As night crept up from the valley
that stormy afternoon, Sawyer’s Ledge was at
first quite blotted out by wind and rain, but presently
reappeared in little nebulous star-like points along
the mountain side, as the straggling cabins of the
settlement were one by one lit up by the miners returning
from tunnel and claim. These stars were of varying
brilliancy that evening, two notably so one
that eventually resolved itself into a many-candled
illumination of a cabin of evident festivity; the
other into a glimmering taper in the window of a silent
one. They might have represented the extreme
mutations of fortune in the settlement that night:
the celebration of a strike by Robert Falloner, a
lucky miner; and the sick-bed of Dick Lasham, an unlucky
one.
The latter was, however, not quite
alone. He was ministered to by Daddy Folsom,
a weak but emotional and aggressively hopeful neighbor,
who was sitting beside the wooden bunk whereon the
invalid lay. Yet there was something perfunctory
in his attitude: his eyes were continually straying
to the window, whence the illuminated Falloner festivities
could be seen between the trees, and his ears were
more intent on the songs and laughter that came faintly
from the distance than on the feverish breathing and
unintelligible moans of the sufferer.
Nevertheless he looked troubled equally
by the condition of his charge and by his own enforced
absence from the revels. A more impatient moan
from the sick man, however, brought a change to his
abstracted face, and he turned to him with an exaggerated
expression of sympathy.
“In course! Lordy!
I know jest what those pains are: kinder ez ef
you was havin’ a tooth pulled that had roots
branchin’ all over ye! My! I’ve
jest had ’em so bad I couldn’t keep from
yellin’! That’s hot rheumatics!
Yes, sir, I oughter know! And” (confidentially)
“the sing’ler thing about ’em is
that they get worse jest as they’re going off sorter
wringin’ yer hand and punchin’ ye in the
back to say ‘Good-by.’ There!”
he continued, as the man sank exhaustedly back on his
rude pillow of flour-sacks. “There! didn’t
I tell ye? Ye’ll be all right in a minit,
and ez chipper ez a jay bird in the mornin’.
Oh, don’t tell me about rheumatics I’ve
bin thar! On’y mine was the cold kind that
hangs on longest yours is the hot, that
burns itself up in no time!”
If the flushed face and bright eyes
of Lasham were not enough to corroborate this symptom
of high fever, the quick, wandering laugh he gave
would have indicated the point of delirium. But
the too optimistic Daddy Folsom referred this act
to improvement, and went on cheerfully: “Yes,
sir, you’re better now, and” here
he assumed an air of cautious deliberation, extravagant,
as all his assumptions were “I ain’t
sayin’ that ef you was to rise up”
(very slowly) “and heave a blanket or two over
your shoulders jest by way o’ caution,
you know and leanin’ on me, kinder
meander over to Bob Falloner’s cabin and the
boys, it wouldn’t do you a heap o’ good.
Changes o’ this kind is often prescribed by
the faculty.” Another moan from the sufferer,
however, here apparently corrected Daddy’s too
favorable prognosis. “Oh, all right!
Well, perhaps ye know best; and I’ll jest run
over to Bob’s and say how as ye ain’t
comin’, and will be back in a jiffy!”
“The letter,” said the
sick man hurriedly, “the letter, the letter!”
Daddy leaned suddenly over the bed.
It was impossible for even his hopefulness to avoid
the fact that Lasham was delirious. It was a strong
factor in the case one that would certainly
justify his going over to Falloner’s with the
news. For the present moment, however, this aberration
was to be accepted cheerfully and humored after Daddy’s
own fashion. “Of course the
letter, the letter,” he said convincingly; “that’s
what the boys hev bin singin’ jest now
’Good-by, Charley;
when you are away,
Write me a letter, love;
send me a letter, love!’
“That’s what you heard,
and a mighty purty song it is too, and kinder clings
to you. It’s wonderful how these things
gets in your head.”
“The letter write send
money money money, and the photograph the
photograph photograph money,”
continued the sick man, in the rapid reiteration of
delirium.
“In course you will to-morrow when
the mail goes,” returned Daddy soothingly; “plenty
of them. Jest now you try to get a snooze, will
ye? Hol’ on! take some o’
this.”
There was an anodyne mixture on the
rude shelf, which the doctor had left on his morning
visit. Daddy had a comfortable belief that what
would relieve pain would also check delirium, and he
accordingly measured out a dose with a liberal margin
to allow of waste by the patient in swallowing in
his semi-conscious state. As he lay more quiet,
muttering still, but now unintelligibly, Daddy, waiting
for a more complete unconsciousness and the opportunity
to slip away to Falloner’s, cast his eyes around
the cabin. He noticed now for the first time since
his entrance that a crumpled envelope bearing a Western
post-mark was lying at the foot of the bed. Daddy
knew that the tri-weekly post had arrived an hour
before he came, and that Lasham had evidently received
a letter. Sure enough the letter itself was lying
against the wall beside him. It was open.
