Terry was happily engaged in remaking
the Major’s old pack for his own use when the
Major entered the torchlit shack. It lacked an
hour till dawn. Outside, the main clearing was
dark, but the big fires which illuminated the surrounding
trees revealed the excited natives still celebrating
Ahma’s nuptials in the clearing around Ohto’s
house.
Terry straightened up from his task
and studied the face of his friend: fatigue and
happiness had softened the serious lines that had
given the Major an appearance of age beyond his years.
“Major, isn’t the ceremony finished yet?”
“No, it takes forty-eight hours
to get married up here and only two hours
to get buried! But a month ago I would have said
that it was about the correct ratio, at that.”
Terry grinned as he finished the pack
and threw it on the floor near the door, then sat
beside the Major on the cot.
“Major, I want to send up a
gift for Ahma by the first runner the postoffice people
send through. It’s hard to decide what to
give her, because she is entirely different from other
girls, and the usual bridal gifts would hardly do.
Can’t you help me out?”
For a minute the Major pondered heavily:
“How about a mirror? She is twenty years
old and has never seen her own reflection.”
“Just the thing! Enter
the civilizing influence of vanity in the Hill Country!”
Terry drew a notebook from his shirt
pocket. “Major, I have jotted down a list
of things we are going to need for this work up here.
I thought it would be better if I had a definite program
to submit to the Governor, with estimate of appropriations
necessary, and so on. First I listed those things
you will need in order to build and furnish your house:
cook stoves, lamps, dishes, window glass, and so on.
I think I have included everything, so just run over
those things you will need to begin this work.”
For an hour earnestly they discussed
the problems the Major would confront pending Terry’s
return to take up the work. They listed a wide
variety of needs pigs, chickens, medicines,
books, tools, seeds: contingent upon the Governor’s
approval, they outlined several months of planting,
trail making, establishment of regular communication
with the lowlands, selection of school teachers, of
a health officer all of the varied instruments
needed for the initial work of elevating the tribesmen
out of their barbarism.
Dawn had dimmed their torches when
they finished. For a while they sat silent, Terry
happy in the outcome of this strange adventure in the
Hills, the Major thrilling with the joy that had come
to him.
The Major broke the silence:
“Terry, I AM a chump! All this time I’ve
forgotten to tell you that a captain’s commission
is waiting your acceptance in Zamboanga!”
He went on, slowly: “Are
you sure that you can come back here for a year after
your honeymoon? Maybe she your wife won’t
wish to come.”
“Yes, she will.”
Terry was confident. “It will be for only
one year, and then
“And then what?” the Major demanded after
a while.
“Then back home,
among my own people. I left home foolishly, Major.
I was restless looking for a dragon to
slay. But I have had a year in which to think and
I see things differently. During the time I was
sick up here I I ... well, I know now that
a man need not cross the world to find service:
he can be just as useful in preventing bunions as
in as in such lucky ventures as this.”
“Preventing bunions?” The Major was puzzled.
But Terry did not answer. He
had risen to finish his preparations for the journey
down.
“Just one more thing, Terry.
You promised to tell me how you started that little
avalanche the ‘sign.’”
Something of the serenity faded from
Terry’s face as he turned to explain: “I
had been up there several times, and had noticed a
deep crevice that split the platform from the parent
rock. It would have fallen within a few months.
I carried up some softwood wedges, drove them into
the fault, poured in a lot of water and expansion did
the rest.”
The Major visualized the toil and
peril of lugging heavy logs up the spiral trail at
night. “Why didn’t you let me help?”
he demanded.
“Well, Ahma kept guard for me,
and that was enough. If I had been caught I could
probably have talked myself out of the scrape, but
it might have gone harder with you. Luckily the
timbers I used for wedges were buried in the slide.”
The Major’s face clouded swiftly:
“Say, Terry! That scoundrel Pud-Pud said
that he saw you that night he can ruin the
thing yet if he talks!”
