
trout. But even this triumph did not remove a
vague sense of disappointment which had come over him.
He had often pictured to himself a Heaven-sent meeting
with her in the woods, a walk with her, alone, where
he could pick her the rarest flowers and herbs and
show her his woodland friends; and it had only ended
in this, and an exhibition of William Henry!
He ought to have saved her from something, and
not her husband. Yet he had no ill-feeling for
Burroughs, only a desire to circumvent him, on behalf
of the unprotected, as he would have baffled a hawk
or a wildcat. He went home in dismal spirits,
but later that evening constructed a boyish letter
of thanks to the apocryphal Belcher and told him all
about the trout!
He brought her his letter the next
day, and received hers to inclose. She was pleasant,
her own charming self again, but she seemed more interested
in other things than himself, as, for instance, the
docile William Henry, whose hiding-place he showed,
and whose few tricks she made him exhibit to her,
and which the gratified Leonidas accepted as a delicate
form of flattery to himself. But his yearning,
innocent spirit detected a something lacking, which
he was too proud to admit even to himself. It
was his own fault; he ought to have waited for her,
and not gone for the trout!
So a fortnight passed with an interchange
of the vicarious letters, and brief, hopeful, and
disappointing meetings to Leonidas. To add to
his unhappiness, he was obliged to listen to sneering
disparagement of his goddess from his family, and
criticisms which, happily, his innocence did not comprehend.
It was his own mother who accused her of shamefully
“making up” to the good-looking expressman
at church last Sunday, and declared that Burroughs
ought to “look after that wife of his,” two
statements which the simple Leonidas could not reconcile.
He had seen the incident, and only thought her more
lovely than ever. Why should not the expressman
think so too? And yet the boy was not happy; something
intruded upon his sports, upon his books, making them
dull and vapid, and yet that something was she!
He grew pale and preoccupied. If he had only
some one in whom to confide some one who
could explain his hopes and fears. That one was
nearer than he thought!
It was quite three weeks since the
rattlesnake incident, and he was wandering moodily
over Casket Ridge. He was near the Casket, that
abrupt upheaval of quartz and gneiss, shaped like
a coffer, from which the mountain took its name.
It was a favorite haunt of Leonidas, one of whose
boyish superstitions was that it contained a treasure
of gold, and one of whose brightest dreams had been
that he should yet discover it. This he did not
do to-day, but looking up from the rocks that he was
listlessly examining, he made the almost as thrilling
discovery that near him on the trail was a distinguished-looking
stranger.
He was bestriding a shapely mustang,
which well became his handsome face and slight, elegant
figure, and he was looking at Leonidas with an amused
curiosity and a certain easy assurance that were difficult
to withstand. It was with the same fascinating
self-confidence of smile, voice, and manner that he
rode up to the boy, and leaning lightly over his saddle,
said with exaggerated politeness: “I believe
I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Leonidas Boone?”
The rising color in Leonidas’s
face was apparently a sufficient answer to the stranger,
for he continued smilingly, “Then permit me to
introduce myself as Mr. James Belcher. As you
perceive, I have grown considerably since you last
saw me. In fact, I’ve done nothing else.
It’s surprising what a fellow can do when he
sets his mind on one thing. And then, you know,
they’re always telling you that San Francisco
is a ‘growing place.’ That accounts
for it!”
Leonidas, dazed, dazzled, but delighted,
showed all his white teeth in a shy laugh. At
which the enchanting stranger leaped from his horse
like a very boy, drew his arm through the rein, and
going up to Leonidas, lifted the boy’s straw
hat from his head and ran his fingers through his
curls. There was nothing original in that everybody
did that to him as a preliminary to conversation.
But when this ingenuous fine gentleman put his own
Panama hat on Leonidas’s head, and clapped Leonidas’s
torn straw on his own, and, passing his arm through
the boy’s, began to walk on with him, Leonidas’s
simple heart went out to him at once.
“And now, Leon,” said
the delightful stranger, “let’s you and
me have a talk. There’s a nice cool spot
under these laurels; I’ll stake out Pepita,
and we’ll just lie off there and gab, and not
care if school keeps or not.”
“But you know you ain’t
really Jim Belcher,” said the boy shyly.