Daddy felt justified in reading it.
It was curt and businesslike, stating
that unless Lasham at once sent a remittance for the
support of his brother and sister two children
in charge of the writer they must find
a home elsewhere. That the arrears were long
standing, and the repeated promises of Lasham to send
money had been unfulfilled. That the writer could
stand it no longer. This would be his last communication
unless the money were sent forthwith.
It was by no means a novel or, under
the circumstances, a shocking disclosure to Daddy.
He had seen similar missives from daughters, and even
wives, consequent on the varying fortunes of his neighbors;
no one knew better than he the uncertainties of a
miner’s prospects, and yet the inevitable hopefulness
that buoyed him up. He tossed it aside impatiently,
when his eye caught a strip of paper he had overlooked
lying upon the blanket near the envelope. It contained
a few lines in an unformed boyish hand addressed to
“my brother,” and evidently slipped into
the letter after it was written. By the uncertain
candlelight Daddy read as follows:
Dear Brother, Rite to me and Cissy
rite off. Why aint you done it? It’s
so long since you rote any. Mister Recketts ses
you dont care any more. Wen you rite send
your fotograff. Folks here ses I aint got
no big bruther any way, as I disremember his looks,
and cant say wots like him. Cissy’s kryin’
all along of it. I’ve got a hedake.
William Walker make it ake by a blo. So no more
at present from your loving little bruther Jim.
The quick, hysteric laugh with which
Daddy read this was quite consistent with his responsive,
emotional nature; so, too, were the ready tears that
sprang to his eyes. He put the candle down unsteadily,
with a casual glance at the sick man. It was notable,
however, that this look contained less sympathy for
the ailing “big brother” than his emotion
might have suggested. For Daddy was carried quite
away by his own mental picture of the helpless children,
and eager only to relate his impressions of the incident.
He cast another glance at the invalid, thrust the
papers into his pocket, and clapping on his hat slipped
from the cabin and ran to the house of festivity.
Yet it was characteristic of the man, and so engrossed
was he by his one idea, that to the usual inquiries
regarding his patient he answered, “he’s
all right,” and plunged at once into the incident
of the dunning letter, reserving with the
instinct of an emotional artist the child’s
missive until the last. As he expected, the money
demand was received with indignant criticisms of the
writer.
“That’s just like ’em
in the States,” said Captain Fletcher; “darned
if they don’t believe we’ve only got to
bore a hole in the ground and snake out a hundred
dollars. Why, there’s my wife with
a heap of hoss sense in everything else is
allus wonderin’ why I can’t rake in
a cool fifty betwixt one steamer day and another.”
“That’s nothin’
to my old dad,” interrupted Gus Houston, the
“infant” of the camp, a bright-eyed young
fellow of twenty; “why, he wrote to me yesterday
that if I’d only pick up a single piece of gold
every day and just put it aside, sayin’ ‘That’s
for popper and mommer,’ and not fool it away it
would be all they’d ask of me.”
“That’s so,” added
another; “these ignorant relations is just the
ruin o’ the mining industry. Bob Falloner
hez bin lucky in his strike to-day, but he’s
a darned sight luckier in being without kith or kin
that he knows of.”
Daddy waited until the momentary irritation
had subsided, and then drew the other letter from
his pocket. “That ain’t all, boys,”
he began in a faltering voice, but gradually working
himself up to a pitch of pathos; “just as I
was thinking all them very things, I kinder noticed
this yer poor little bit o’ paper lyin’
thar lonesome like and forgotten, and I read
it and well gentlemen it
just choked me right up!” He stopped, and his
voice faltered.
“Go slow, Daddy, go slow!”
said an auditor smilingly. It was evident that
Daddy’s sympathetic weakness was well known.
Daddy read the child’s letter.
But, unfortunately, what with his real emotion and
the intoxication of an audience, he read it extravagantly,
and interpolated a child’s lisp (on no authority
whatever), and a simulated infantile delivery, which,
I fear, at first provoked the smiles rather than the
tears of his audience. Nevertheless, at its conclusion
the little note was handed round the party, and then
there was a moment of thoughtful silence.
“Tell you what it is, boys,”
said Fletcher, looking around the table, “we
ought to be doin’ suthin’ for them kids
right off! Did you,” turning to Daddy,
“say anythin’ about this to Dick?”
