Lumber had gone up, and the big mill
on the Aspohegan was working overtime.
Through the range of square openings
under the eaves the sunlight streamed in steadily
upon the strident tumult, the confusion of sun and
shadow, within the mill. The air was sweet with
the smell of fresh sawdust and clammy with the ooze
from great logs just “yanked” up the dripping
slides from the river. One had to pitch his voice
with peculiar care to make it audible amid the chaotic
din of the saws.
In the middle of the mill worked the
“gang,” a series of upright saws that
rose and fell swiftly, cleaving their way with a pulsating,
vicious clamor through an endless and sullen procession
of logs. Here and there, each with a massive
table to itself, hummed the circulars, large and small;
and whensoever a deal, or a pile of slabs, was brought
in contact with one of the spinning discs, upon the
first arching spirt of sawdust spray began a shrieking
note, which would run the whole vibrant and intolerable
gamut as the saw bit through the fibres from end to
end. In the occasional brief moments of comparative
silence, when several of the saws would chance to
be disengaged at the same instant, might be heard,
far down in the lower story of the mill, the grumbling
roar of the two great turbine wheels, which, sucking
in the tortured water from the sluices, gave life
to all the wilderness of cranks and shafts above.
That end of the mill which looked
down river stood open, to a height of about seven
feet, across the whole of the upper story. From
this opening ran a couple of long slanting ways each
two feet wide and about a hundred feet in length,
raised on trestles. The track of these “slides,”
as they are technically termed, consisted of a series
of wooden rollers, along which the deals raced in
endless sequence from the saws, to drop with a plunge
into a spacious basin, at the lower end of which they
were gathered into rafts. Whenever there was
a break in the procession of deals, the rollers would
be left spinning briskly with a cheerful murmur.
There was also a shorter and steeper “slide,”
diverging to the lumber yard, where clapboards and
such light stuff were piled till they could be carted
to the distant station.
In former days it had been the easy
custom to dump the sawdust into the stream, but the
fish-wardens had lately interfered and put a stop to
the practice. Now, a tall young fellow, in top
boots, gray homespun trousers and blue shirt, was
busy carting the sawdust to a swampy hollow near the
lower end of the main slides.
Sandy MacPherson was a new hand.
Only that morning had he joined the force at the Aspohegan
Mill; and every now and then he would pause, remove
his battered soft felt from his whitish yellow curls,
mop his red forehead, and gaze with a hearty appreciation
at the fair landscape spread out beyond the mill.
With himself and with the world in general he felt
on fairly good terms an easy frame of mind
which would have been much jarred had he been conscious
of the fact that from a corner in the upper story
of the mill his every movement was watched with a
vindictive and ominous interest.
In that corner, close by the head
of one of the main slides, stood a table whose presiding
genius was a little swinging circular. The circular
was tended by a powerful, sombre-visaged old mill-hand
called ’Lije Vandine, whose office it was to
trim square the ragged ends of the “stuff”
before it went down the slide. At the very back
of the table hummed the saw, like a great hornet;
and whenever Vandine got two or three deals in place
before him he would grasp a lever above his head,
and forward through its narrow slit in the table would
dart the little saw, and scream its way in a second
through the tough white spruce. Every time he
let the saw swing back, Vandine would drop his eyes
to the blue-shirted figure below, and his harsh features
would work with concentrated fury. These seven
years he had been waiting for the day when he should
meet Sandy MacPherson face to face.
Seven years before, ’Lije Vandine
had been working in one of the mills near St. John,
New Brunswick, while his only daughter, Sarah, was
living out at service in the city. At this time
Sandy MacPherson was employed on the city wharves,
and an acquaintance which he formed with the pretty
housemaid resulted in a promise of marriage between
the two. Vandine and his wife were satisfied
with the girl’s account of her lover, and the
months slipped by swiftly without their making his
acquaintance. Among the fishing and lumbering
classes, however, it not seldom happens that betrothal
brings with it rather more intimate privileges than
propriety could sanction, whence it came to pass that
one evening Sarah returned to her parents unexpectedly,
having been dismissed from her situation in disgrace.
