To Kate’s surprise, the lower
part of the house was deserted, but there was an unusual
activity on the floor above, and the sound of heavy
steps. There were alien marks of dusty feet on
the scrupulously clean passage, and on the first step
of the stairs a spot of blood. With a sudden
genuine alarm that drove her previous adventure from
her mind, she impatiently called her sister’s
name. There was a hasty yet subdued rustle of
skirts on the staircase, and Mrs. Hale, with her finger
on her lip, swept Kate unceremoniously into the sitting-room,
closed the door, and leaned back against it, with
a faint smile. She had a crumpled paper in her
hand.
“Don’t be alarmed, but
read that first,” she said, handing her sister
the paper. “It was brought just now.”
Kate instantly recognized her brother’s
distinct hand. She read hurriedly, “The
coach was robbed last night; nobody hurt. I’ve
lost nothing but a day’s time, as this business
will keep me here until to-morrow, when Manuel can
join me with a fresh horse. No cause for alarm.
As the bearer goes out of his way to bring you this,
see that he wants for nothing.”
“Well,” said Kate expectantly.
“Well, the ‘bearer’
was fired upon by the robbers, who were lurking on
the Ridge. He was wounded in the leg. Luckily
he was picked up by his friend, who was coming to
meet him, and brought here as the nearest place.
He’s up-stairs in the spare bed in the spare
room, with his friend, who won’t leave his side.
He won’t even have mother in the room.
They’ve stopped the bleeding with John’s
ambulance things, and now, Kate, here’s a chance
for you to show the value of your education in the
ambulance class. The ball has got to be extracted.
Here’s your opportunity.”
Kate looked at her sister curiously.
There was a faint pink flush on her pale cheeks, and
her eyes were gently sparkling. She had never
seen her look so pretty before.
“Why not have sent Manuel for
a doctor at once?” asked Kate.
“The nearest doctor is fifteen
miles away, and Manuel is nowhere to be found.
Perhaps he’s gone to look after the stock.
There’s some talk of snow; imagine the absurdity
of it!”
“But who are they?”
“They speak of themselves as
‘friends,’ as if it were a profession.
The wounded one was a passenger, I suppose.”
“But what are they like?”
continued Kate. “I suppose they’re
like them all.”
Mrs. Hale shrugged her shoulders.
“The wounded one, when he’s
not fainting away, is laughing. The other is
a creature with a moustache, and gloomy beyond expression.”
“What are you going to do with them?”
said Kate.
“What should I do? Even
without John’s letter I could not refuse the
shelter of my house to a wounded and helpless man.
I shall keep him, of course, until John comes.
Why, Kate, I really believe you are so prejudiced
against these people you’d like to turn them
out. But I forget! It’s because you
like them so well. Well, you need not fear
to expose yourself to the fascinations of the wounded
Christy Minstrel I’m sure he’s
that or to the unspeakable one, who is shyness
itself, and would not dare to raise his eyes to you.”
There was a timid, hesitating step
in the passage. It paused before the door, moved
away, returned, and finally asserted its intentions
in the gentlest of taps.
“It’s him; I’m sure
of it,” said Mrs. Hale, with a suppressed smile.
Kate threw open the door smartly,
to the extreme discomfiture of a tall, dark figure
that already had slunk away from it. For all that,
he was a good-looking enough fellow, with a moustache
as long and almost as flexible as a ringlet.
Kate could not help noticing also that his hand, which
was nervously pulling the moustache, was white and
thin.
“Excuse me,” he stammered,
without raising his eyes, “I was looking for for the
old lady. I I beg your pardon.
I didn’t know that you the young
ladies company were here.
I intended I only wanted to say that my
friend ” He stopped at the slight
smile that passed quickly over Mrs. Hale’s mouth,
and his pale face reddened with an angry flush.
“I hope he is not worse,”
said Mrs. Hale, with more than her usual languid gentleness.
“My mother is not here at present. Can I can
we this is my sister do
as well?”
Without looking up he made a constrained
recognition of Kate’s presence, that embarrassed
and curt as it was, had none of the awkwardness of
rusticity.
“Thank you; you’re very
kind. But my friend is a little stronger, and
if you can lend me an extra horse I’ll try to
get him on the Summit to-night.”
“But you surely will not take
him away from us so soon?” said Mrs. Hale, with
a languid look of alarm, in which Kate, however, detected
a certain real feeling. “Wait at least
until my husband returns to-morrow.”
“He won’t be here to-morrow,”
said the stranger hastily. He stopped, and as
quickly corrected himself. “That is, his
business is so very uncertain, my friend says.”