“Nary why, he’s
clean off his head with fever don’t
understand a word and just babbles,”
returned Daddy, forgetful of his roseate diagnosis
a moment ago, “and hasn’t got a cent.”
“We must make up what we can
amongst us afore the mail goes to-night,” said
the “infant,” feeling hurriedly in his
pockets. “Come, ante up, gentlemen,”
he added, laying the contents of his buckskin purse
upon the table.
“Hold on, boys,” said
a quiet voice. It was their host Falloner, who
had just risen and was slipping on his oilskin coat.
“You’ve got enough to do, I reckon, to
look after your own folks. I’ve none!
Let this be my affair. I’ve got to go to
the Express Office anyhow to see about my passage
home, and I’ll just get a draft for a hundred
dollars for that old skeesicks what’s
his blamed name? Oh, Ricketts” he
made a memorandum from the letter “and
I’ll send it by express. Meantime, you
fellows sit down there and write something you
know what saying that Dick’s hurt
his hand and can’t write you know;
but asked you to send a draft, which you’re
doing. Sabe? That’s all! I’ll
skip over to the express now and get the draft off,
and you can mail the letter an hour later. So
put your dust back in your pockets and help yourselves
to the whiskey while I’m gone.” He
clapped his hat on his head and disappeared.
“There goes a white man, you
bet!” said Fletcher admiringly, as the door
closed behind their host. “Now, boys,”
he added, drawing a chair to the table, “let’s
get this yer letter off, and then go back to our game.”
Pens and ink were produced, and an
animated discussion ensued as to the matter to be
conveyed. Daddy’s plea for an extended explanatory
and sympathetic communication was overruled, and the
letter was written to Ricketts on the simple lines
suggested by Falloner.
“But what about poor little
Jim’s letter? That ought to be answered,”
said Daddy pathetically.
“If Dick hurt his hand so he
can’t write to Ricketts, how in thunder is he
goin’ to write to Jim?” was the reply.
“But suthin’ oughter be
said to the poor kid,” urged Daddy piteously.
“Well, write it yourself you
and Gus Houston make up somethin’ together.
I’m going to win some money,” retorted
Fletcher, returning to the card-table, where he was
presently followed by all but Daddy and Houston.
“Ye can’t write it in
Dick’s name, because that little brother knows
Dick’s handwriting, even if he don’t remember
his face. See?” suggested Houston.
“That’s so,” said
Daddy dubiously; “but,” he added, with
elastic cheerfulness, “we can write that Dick
‘says.’ See?”
“Your head’s level, old man! Just
you wade in on that.”
Daddy seized the pen and “waded
in.” Into somewhat deep and difficult water,
I fancy, for some of it splashed into his eyes, and
he sniffled once or twice as he wrote. “Suthin’
like this,” he said, after a pause:
Dear little Jimmie, Your
big brother havin’ hurt his hand, wants me to
tell you that otherways he is all hunky and A1.
He says he don’t forget you and little Cissy,
you bet! and he’s sendin’ money to old
Ricketts straight off. He says don’t you
and Cissy mind whether school keeps or not as long
as big Brother Dick holds the lines. He says he’d
have written before, but he’s bin follerin’
up a lead mighty close, and expects to strike it rich
in a few days.
“You ain’t got no sabe
about kids,” said Daddy imperturbably; “they’ve
got to be humored like sick folks. And they want
everythin’ big they don’t take
no stock in things ez they are even ef they
hev ’em worse than they are. ‘So,’”
continued Daddy, reading to prevent further interruption,
“‘he says you’re just to keep your
eyes skinned lookin’ out for him comin’
home any time day or night. All you’ve
got to do is to sit up and wait. He might come
and even snake you out of your beds! He might
come with four white horses and a nigger driver, or
he might come disguised as an ornary tramp. Only
you’ve got to be keen on watchin’.’
(Ye see,” interrupted Daddy explanatorily, “that’ll
jest keep them kids lively.) ‘He says Cissy’s
to stop cryin’ right off, and if Willie Walker
hits yer on the right cheek you just slug out with
your left fist, ‘cordin’ to Scripter.’
Gosh,” ejaculated Daddy, stopping suddenly and
gazing anxiously at Houston, “there’s that
blamed photograph I clean forgot that.”
“And Dick hasn’t got one
in the shop, and never had,” returned Houston
emphatically. “Golly! that stumps us!
Unless,” he added, with diabolical thoughtfulness,
“we take Bob’s? The kids don’t
remember Dick’s face, and Bob’s about
the same age. And it’s a regular star picture you
bet! Bob had it taken in Sacramento in
all his war paint. See!” He indicated a
photograph pinned against the wall a really
striking likeness which did full justice to Bob’s
long silken mustache and large, brown determined eyes.