Vandine, though ignorant, was a clear-seeing man, who
understood his own class thoroughly; and after his
first outburst of wounded indignation he had forgiven
and comforted his daughter no less tenderly than her
mother had done. He knew perfectly that the girl
was no wanton. He went at once into the city,
with the intention of fetching Sandy out and covering
up the disgrace by an immediate marriage. He
visited the wharves, but the young man was not there.
With growing apprehension he hastened to his boarding-house,
only to learn that MacPherson had left the place and
was departing for the States by the next train, having
been married the previous evening. The man’s
pain and fury at this revelation almost choked him,
but he mastered himself sufficiently to ask a boy
of the house to accompany him to the station and point
out the betrayer. If the train had not gone, he
would be in time to avenge his poor girl. The
boy, however, took alarm at something in Vandine’s
face, and led him by a roundabout way, so that just
as he drew near the station the Western Express rolled
out with increasing speed. On the rear platform
stood a laughing young woman bedecked in many colors,
and beside her a tall youth with a curly yellow head,
whom the boy pointed out as Sandy MacPherson.
He was beyond the reach of vengeance for the time.
But his features stamped themselves ineffaceably on
the avenger’s memory. As the latter turned
away, to bide his time in grim silence, the young
woman on the platform of the car said to her husband,
“I wonder who that was, Sandy, that looked like
he was going to run after the cars! Didn’t
you see? His arms kind o’ jerked out, like
that; but he didn’t start after all. There
he goes up the hill, with one pant-leg in his boot.
He looked kind of wild. I’m just as glad
he didn’t get aboard!”
“He’s one of your old
fellers as you’ve give the go-by to, I kind of
suspicion, Sis,” replied the young man with a
laugh. And the train roared into a cutting.
About a year after these events Vandine’s
wife died, and Vandine thereupon removed, with Sarah
and her baby, to the interior of the province, settling
down finally at Aspohegan Mills. Here he built
himself a small cottage, on a steep slope overlooking
the mill; and here Sarah, by her quiet and self-sacrificing
devotion to her father and her child, wiped out the
memory of her error and won the warm esteem of the
settlement. As for the child, he grew into a handsome,
blue-eyed, sturdy boy, whom his grandfather loved
with a passionate tenderness intensified by a subtle
strain of pity. As year by year his daughter and
the boy twined themselves ever closer about his heart,
Vandine’s hate against the man who had wronged
them both kept ever deepening to a keener anguish.
But now at last the day had come.
When first he had caught sight of MacPherson in the
yard below, the impulse to rush down and throttle him
was so tremendous that as he curbed it the blood forsook
his face, leaving it the color of ashes, and for a
few seconds he could not tend his saw. Presently,
when the yelping little demon was again at work biting
across the timbers, the foreman drew near, and Vandine
asked him, “Who’s the new hand down yonder?”
“Oh!” said the foreman,
leaning a little over the bench to follow Vandine’s
pointing, “yon’s one Sandy MacPherson,
from over on the Kennebec. He’s been working
in Maine these seven year past, but says he kind of
got a hankering after his own country, an’ so
he’s come back. Good hand!”
“That so!” was all Vandine replied.
All the long forenoon, amid the wild,
or menacing, or warning, or complaining crescendos
and diminuendos of the unresting saws, the man’s
brain seethed with plans of vengeance. After all
these years of waiting he would be satisfied with
no common retribution. To merely kill the betrayer
would be insufficient. He would wring his soul
and quench his manhood with some strange unheard-of
horror, ere dealing the final stroke that should rid
earth of his presence. Scheme after scheme burned
through his mind, and at times his gaunt face would
crease itself in a dreadful smile as he pulled the
lever that drove his blade through the deals.
Finding no plan altogether to his taste, however, he
resolved to postpone his revenge till night, at least,
that he might have the more time to think it over,
and to indulge the luxury of anticipation with realization
so easily within his grasp.