Only Kate noticed the slip; but she
noticed also that her sister was apparently unconscious
of it. “You think,” she said, “that
Mr. Hale may be delayed?”
He turned upon her almost brusquely.
“I mean that it is already snowing up there;”
he pointed through the window to the cloud Kate had
noticed; “if it comes down lower in the pass
the roads will be blocked up. That is why it
would be better for us to try and get on at once.”
“But if Mr. Hale is likely to
be stopped by snow, so are you,” said Mrs. Hale
playfully; “and you had better let us try to
make your friend comfortable here rather than expose
him to that uncertainty in his weak condition.
We will do our best for him. My sister is dying
for an opportunity to show her skill in surgery,”
she continued, with an unexpected mischievousness
that only added to Kate’s surprised embarrassment.
“Aren’t you, Kate?”
Equivocal as the young girl knew her
silence appeared, she was unable to utter the simplest
polite evasion. Some unaccountable impulse kept
her constrained and speechless. The stranger
did not, however, wait for her reply, but, casting
a swift, hurried glance around the room, said, “It’s
impossible; we must go. In fact, I’ve already
taken the liberty to order the horses round.
They are at the door now. You may be certain,”
he added, with quick earnestness, suddenly lifting
his dark eyes to Mrs. Hale, and as rapidly withdrawing
them, “that your horse will be returned at once,
and and we won’t forget
your kindness.” He stopped and turned towards
the hall. “I I have brought my
friend down-stairs. He wants to thank you before
he goes.”
As he remained standing in the hall
the two women stepped to the door. To their surprise,
half reclining on a cane sofa was the wounded man,
and what could be seen of his slight figure was wrapped
in a dark serape. His beardless face gave him
a quaint boyishness quite inconsistent with the mature
lines of his temples and forehead. Pale, and
in pain, as he evidently was, his blue eyes twinkled
with intense amusement. Not only did his manner
offer a marked contrast to the sombre uneasiness of
his companion, but he seemed to be the only one perfectly
at his ease in the group around him.
“It’s rather rough making
you come out here to see me off,” he said, with
a not unmusical laugh that was very infectious, “but
Ned there, who carried me downstairs, wanted to tote
me round the house in his arms like a baby to say
ta-ta to you all. Excuse my not rising,
but I feel as uncertain below as a mermaid, and as
out of my element,” he added, with a mischievous
glance at his friend. “Ned concluded I must
go on. But I must say good-by to the old lady
first. Ah! here she is.”
To Kate’s complete bewilderment,
not only did the utter familiarity of this speech,
pass unnoticed and unrebuked by her sister, but actually
her own mother advanced quickly with every expression
of lively sympathy, and with the authority of her
years and an almost maternal anxiety endeavored to
dissuade the invalid from going. “This is
not my house,” she said, looking at her daughter,
“but if it were I should not hear of your leaving,
not only to-night, but until you were out of danger.
Josephine! Kate! What are you thinking of
to permit it? Well, then I forbid it there!”
Had they become suddenly insane, or
were they bewitched by this morose intruder and his
insufferably familiar confidant? The man was wounded,
it was true; they might have to put him up in common
humanity; but here was her austere mother, who wouldn’t
come in the room when Whisky Dick called on business,
actually pressing both of the invalid’s hands,
while her sister, who never extended a finger to the
ordinary visiting humanity of the neighborhood, looked
on with evident complacency.
The wounded man suddenly raised Mrs.
Scott’s hand to his lips, kissed it gently,
and, with his smile quite vanished, endeavored to rise
to his feet. “It’s of no use we
must go. Give me your arm, Ned. Quick!
Are the horses there?”
“Dear me,” said Mrs. Scott
quickly. “I forgot to say the horse cannot
be found anywhere. Manuel must have taken him
this morning to look up the stock. But he will
be back to-night certainly, and if to-morrow ”
The wounded man sank back to a sitting
position. “Is Manuel your man?” he
asked grimly.
“Yes.”
The two men exchanged glances.
“Marked on his left cheek and drinks a good
deal?”
“Yes,” said Kate, finding her voice.
“Why?”
The amused look came back to the man’s
eyes. “That kind of man isn’t safe
to wait for. We must take our own horse, Ned.
Are you ready?”
“Yes.”
The wounded man again attempted to
rise. He fell back, but this time quite heavily.
He had fainted.
Involuntarily and simultaneously the
three women rushed to his side. “He cannot
go,” said Kate suddenly.
“He will be better in a moment.”
“But only for a moment. Will nothing induce
you to change your mind?”
As if in reply a sudden gust of wind
brought a volley of rain against the window.