“I’ll snake it off while they ain’t
lookin’, and you jam it in the letter.
Bob won’t miss it, and we can fix it up with
Dick after he’s well, and send another.”
Daddy silently grasped the “infant’s”
hand, who presently secured the photograph without
attracting attention from the card-players. It
was promptly inclosed in the letter, addressed to
Master James Lasham. The “infant”
started with it to the post-office, and Daddy Folsom
returned to Lasham’s cabin to relieve the watcher
that had been detached from Falloner’s to take
his place beside the sick man.
Meanwhile the rain fell steadily and
the shadows crept higher and higher up the mountain.
Towards midnight the star points faded out one by one
over Sawyer’s Ledge even as they had come, with
the difference that the illumination of Falloner’s
cabin was extinguished first, while the dim light
of Lasham’s increased in number. Later,
two stars seemed to shoot from the centre of the ledge,
trailing along the descent, until they were lost in
the obscurity of the slope the lights of
the stage-coach to Sacramento carrying the mail and
Robert Falloner. They met and passed two fainter
lights toiling up the road the buggy lights
of the doctor, hastily summoned from Carterville to
the bedside of the dying Dick Lasham.
The slowing up of his train caused
Bob Falloner to start from a half doze in a Western
Pullman car. As he glanced from his window he
could see that the blinding snowstorm which had followed
him for the past six hours had at last hopelessly
blocked the line. There was no prospect beyond
the interminable snowy level, the whirling flakes,
and the monotonous palisades of leafless trees seen
through it to the distant banks of the Missouri.
It was a prospect that the mountain-bred Falloner
was beginning to loathe, and although it was scarcely
six weeks since he left California, he was already
looking back regretfully to the deep slopes and the
free song of the serried ranks of pines.
The intense cold had chilled his temperate
blood, even as the rigors and conventions of Eastern
life had checked his sincerity and spontaneous flow
of animal spirits begotten in the frank intercourse
and brotherhood of camps. He had just fled from
the artificialities of the great Atlantic cities to
seek out some Western farming lands in which he might
put his capital and energies. The unlooked-for
interruption of his progress by a long-forgotten climate
only deepened his discontent. And now that
train was actually backing! It appeared they must
return to the last station to wait for a snow-plough
to clear the line. It was, explained the conductor,
barely a mile from Shepherdstown, where there was
a good hotel and a chance of breaking the journey for
the night.
Shepherdstown! The name touched
some dim chord in Bob Falloner’s memory and
conscience yet one that was vague.
Then he suddenly remembered that before leaving New
York he had received a letter from Houston informing
him of Lasham’s death, reminding him of his previous
bounty, and begging him if he went West to
break the news to the Lasham family. There was
also some allusion to a joke about his (Bob’s)
photograph, which he had dismissed as unimportant,
and even now could not remember clearly. For a
few moments his conscience pricked him that he should
have forgotten it all, but now he could make amends
by this providential delay. It was not a task
to his liking; in any other circumstances he would
have written, but he would not shirk it now.
Shepherdstown was on the main line
of the Kansas Pacific Road, and as he alighted at
its station, the big through trains from San Francisco
swept out of the stormy distance and stopped also.
He remembered, as he mingled with the passengers,
hearing a childish voice ask if this was the Californian
train. He remembered hearing the amused and patient
reply of the station-master: “Yes, sonny here
she is again, and here’s her passengers,”
as he got into the omnibus and drove to the hotel.
Here he resolved to perform his disagreeable duty
as quickly as possible, and on his way to his room
stopped for a moment at the office to ask for Ricketts’
address. The clerk, after a quick glance of curiosity
at his new guest, gave it to him readily, with a somewhat
familiar smile. It struck Falloner also as being
odd that he had not been asked to write his name on
the hotel register, but this was a saving of time he
was not disposed to question, as he had already determined
to make his visit to Ricketts at once, before dinner.
It was still early evening.
He was washing his hands in his bedroom
when there came a light tap at his sitting-room door.
Falloner quickly resumed his coat and entered the
sitting-room as the porter ushered in a young lady
holding a small boy by the hand. But, to Falloner’s
utter consternation, no sooner had the door closed
on the servant than the boy, with a half-apologetic
glance at the young lady, uttered a childish cry,
broke from her, and calling, “Dick! Dick!”
ran forward and leaped into Falloner’s arms.
The mere shock of the onset and his
own amazement left Bob without breath for words.