“I’m as good a man as
he is any day, whoever I am,” said the stranger,
with humorous defiance, “and can lick him out
of his boots, whoever he is. That ought
to satisfy you. But if you want my certificate,
here’s your own letter, old man,” he said,
producing Leonidas’s last scrawl from his pocket.
“And hers?” said the boy cautiously.
The stranger’s face changed
a little. “And hers,” he repeated
gravely, showing a little pink note which Leonidas
recognized as one of Mrs. Burroughs’s inclosures.
The boy was silent until they reached the laurels,
where the stranger tethered his horse and then threw
himself in an easy attitude beneath the tree, with
the back of his head upon his clasped hands.
Leonidas could see his curved brown mustaches and silky
lashes that were almost as long, and thought him the
handsomest man he had ever beheld.
“Well, Leon,” said the
stranger, stretching himself out comfortably and pulling
the boy down beside him, “how are things going
on the Casket? All serene, eh?”
The inquiry so dismally recalled Leonidas’s
late feelings that his face clouded, and he involuntarily
sighed. The stranger instantly shifted his head
and gazed curiously at him. Then he took the boy’s
sunburnt hand in his own, and held it a moment.
“Well, go on,” he said.
“Well, Mr. Mr. I
can’t go on I won’t!”
said Leonidas, with a sudden fit of obstinacy.
“I don’t know what to call you.”
“Call me ‘Jack’ ’Jack
Hamlin’ when you’re not in a hurry.
Ever heard of me before?” he added, suddenly
turning his head towards Leonidas.
The boy shook his head. “No.”
Mr. Jack Hamlin lifted his lashes
in affected expostulation to the skies. “And
this is Fame!” he murmured audibly.
But this Leonidas did not comprehend.
Nor could he understand why the stranger, who clearly
must have come to see her, should not ask about
her, should not rush to seek her, but should lie back
there all the while so contentedly on the grass.
He wouldn’t. He half resented it, and
then it occurred to him that this fine gentleman was
like himself shy. Who could help being
so before such an angel? He would help him
on.
And so, shyly at first, but bit by
bit emboldened by a word or two from Jack, he began
to talk of her of her beauty of
her kindness of his own unworthiness of
what she had said and done until, finding
in this gracious stranger the vent his pent-up feelings
so long had sought, he sang then and there the little
idyl of his boyish life. He told of his decline
in her affections after his unpardonable sin in keeping
her waiting while he went for the trout, and added
the miserable mistake of the rattlesnake episode.
“For it was a mistake, Mr. Hamlin. I oughtn’t
to have let a lady like that know anything about snakes just
because I happen to know them.”
“It was an awful slump,
Lee,” said Hamlin gravely. “Get a
woman and a snake together and where are
you? Think of Adam and Eve and the serpent, you
know.”
“But it wasn’t that way,”
said the boy earnestly. “And I want to tell
you something else that’s just makin’ me
sick, Mr. Hamlin. You know I told you William
Henry lives down at the bottom of Burroughs’s
garden, and how I showed Mrs. Burroughs his tricks!
Well, only two days ago I was down there looking for
him, and couldn’t find him anywhere. There’s
a sort of narrow trail from the garden to the hill,
a short cut up to the Ridge, instead o’ going
by their gate. It’s just the trail any one
would take in a hurry, or if they didn’t want
to be seen from the road. Well! I was looking
this way and that for William Henry, and whistlin’
for him, when I slipped on to the trail. There,
in the middle of it, was an old bucket turned upside
down just the thing a man would kick away
or a woman lift up. Well, Mr. Hamlin, I kicked
it away, and” the boy stopped, with
rounded eyes and bated breath, and added “I
just had time to give one jump and save myself!
For under that pail, cramped down so he couldn’t
get out, and just bilin’ over with rage, and
chockful of pizen, was William Henry! If it had
been anybody else less spry, they’d have got
bitten, and that’s just what the sneak
who put it there knew.”
Mr. Hamlin uttered an exclamation
under his breath, and rose to his feet.
“What did you say?” asked the boy quickly.
“Nothing,” said Mr. Hamlin.
But it had sounded to Leonidas like an oath.
Mr. Hamlin walked a few steps, as
if stretching his limbs, and then said: “And
you think Burroughs would have been bitten?”