At noon Vandine, muttering to himself,
climbed the steep path to the little cottage on the
hillside. He ate his dinner in silence, with
apparently no perception of what was being set before
him. His daughter dared not break in upon this
preoccupation. Even his idolized Stevie could
win from him no notice, save a smile of grim triumph
that frightened the child. Just as he was leaving
the cottage to return to the mill, he saw Sarah start
back from the window and sit down suddenly, grasping
at her bosom, and blanching to the lips as if she had
seen a ghost. Glancing downward to the black
road, deep with rotted sawdust, he saw MacPherson
passing.
“Who is it?” he asked the girl.
“It’s Sandy,” she murmured, flushing
scarlet and averting her face.
Her father turned away without a word
and started down the hill. Presently the girl
remembered that there was something terrifying in the
expression of his face as he asked the curt question.
With a sudden vague fear rising in her breast, she
ran to the cottage door.
“Father!” she cried, “father!”
But Vandine paid no heed to her calls, and after a
pause she turned back into the room to answer Stevie’s
demand for a cup of milk.
Along about the middle of the afternoon,
while Sandy MacPherson was still carting sawdust,
and Vandine tending his circular amid the bewildering
din, Stevie and some other children came down to play
around the mill.
The favorite amusement with these
embryo mill-hands, stream-drivers, and lumbermen,
was to get on the planks as they emerged from the upper
story of the mill, and go careering swiftly and smoothly
down the slides, till, just before coming to the final
plunge, they would jump off, and fall on the heap
of sawdust. This was a game that to strangers
looked perilous enough; but there had never been an
accident, so at Aspohegan Mills it had outgrown the
disapproval of the hands. To Sandy MacPherson,
however, it was new, and from time to time he eyed
the sport apprehensively. And all the while Vandine
glared upon him from his corner in the upper story,
and the children raced shouting down the slides, and
tumbled with bright laughter into the sawdust.
Among the children none enjoyed more
than Stevie this racing down the slides. His
mother, looking out of the window on the hillside,
saw the merry little figure, bareheaded, the long
yellow curls floating out behind him, as he half knelt,
half sat on the sliding plank ready to jump off at
the proper moment. She had no thought of danger
as she resumed her housework. Neither had Stevie.
At length it happened, however, that just as he was
nearing the end of the descent, an eagle came sailing
low overhead, caught the little fellow’s eye,
and diverted his attention for a moment. It was
the fatal moment. Just as he looked down again,
gathering himself to jump, his heart sprang into his
throat, and the plank with a sickening lurch plunged
into the churning basin. The child’s shrill,
frightened shriek was not half uttered ere the waters
choked it.
Vandine had just let the buzzing little
circular slip back into its recess, when he saw MacPherson
spring from his cart and dash madly down to the shore.
At the same instant came that shrill
cry, so abruptly silenced. Vandine’s heart
stood still with awful terror, he had recognized
the child’s voice. In a second he had swung
himself down over the scaffolding, alighting on a
sawdust heap.
“Hold back the deals!”
he yelled in a voice that pierced the din. It
was not five seconds ere every one in the mill seemed
to know what had happened. Two men sprang on
the slides and checked the stream of deals. Then
the great turbines ceased to grumble, and all the clamor
of the saws was hushed. The unexpected silence
was like a blow, and sickened the nerves.
And meanwhile Stevie?
The plank that bore his weight clinging desperately
to it, plunged deeper than its fellows, and came up
somewhat further from the slide, but not now with
Stevie upon it. The child had lost his hold,
and when he rose it was only to strike against the
bottoms of three or four deals that lay clustered together.
This, though apparently fatal, was
in reality the child’s salvation, for during
the half or three-quarters of a minute that intervened
before the slides could be stopped, the great planks
kept dropping and plunging and crashing about him;
and had it not been for those very timbers that cut
him off from the air he was choking to breathe, he
would have been crushed and battered out of all human
semblance in a second. As it was, ere he had
time to suffocate, MacPherson was on the spot.
In an instant the young man’s
heavy boots were kicked off, and without pausing to
count the odds, which were hideously against him, he
sprang into the chaos of whirling timbers. All
about him pounded the falling deals, then ceased,
just as he made a clean dive beneath that little cluster
that covered Stevie. As Vandine reached the shore,
and was casting desperate glances over the basin in
search of some clue to guide his plunge, MacPherson
reappeared at the other side of the deals, and Stevie’s
yellow curls were floating over his shoulder.