“That will,” said the stranger bitterly.
“The rain?”
“A mile from here it is snow;
and before we could reach the Summit with these horses
the road would be impassable.”
He made a slight gesture to himself,
as if accepting an inevitable defeat, and turned to
his companion, who was slowly reviving under the active
ministration of the two women. The wounded man
looked around with a weak smile. “This
is one way of going off,” he said faintly, “but
I could do this sort of thing as well on the road.”
“You can do nothing now,”
said his friend, decidedly. “Before we get
to the Gate the road will be impassable for our horses.”
“For any horses?” asked Kate.
“For any horses. For any
man or beast I might say. Where we cannot get
out, no one can get in,” he added, as if answering
her thoughts. “I am afraid that you won’t
see your brother to-morrow morning. But I’ll
reconnoitre as soon as I can do so without torturing
him,” he said, looking anxiously at the
helpless man; “he’s got about his share
of pain, I reckon, and the first thing is to get him
easier.” It was the longest speech he had
made to her; it was the first time he had fairly looked
her in the face. His shy restlessness had suddenly
given way to dogged resignation, less abstracted,
but scarcely more flattering to his entertainers.
Lifting his companion gently in his arms, as if he
had been a child, he reascended the staircase, Mrs.
Scott and the hastily-summoned Molly following with
overflowing solicitude. As soon as they were
alone in the parlor Mrs. Hale turned to her sister:
“Only that our guests seemed to be as anxious
to go just now as you were to pack them off, I should
have been shocked at your inhospitality. What
has come over you, Kate? These are the very people
you have reproached me so often with not being civil
enough to.”
“But who are they?”
“How do I know? There is your brother’s
letter.”
She usually spoke of her husband as
“John.” This slight shifting of relationship
and responsibility to the feminine mind was significant.
Kate was a little frightened and remorseful.
“I only meant you don’t even know their
names.”
“That wasn’t necessary
for giving them a bed and bandages. Do you suppose
the good Samaritan ever asked the wounded Jew’s
name, and that the Levite did not excuse himself because
the thieves had taken the poor man’s card-case?
Do the directions, ‘In case of accident,’
in your ambulance rules, read, ’First lay the
sufferer on his back and inquire his name and family
connections’? Besides, you can call one
‘Ned’ and the other ‘George,’
if you like.”
“Oh, you know what I mean,” said Kate,
irrelevantly. “Which is George?”
“George is the wounded man,”
said Mrs. Hale; “Not the one who talked
to you more than he did to any one else. I suppose
the poor man was frightened and read dismissal in
your eyes.”
“I wish John were here.”
“I don’t think we have
anything to fear in his absence from men whose only
wish is to get away from us. If it is a question
of propriety, my dear Kate, surely there is the presence
of mother to prevent any scandal although
really her own conduct with the wounded one is not
above suspicion,” she added, with that novel
mischievousness that seemed a return of her lost girlhood.
“We must try to do the best we can with them
and for them,” she said decidedly, “and
meantime I’ll see if I can’t arrange John’s
room for them.”
“John’s room?”
“Oh, mother is perfectly satisfied;
indeed, suggested it. It’s larger and will
hold two beds, for ‘Ned,’ the friend, must
attend to him at night. And, Kate, don’t
you think, if you’re not going out again, you
might change your costume? It does very well while
we are alone ”
“Well,” said Kate indignantly, “as
I am not going into his room ”
“I’m not so sure about
that, if we can’t get a regular doctor.
But he is very restless, and wanders all over the
house like a timid and apologetic spaniel.”
“Who?”
“Why ‘Ned.’
But I must go and look after the patient. I suppose
they’ve got him safe in his bed again,”
and with a nod to her sister she tripped up-stairs.
Uncomfortable and embarrassed, she
knew not why, Kate sought her mother. But that
good lady was already in attendance on the patient,
and Kate hurried past that baleful centre of attraction
with a feeling of loneliness and strangeness she had
never experienced before. Entering her own room
she went to the window that first and last
refuge of the troubled mind and gazed out.
Turning her eyes in the direction of her morning’s
walk, she started back with a sense of being dazzled.
She rubbed first her eyes and then the rain-dimmed
pane. It was no illusion! The whole landscape,
so familiar to her, was one vast field of dead, colorless
white! Trees, rocks, even distance itself, had
vanished in those few hours. An even shadowless,
motionless white sea filled the horizon. On either
side a vast wall of snow seemed to shut out the world
like a shroud. Only the green plateau before her,
with its sloping meadows and fringe of pines and cottonwood,
lay alone like a summer island in this frozen sea.