The boy, with arms convulsively clasping his body,
was imprinting kisses on Bob’s waistcoat in
default of reaching his face. At last Falloner
managed gently but firmly to free himself, and turned
a half-appealing, half-embarrassed look upon the young
lady, whose own face, however, suddenly flushed pink.
To add to the confusion, the boy, in some reaction
of instinct, suddenly ran back to her, frantically
clutched at her skirts, and tried to bury his head
in their folds.
“He don’t love me,”
he sobbed. “He don’t care for me any
more.”
The face of the young girl changed.
It was a pretty face in its flushing; in the paleness
and thoughtfulness that overcast it it was a striking
face, and Bob’s attention was for a moment distracted
from the grotesqueness of the situation. Leaning
over the boy she said in a caressing yet authoritative
voice, “Run away for a moment, dear, until I
call you,” opening the door for him in a maternal
way so inconsistent with the youthfulness of her figure
that it struck him even in his confusion. There
was something also in her dress and carriage that
equally affected him: her garments were somewhat
old-fashioned in style, yet of good material, with
an odd incongruity to the climate and season.
Under her rough outer cloak she wore
a polka jacket and the thinnest of summer blouses;
and her hat, though dark, was of rough straw, plainly
trimmed. Nevertheless, these peculiarities were
carried off with an air of breeding and self-possession
that was unmistakable. It was possible that her
cool self-possession might have been due to some instinctive
antagonism, for as she came a step forward with coldly
and clearly-opened gray eyes, he was vaguely conscious
that she didn’t like him. Nevertheless,
her manner was formally polite, even, as he fancied,
to the point of irony, as she began, in a voice that
occasionally dropped into the lazy Southern intonation,
and a speech that easily slipped at times into Southern
dialect:
“I sent the child out of the
room, as I could see that his advances were annoying
to you, and a good deal, I reckon, because I knew your
reception of them was still more painful to him.
It is quite natural, I dare say, you should feel as
you do, and I reckon consistent with your attitude
towards him. But you must make some allowance
for the depth of his feelings, and how he has looked
forward to this meeting. When I tell you that
ever since he received your last letter, he and his
sister until her illness kept her home have
gone every day when the Pacific train was due to the
station to meet you; that they have taken literally
as Gospel truth every word of your letter”
“My letter?” interrupted Falloner.
The young girl’s scarlet lip
curled slightly. “I beg your pardon I
should have said the letter you dictated. Of course
it wasn’t in your handwriting you
had hurt your hand, you know,” she added ironically.
“At all events, they believed it all that
you were coming at any moment; they lived in that
belief, and the poor things went to the station with
your photograph in their hands so that they might be
the first to recognize and greet you.”
“With my photograph?” interrupted Falloner
again.
The young girl’s clear eyes
darkened ominously. “I reckon,” she
said deliberately, as she slowly drew from her pocket
the photograph Daddy Folsom had sent, “that
that is your photograph. It certainly seems an
excellent likeness,” she added, regarding him
with a slight suggestion of contemptuous triumph.
In an instant the revelation of the
whole mystery flashed upon him! The forgotten
passage in Houston’s letter about the stolen
photograph stood clearly before him; the coincidence
of his appearance in Shepherdstown, and the natural
mistake of the children and their fair protector, were
made perfectly plain. But with this relief and
the certainty that he could confound her with an explanation
came a certain mischievous desire to prolong the situation
and increase his triumph. She certainly had not
shown him any favor.
“Have you got the letter also?” he asked
quietly.
She whisked it impatiently from her
pocket and handed it to him. As he read Daddy’s
characteristic extravagance and recognized the familiar
idiosyncrasies of his old companions, he was unable
to restrain a smile. He raised his eyes, to meet
with surprise the fair stranger’s leveled eyebrows
and brightly indignant eyes, in which, however, the
rain was fast gathering with the lightning.
“It may be amusing to you, and
I reckon likely it was all a California joke,”
she said with slightly trembling lips; “I don’t
know No’thern gentlemen and their ways, and
you seem to have forgotten our ways as you have your
kindred. Perhaps all this may seem so funny to
them: it may not seem funny to that boy who is
now crying his heart out in the hall; it may not be
very amusing to that poor Cissy in her sick-bed longing
to see her brother. It may be so far from amusing
to her, that I should hesitate to bring you there
in her excited condition and subject her to the pain
that you have caused him. But I have promised
her; she is already expecting us, and the disappointment
may be dangerous, and I can only implore you for
a few moments at least to show a little
more affection than you feel.” As he made
an impulsive, deprecating gesture, yet without changing
his look of restrained amusement, she stopped him
hopelessly. “Oh, of course, yes, yes, I
know it is years since you have seen them; they have
no right to expect more; only only feeling
as you do,” she burst impulsively, “why oh,
why did you come?”