“Why, no!” said Leonidas
in astonished indignation; “of course not not
Burroughs. It would have been poor Mrs.
Burroughs. For, of course, he set that trap
for her don’t you see? Who else
would do it?”
“Of course, of course!
Certainly,” said Mr. Hamlin coolly. “Of
course, as you say, he set the trap yes you
just hang on to that idea.”
But something in Mr. Hamlin’s
manner, and a peculiar look in his eye, did not satisfy
Leonidas. “Are you going to see her now?”
he said eagerly. “I can show you the house,
and then run in and tell her you’re outside
in the laurels.”
“Not just yet,” said Mr.
Hamlin, laying his hand on the boy’s head after
having restored his own hat. “You see, I
thought of giving her a surprise. A big surprise!”
he added slowly. After a pause, he went on:
“Did you tell her what you had seen?”
“Of course I did,” said
Leonidas reproachfully. “Did you think I
was going to let her get bit? It might have killed
her.”
“And it might not have been
an unmixed pleasure for William Henry. I mean,”
said Mr. Hamlin gravely, correcting himself, “You
would never have forgiven him. But what did she
say?”
The boy’s face clouded.
“She thanked me and said it was very thoughtful and
kind though it might have been only an accident” he
stammered “and then she said perhaps
I was hanging round and coming there a little too
much lately, and that as Burroughs was very watchful,
I’d better quit for two or three days.”
The tears were rising to his eyes, but by putting
his two clenched fists into his pockets, he managed
to hold them down. Perhaps Mr. Hamlin’s
soft hand on his head assisted him. Mr. Hamlin
took from his pocket a notebook, and tearing out a
leaf, sat down again and began to write on his knee.
After a pause, Leonidas said,
“Was you ever in love, Mr. Hamlin?”
“Never,” said Mr. Hamlin,
quietly continuing to write. “But, now you
speak of it, it’s a long-felt want in my nature
that I intend to supply some day. But not until
I’ve made my pile. And don’t you
either.” He continued writing, for it was
this gentleman’s peculiarity to talk without
apparently the slightest concern whether anybody else
spoke, whether he was listened to, or whether his
remarks were at all relevant to the case. Yet
he was always listened to for that reason. When
he had finished writing, he folded up the paper, put
it in an envelope, and addressed it.
“Shall I take it to her?” said Leonidas
eagerly.
“It’s not for her;
it’s for him Mr. Burroughs,”
said Mr. Hamlin quietly.
The boy drew back. “To
get him out of the way,” added Hamlin explanatorily.
“When he gets it, lightning wouldn’t keep
him here. Now, how to send it,” he said
thoughtfully.
“You might leave it at the post-office,”
said Leonidas timidly. “He always goes
there to watch his wife’s letters.”
For the first time in their interview
Mr. Hamlin distinctly laughed.
“Your head is level, Leo, and
I’ll do it. Now the best thing you can do
is to follow Mrs. Burroughs’s advice. Quit
going to the house for a day or two.” He
walked towards his horse. The boy’s face
sank, but he kept up bravely. “And will
I see you again?” he said wistfully.
Mr. Hamlin lowered his face so near
the boy’s that Leonidas could see himself in
the brown depths of Mr. Hamlin’s eyes. “I
hope you will,” he said gravely. He mounted,
shook the boy’s hand, and rode away in the lengthening
shadows. Then Leonidas walked sadly home.
There was no need for him to keep
his promise; for the next morning the family were
stirred by the announcement that Mr. and Mrs. Burroughs
had left Casket Ridge that night by the down stage
for Sacramento, and that the house was closed.
There were various rumors concerning the reason of
this sudden departure, but only one was persistent,
and borne out by the postmaster. It was that
Mr. Burroughs had received that afternoon an anonymous
note that his wife was about to elope with the notorious
San Francisco gambler, Jack Hamlin.
But Leonidas Boone, albeit half understanding,
kept his miserable secret with a still hopeful and
trustful heart. It grieved him a little that
William Henry was found a few days later dead, with
his head crushed. Yet it was not until years
later, when he had made a successful “prospect”
on Casket Ridge, that he met Mr. Hamlin in San Francisco,
and knew how he had played the part of Mercury upon
that “heaven-kissing hill.”