The young man clung rather faintly to the supporting
planks, as if he had overstrained himself; and two
or three hands, who had already shoved off a “bateau,”
pushed out and picked him up with his burden.
Torn by a convulsion of fiercely antagonized
passions, Vandine sat down on the edge of the bank
and waited stupidly. About the same moment Sarah
looked out of the cottage door in wonder to see why
the mill had stopped so suddenly.
In all his dreams, Vandine had never
dreamed of such chance as that his enemy should deserve
his gratitude. In his nature there had grown up
one thing stronger than his thirst for vengeance,
and that one thing was his love for Stevie. In
spite of himself, and indeed to his furious self-scorn,
he found his heart warming strangely to the man who,
at deadliest risk, had saved the life of his darling.
At the same time he was conscious of a fresh sense
of injury. A bitter resentment throbbed up in
his bewildered bosom, to think that MacPherson should
thus have robbed him of the sweets of that revenge
he had so long anticipated. The first clear realization
that came to him was that, though he must kill the
man who had wronged his girl, he would nevertheless
be tortured with remorse for ever after. A moment
more, and as he saw Sandy step out of the
“bateau” with the boy, now sobbing feebly,
in his arms he knew that his vengeance
had been made for ever impossible. He longed fiercely
to grasp the fellow’s hand, and make some poor
attempt to thank him. But he mastered the impulse Sarah
must not be forgotten. He strode down the bank.
One of the hands had taken Stevie, and MacPherson was
leaning against a pile of boards, panting for breath.
Vandine stepped up to him, his fingers twitching,
and struck him a furious blow across the mouth with
his open hand. Then he turned aside, snatched
Stevie to his bosom, and started up the bank.
Before going two paces, however, he paused, as if
oppressed by the utter stillness that followed his
astounding act. Bending a strange look on the
young man, he said, in a voice as harsh as the saw’s:
“I was going to kill
you to-night, Sandy MacPherson. But now after
this day’s work of yourn, I guess yer safe from
me from this out.” He shut his mouth with
a snap, and strode up through the piles of sawdust
toward the cottage on the hill.
As for MacPherson, he was dumbfounded.
Though no boaster, he knew he had done a magnificently
heroic thing, and to get his mouth slapped for it
was an exigency which he did not know what to do with.
He had staggered against the boards from the force
of the stroke, but it had not occurred to him to resent
it, though ordinarily he was hot-blooded and quick
in a quarrel. He stared about him sheepishly,
bewildered and abashed, and unspeakably aggrieved.
In the faces of the mill-hands who were gathered about
him, he found no solution of the mystery. They
looked as astonished as himself, and almost equally
hot and ashamed. Presently he ejaculated, “Well,
I swan!” Then one of the men who had taken out
the “bateau” and picked him up, found
voice.
“I’ll be gosh-darned ef
that ain’t the damnedest,” said he, slowly.
“Why, so, I’d thought as how he was a-goin’
right down on his prayer-handles to ye. That
there kid is the apple of his eye.”
“An’ he was sot on killin’
me to-night, was he?” murmured MacPherson in
deepest wonderment. “What might his name
be, anyhow?”
“‘Lije Vandine,”
spoke up another of the hands. “An’
that’s his grandchild, Stevie. I reckon
he must have a powerful grudge agin you, Sandy, or
he’d never ‘a’ acted that way.”
MacPherson’s face had grown
suddenly serious and dignified. “Is the
boy’s father and mother livin’?”
he inquired.
“Sarah Vandine’s living
with the old man,” answered the foreman, “and
as fine a girl as there’ll be in Aspohegan.
Don’t know anything about the lad’s father,
nor don’t want to. The man that’d
treat a girl like Sarah Vandine that way hangin
’s too good for ’im.”
MacPherson’s face flushed crimson,
and he dropped his eyes.