Here was Bob’s chance.
He turned to her politely; began gravely, “I
simply came to” when suddenly his
face changed; he stopped as if struck by a blow.
His cheek flushed, and then paled! Good God!
What had he come for? To tell them that this
brother they were longing for living for perhaps
even dying for was dead! In his crass
stupidity, his wounded vanity over the scorn of the
young girl, his anticipation of triumph, he had forgotten totally
forgotten what that triumph meant!
Perhaps if he had felt more keenly the death of Lasham
the thought of it would have been uppermost in his
mind; but Lasham was not his partner or associate,
only a brother miner, and his single act of generosity
was in the ordinary routine of camp life. If
she could think him cold and heartless before, what
would she think of him now? The absurdity of her
mistake had vanished in the grim tragedy he had seemed
to have cruelly prepared for her. The thought
struck him so keenly that he stammered, faltered,
and sank helplessly into a chair.
The shock that he had received was
so plain to her that her own indignation went out
in the breath of it. Her lip quivered. “Don’t
you mind,” she said hurriedly, dropping into
her Southern speech; “I didn’t go to hurt
you, but I was just that mad with the thought of those
pickaninnies, and the easy way you took it, that I
clean forgot I’d no call to catechise you!
And you don’t know me from the Queen of Sheba.
Well,” she went on, still more rapidly, and in
odd distinction to her previous formal slow Southern
delivery, “I’m the daughter of Colonel
Boutelle, of Bayou Sara, Louisiana; and his paw, and
his paw before him, had a plantation there since the
time of Adam, but he lost it and six hundred niggers
during the Wah! We were pooh as pohverty paw
and maw and we four girls and no more idea
of work than a baby. But I had an education at
the convent at New Orleans, and could play, and speak
French, and I got a place as school-teacher here; I
reckon the first Southern woman that has taught school
in the No’th! Ricketts, who used to be
our steward at Bayou Sara, told me about the pickaninnies,
and how helpless they were, with only a brother who
occasionally sent them money from California.
I suppose I cottoned to the pooh little things at first
because I knew what it was to be alone amongst strangers,
Mr. Lasham; I used to teach them at odd times, and
look after them, and go with them to the train to
look for you. Perhaps Ricketts made me think you
didn’t care for them; perhaps I was wrong in
thinking it was true, from the way you met Jimmy just
now. But I’ve spoken my mind and you know
why.” She ceased and walked to the window.
Falloner rose. The storm that
had swept through him was over. The quick determination,
resolute purpose, and infinite patience which had made
him what he was were all there, and with it a conscientiousness
which his selfish independence had hitherto kept dormant.
He accepted the situation, not passively it
was not in his nature but threw himself
into it with all his energy.
“You were quite right,”
he said, halting a moment beside her; “I don’t
blame you, and let me hope that later you may think
me less to blame than you do now. Now, what’s
to be done? Clearly, I’ve first to make
it right with Tommy I mean Jimmy and
then we must make a straight dash over to the girl!
Whoop!” Before she could understand from his
face the strange change in his voice, he had dashed
out of the room. In a moment he reappeared with
the boy struggling in his arms. “Think of
the little scamp not knowing his own brother!”
he laughed, giving the boy a really affectionate,
if slightly exaggerated hug, “and expecting me
to open my arms to the first little boy who jumps
into them! I’ve a great mind not to give
him the present I fetched all the way from California.
Wait a moment.” He dashed into the bedroom,
opened his valise where he providentially
remembered he had kept, with a miner’s superstition,
the first little nugget of gold he had ever found seized
the tiny bit of quartz of gold, and dashed out again
to display it before Jimmy’s eager eyes.
If the heartiness, sympathy, and charming
kindness of the man’s whole manner and face
convinced, even while it slightly startled, the young
girl, it was still more effective with the boy.
Children are quick to detect the false ring of affected
emotion, and Bob’s was so genuine whatever
its cause that it might have easily passed
for a fraternal expression with harder critics.
The child trustfully nestled against him and would
have grasped the gold, but the young man whisked it
into his pocket. “Not until we’ve
shown it to our little sister where we’re
going now! I’m off to order a sleigh.”
He dashed out again to the office as if he found some
relief in action, or, as it seemed to Miss Boutelle,
to avoid embarrassing conversation. When he came
back again he was carrying an immense bearskin from
his luggage. He cast a critical look at the girl’s
unseasonable attire.
“I shall wrap you and Jimmy
in this you know it’s snowing frightfully.”
Miss Boutelle flushed a little.