A sudden desire to view this phenomenon
more closely, and to learn for herself the limits
of this new tethered life, completely possessed her,
and, accustomed to act upon her independent impulses,
she seized a hooded waterproof cloak, and slipped
out of the house unperceived. The rain was falling
steadily along the descending trail where she walked,
but beyond, scarcely a mile across the chasm, the wintry
distance began to confuse her brain with the inextricable
swarming of snow. Hurrying down with feverish
excitement, she at last came in sight of the arching
granite portals of their domain. But her first
glance through the gateway showed it closed as if
with a white portcullis. Kate remembered that
the trail began to ascend beyond the arch, and knew
that what she saw was only the mountain side she had
partly climbed this morning. But the snow had
already crept down its flank, and the exit by trail
was practically closed. Breathlessly making her
way back to the highest part of the plateau the
cliff behind the house that here descended abruptly
to the rain-dimmed valley she gazed at the
dizzy depths in vain for some undiscovered or forgotten
trail along its face. But a single glance convinced
her of its inaccessibility. The gateway was indeed
their only outlet to the plain below. She looked
back at the falling snow beyond until she fancied
she could see in the crossing and recrossing lines
the moving meshes of a fateful web woven around them
by viewless but inexorable fingers.
Half frightened, she was turning away,
when she perceived, a few paces distant, the figure
of the stranger, “Ned,” also apparently
absorbed in the gloomy prospect. He was wrapped
in the clinging folds of a black serape braided with
silver; the broad flap of a slouch hat beaten back
by the wind exposed the dark, glistening curls on his
white forehead. He was certainly very handsome
and picturesque, and that apparently without effort
or consciousness. Neither was there anything in
his costume or appearance inconsistent with his surroundings,
or, even with what Kate could judge were his habits
or position. Nevertheless, she instantly decided
that he was too handsome and too picturesque,
without suspecting that her ideas of the limits of
masculine beauty were merely personal experience.
As he turned away from the cliff they
were brought face to face. “It doesn’t
look very encouraging over there,” he said quietly,
as if the inevitableness of the situation had relieved
him of his previous shyness and effort; “it’s
even worse than I expected. The snow must have
begun there last night, and it looks as if it meant
to stay.” He stopped for a moment, and
then, lifting his eyes to her, said:
“I suppose you know what this means?”
“I don’t understand you.”
“I thought not. Well! it
means that you are absolutely cut off here from any
communication or intercourse with any one outside of
that canyon. By this time the snow is five feet
deep over the only trail by which one can pass in
and out of that gateway. I am not alarming you,
I hope, for there is no real physical danger; a place
like this ought to be well garrisoned, and certainly
is self-supporting so far as the mere necessities
and even comforts are concerned. You have wood,
water, cattle, and game at your command, but for two
weeks at least you are completely isolated.”
“For two weeks,” said Kate, growing pale “and
my brother!”
“He knows all by this time,
and is probably as assured as I am of the safety of
his family.”
“For two weeks,” continued
Kate; “impossible! You don’t know
my brother! He will find some way to get to us.”
“I hope so,” returned
the stranger gravely, “for what is possible for
him is possible for us.”
“Then you are anxious to get
away,” Kate could not help saying.
“Very.”
The reply was not discourteous in
manner, but was so far from gallant that Kate felt
a new and inconsistent resentment. Before she
could say anything he added, “And I hope you
will remember, whatever may happen, that I did my
best to avoid staying here longer than was necessary
to keep my friend from bleeding to death in the road.”
“Certainly,” said Kate;
then added awkwardly, “I hope he’ll be
better soon.” She was silent, and then,
quickening her pace, said hurriedly, “I must
tell my sister this dreadful news.”
“I think she is prepared for
it. If there is anything I can do to help you
I hope you will let me know. Perhaps I may be
of some service. I shall begin by exploring the
trails to-morrow, for the best service we can do you
possibly is to take ourselves off; but I can carry
a gun, and the woods are full of game driven down
from the mountains. Let me show you something
you may not have noticed.” He stopped, and
pointed to a small knoll of sheltered shrubbery and
granite on the opposite mountain, which still remained
black against the surrounding snow. It seemed
to be thickly covered with moving objects. “They
are wild animals driven out of the snow,” said
the stranger. “That larger one is a grizzly;
there is a panther, wolves, wild cats, a fox, and
some mountain goats.”
“An ill-assorted party,” said the young
girl.
“Ill luck makes them companions.
They are too frightened to hurt one another now.”
“But they will eat each other
later on,” said Kate, stealing a glance at her
companion.
He lifted his long lashes and met
her eyes. “Not on a haven of refuge.”