“Boys,” said he, huskily,
“ef ’Lije Vandine had ‘a’ served
me as he intended, I guess as how I’d have only
got my deserts. I reckon as how I’m
the little lad’s father!”
The hands stared at each other.
Nothing could make them forget what MacPherson had
just done. They were all daring and ready in emergency,
but each man felt that he would have thought twice
before jumping into the basin when the deals were
running on the slides. The foreman could have
bitten his tongue out for what he had just said.
He tried to mend matters.
“I wouldn’t have thought
you was that sort of a man, to judge from what I’ve
just seen o’ you,” he explained. “Anyhow,
I reckon you’ve more’n made up this day
for the wrong you done when you was younger. But
Sarah Vandine’s as good a girl as they make,
an’ I don’t hardly see how you could ‘a’
served her that trick.”
A certain asperity grew in the foreman’s
voice as he thought of it; for, as his wife used to
say, he “set a great store by ’Lije’s
girl, not havin’ no daughter of his own.”
“It was lies as done it, boys,”
said MacPherson. “As for whose lies,
why that ain’t neither here nor there,
now an’ she as did the mischief’s
dead and buried and before she died she
told me all about it. That was last winter of
the grippe and I tell you I’ve felt
bad about Sarah ever since. An’ to think
the little lad’s mine! Boys, but ain’t
he a beauty?” And Sandy’s face began to
beam with satisfaction at the thought.
By this time all the hands looked
gratified at the turn affairs were, to them, so plainly
taking. Every one returned to work, the foreman
remarking aside to a chum, “I reckon Sarah’s
all right.” And in a minute or two the
saws were once more shrieking their way through the
logs and slabs and deals.
On the following morning, as ’Lije
Vandine tended his vicious little circular, he found
its teeth needed resetting. They had been tried
by a lot of knotty timber. He unshipped the saw
and took it to the foreman. While he was waiting
for the latter to get him another saw, Sandy MacPherson
came up. With a strong effort Vandine restrained
himself from holding out his hand in grateful greeting.
There was a lull in the uproar, the men forgetting
to feed their saws as they watched the interview.
Sandy’s voice was heard all over the mill:
“‘Lije Vandine, I saved
the little lad’s life, an’ that,
counts for something; but I know right well
I ain’t got no right to expect you or Sarah
ever to say a kind word to me. But I swear, so
help me God, I hadn’t no sort of idée what
I was doin’. My wife died las’ winter,
over on the Kennebec, an’ afore she died she
told me everything as I’d take it
kindly ef you’d let me tell you,
more particular, another time. An’ as I
was wantin’ to say now, I’d take it kind
ef you’d let me go up along to your place this
evenin’, and maybe Sarah’d let me jest
talk to the boy a little. Ef so be ez I could
persuade her by-and-by to forget an’ forgive and
you’d trust me after what I’d done I’d
lay out to marry her the minute she’d say the
word, fur there ain’t no other woman I’ve
ever set such store by as I do now by her. An’
then ther’s Stevie ”
“Stevie and the lass hez
both got a good home,” interrupted Vandine,
roughly.
“An’ I wouldn’t
want a better for ’em,” exclaimed MacPherson,
eagerly, catching the train of the old man’s
thought. “What I’d want would be,
ef maybe you’d let me come in along with them
and you.”
By this time Vandine had got his new
saw, and he turned away without replying. Sandy
followed him a few paces, and then turned back dejectedly
to attend his own circular he having been
moved into the mill that morning. All the hands
looked at him in sympathy, and many were the ingenious
backwoods oaths which were muttered after Vandine for
his ugliness. The old man paid little heed, however,
to the tide of unpopularity that was rising about
him. Probably, absorbed in his own thoughts,
he was utterly unaware of it. All the morning
long he swung and fed his circular, and when the horn
blew for twelve his mind was made up. In the
sudden stillness he strode over to the place where
MacPherson worked, and said in a voice of affected
carelessness
“You better come along an’
have a bite o’ dinner with us, Sandy. You’ll
be kinder expected, I reckon, for Stevie’s powerful
anxious to see you.”
Sandy grabbed his coat and went along.