“I’m warm enough when walking,” she
said coldly. Bob glanced at her smart little French
shoes, and thought otherwise. He said nothing,
but hastily bundled his two guests downstairs and
into the street. The whirlwind dance of the snow
made the sleigh an indistinct bulk in the glittering
darkness, and as the young girl for an instant stood
dazedly still, Bob incontinently lifted her from her
feet, deposited her in the vehicle, dropped Jimmy in
her lap, and wrapped them both tightly in the bearskin.
Her weight, which was scarcely more than a child’s,
struck him in that moment as being tantalizingly incongruous
to the matronly severity of her manner and its strange
effect upon him. He then jumped in himself, taking
the direction from his companion, and drove off through
the storm.
The wind and darkness were not favorable
to conversation, and only once did he break the silence.
“Is there any one who would be likely to remember me where
we are going?” he asked, in a lull of the storm.
Miss Boutelle uncovered enough of
her face to glance at him curiously. “Hardly!
You know the children came here from the No’th
after your mother’s death, while you were in
California.”
“Of course,” returned
Bob hurriedly; “I was only thinking you
know that some of my old friends might have called,”
and then collapsed into silence.
After a pause a voice came icily,
although under the furs: “Perhaps you’d
prefer that your arrival be kept secret from the public?
But they seem to have already recognized you at the
hotel from your inquiry about Ricketts, and the photograph
Jimmy had already shown them two weeks ago.”
Bob remembered the clerk’s familiar manner and
the omission to ask him to register. “But
it need go no further, if you like,” she added,
with a slight return of her previous scorn.
“I’ve no reason for keeping it secret,”
said Bob stoutly.
No other words were exchanged until
the sleigh drew up before a plain wooden house in
the suburbs of the town. Bob could see at a glance
that it represented the income of some careful artisan
or small shopkeeper, and that it promised little for
an invalid’s luxurious comfort. They were
ushered into a chilly sitting-room and Miss Boutelle
ran upstairs with Jimmy to prepare the invalid for
Bob’s appearance. He noticed that a word
dropped by the woman who opened the door made the young
girl’s face grave again, and paled the color
that the storm had buffeted to her cheek. He
noticed also that these plain surroundings seemed only
to enhance her own superiority, and that the woman
treated her with a deference in odd contrast to the
ill-concealed disfavor with which she regarded him.
Strangely enough, this latter fact was a relief to
his conscience. It would have been terrible to
have received their kindness under false pretenses;
to take their just blame of the man he personated
seemed to mitigate the deceit.
The young girl rejoined him presently
with troubled eyes. Cissy was worse, and only
intermittently conscious, but had asked to see him.
It was a short flight of stairs to the bedroom, but
before he reached it Bob’s heart beat faster
than it had in any mountain climb. In one corner
of the plainly furnished room stood a small truckle
bed, and in it lay the invalid. It needed but
a single glance at her flushed face in its aureole
of yellow hair to recognize the likeness to Jimmy,
although, added to that strange refinement produced
by suffering, there was a spiritual exaltation in
the child’s look possibly from delirium that
awed and frightened him; an awful feeling that he could
not lie to this hopeless creature took possession
of him, and his step faltered. But she lifted
her small arms pathetically towards him as if she divined
his trouble, and he sank on his knees beside her.
With a tiny finger curled around his long mustache,
she lay there silent. Her face was full of trustfulness,
happiness, and consciousness but she spoke
no word.
There was a pause, and Falloner, slightly
lifting his head without disturbing that faintly clasping
finger, beckoned Miss Boutelle to his side. “Can
you drive?” he said, in a low voice.
“Yes.”
“Take my sleigh and get the
best doctor in town to come here at once. Bring
him with you if you can; if he can’t come at
once, drive home yourself. I will stay here.”
“But” hesitated Miss Boutelle.
“I will stay here,” he repeated.
The door closed on the young girl,
and Falloner, still bending over the child, presently
heard the sleigh-bells pass away in the storm.
He still sat with his bent head, held by the tiny
clasp of those thin fingers. But the child’s
eyes were fixed so intently upon him that Mrs. Ricketts
leaned over the strangely-assorted pair and said
“It’s your brother Dick, dearie.
Don’t you know him?”
The child’s lips moved faintly. “Dick’s
dead,” she whispered.
“She’s wandering,”
said Mrs. Ricketts. “Speak to her.”
But Bob, with his eyes on the child’s, lifted
a protesting hand. The little sufferer’s
lips moved again. “It isn’t Dick it’s
the angel God sent to tell me.”
She spoke no more. And when Miss
Boutelle returned with the doctor she was beyond the
reach of finite voices. Falloner would have remained
all night with them, but he could see that his presence
in the contracted household was not desired.
Even his offer to take Jimmy with him to the hotel
was declined, and at midnight he returned alone.
What his thoughts were that night
may be easily imagined. Cissy’s death had
removed the only cause he had for concealing his real
identity. There was nothing more to prevent his
revealing all to Miss Boutelle and to offer to adopt
the boy. But he reflected this could not be done
until after the funeral, for it was only due to Cissy’s
memory that he should still keep up the rôle of Dick
Lasham as chief mourner. If it seems strange
that Bob did not at this crucial moment take Miss Boutelle
into his confidence, I fear it was because he dreaded
the personal effect of the deceit he had practiced
upon her more than any ethical consideration; she
had softened considerably in her attitude towards him
that night; he was human, after all, and while he felt
his conduct had been unselfish in the main, he dared
not confess to himself how much her opinion had influenced
him. He resolved that after the funeral he would
continue his journey, and write to her, en route, a
full explanation of his conduct, inclosing Daddy’s
letter as corroborative evidence. But on searching
his letter-case he found that he had lost even that
evidence, and he must trust solely at present to her
faith in his improbable story.
It seemed as if his greatest sacrifice
was demanded at the funeral! For it could not
be disguised that the neighbors were strongly prejudiced
against him. Even the preacher improved the occasion
to warn the congregation against the dangers of putting
off duty until too late. And when Robert Falloner,
pale, but self-restrained, left the church with Miss
Boutelle, equally pale and reserved, on his arm, he
could with difficulty restrain his fury at the passing
of a significant smile across the faces of a few curious
bystanders. “It was Amy Boutelle, that
was the ‘penitence’ that fetched him, you
bet!” he overheard, a barely concealed whisper;
and the reply, “And it’s a good thing she’s
made out of it too, for he’s mighty rich!”
At the church door he took her cold
hand into his. “I am leaving to-morrow
morning with Jimmy,” he said, with a white face.
“Good-by.”
“You are quite right; good-by,”
she replied as briefly, but with the faintest color.
He wondered if she had heard it too.
Whether she had heard it or not, she
went home with Mrs. Ricketts in some righteous indignation,
which found after the young lady’s
habit free expression. Whatever were
Mr. Lasham’s faults of omission it was most
un-Christian to allude to them there, and an insult
to the poor little dear’s memory who had forgiven
them. Were she in his shoes she would shake the
dust of the town off her feet; and she hoped he would.
She was a little softened on arriving to find Jimmy
in tears. He had lost Dick’s photograph or
Dick had forgotten to give it back at the hotel, for
this was all he had in his pocket. And he produced
a letter the missing letter of Daddy, which
by mistake Falloner had handed back instead of the
photograph. Miss Boutelle saw the superscription
and Californian postmark with a vague curiosity.
“Did you look inside, dear? Perhaps it
slipped in.”
Jimmy had not. Miss Boutelle
did and I grieve to say, ended by reading
the whole letter.
Bob Falloner had finished packing
his things the next morning, and was waiting for Mr.
Ricketts and Jimmy. But when a tap came at the
door, he opened it to find Miss Boutelle standing
there. “I have sent Jimmy into the bedroom,”
she said with a faint smile, “to look for the
photograph which you gave him in mistake for this.
I think for the present he prefers his brother’s
picture to this letter, which I have not explained
to him or any one.” She stopped, and raising
her eyes to his, said gently: “I think
it would have only been a part of your goodness to
have trusted me, Mr. Falloner.”
“Then you will forgive me?” he said eagerly.
She looked at him frankly, yet with
a faint trace of coquetry that the angels might have
pardoned. “Do you want me to say to you
what Mrs. Ricketts says were the last words of poor
Cissy?”
A year later, when the darkness and
rain were creeping up Sawyer’s Ledge, and Houston
and Daddy Folsom were sitting before their brushwood
fire in the old Lasham cabin, the latter delivered
himself oracularly.
“It’s a mighty queer thing,
that news about Bob! It’s not that he’s
married, for that might happen to any one; but this
yer account in the paper of his wedding being attended
by his ‘little brother.’ That gets
me! To think all the while he was here he was
lettin’ on to us that he hadn’t kith or
kin! Well, sir, that accounts to me for one thing, the
sing’ler way he tumbled to that letter of poor
Dick Lasham’s little brother and sent him that
draft! Don’t ye see? It was a feller
feelin’! Knew how it was himself!
I reckon ye all thought I was kinder soft reading
that letter o’ Dick Lasham’s little brother
to him, but ye see what it did.”