Terry shook his head, a little sorrowfully:
“No, Pud-Pud will never talk to anybody about
anything again. I got to Ohto too late: they
had already executed sentence.”
“What did they do with him?”
“Shot him full of darts and
turned him loose in the Dark Forest. So I confessed
to Ohto that I contrived the ‘sign.’
Of course I made him understand that you had nothing
to do with the trickery.”
“What did he say what
is he going to do about it?” The Major was anxious.
“He had known about it all the
time his men have trailed every step we
have taken, watched everything we have done.”
A slow blush mounted the Major’s
rugged features as he thought of the possibility that
secret onlookers had witnessed his meeting with Ahma
just before the wedding ceremony when he had sought
to teach her the White Man’s customs of caress.
The flush persisted as he turned to Terry.
“There’s one thing I forgot
to ask you to buy for me. I want a good talking
machine, with plenty of records.” He paused,
then continued abstractedly: “She can keep
it in her house.”
Terry looked up in astonishment.
“In her house? Aren’t you both
going to live in the same house?”
“No. Not till you send
a missionary up here to marry us. I don’t
figure that two days of savage rites constitutes a
marriage but I’m going to have a
deuce of a time trying to explain it to Ahma!”
Terry nodded sympathetically and walked
the springy floor a dozen times, nonplussed by the
Major’s dilemma. Pausing in his preoccupation
before the open window he noted vaguely that the nuptial
fires were yellowing before the approach of dawn:
a moment and he started violently as the solution
struck him and he whirled upon the dejected groom
with beaming countenance.
“Say!” he shouted, “I’m
certainly not going down with you two only half-married she
a bride and you not a groom! You forget that as
Senior Inspector of Constabulary I am an ex-officio
Justice of the Peace! Come on!”
He lifted the Major by the arm and
shot him through the doorway with an exuberant shove
that left him no alternative save a jarring leap to
the ground. Terry landed beside him as light as
a cat, and catching him by the elbow he hurried him
on through the woods and into the fading light of
the big fires that burned before Ohto’s house.
Terry, his eyes dancing joyously,
broke up the dance with which a hundred Hill People
were keeping the ceremonial pot boiling, and despatched
two women to fetch the bride, who had sought a brief
respite from the interminable ritual. Shortly
Ahma appeared before them, her dark eyes shadowed
with fatigue, but radiant with exaltation.
Understanding from Terry’s few
words that the Major desired that they be united also
in accordance with the rites of his own people, she
stepped quietly before Terry and took the Major’s
outstretched hand. The crowd of natives, who
had crowded about them, waited the alien ritual curiously.
Ahma was clad in the white costume
in which the Major had first seen her. A scarlet
hibiscus blossom, the Hillmen’s nuptial flower,
was thrust in her black hair, but there was no other
addition to her scant covering.
Possessed of a sudden spirit of banter
Terry turned to the Major: “Before I begin,
Major, I wish to congratulate you upon having won to
the bliss of matrimony without violating that bachelor
formula which you so often boasted.”
“What formula?”
Terry’s voice deepened in mimicry: “‘No
petticoats for mine!’”
A moment he enjoyed the Major’s
embarrassment, then composed himself to the business
in hand, happy, confident.
But the competent Terry
fumbled. Swept away in the exuberance of having
found a way out for the Major, he had forgotten that,
never having exercised his legal privilege of joining
in marriage in a province where all of the natives
were either Catholic or Mohammedan, he was wanting
in the phraseology the ceremony demanded.
Vainly he sought inspiration in a
sky chill with the pale lights of daybreak. He
shuffled his feet nervously, scowled at the ring of
brown-skinned spectators, looked at his watch.
As the sweat of worry appeared upon his white forehead
he drew his handkerchief and wiped his face vigorously,
then blew his nose resoundingly. This last device
seemed to serve.
He turned to the serene couple who
waited patiently: “Do you, John Bronner,
take this woman, Ahma Ahma of the Hills,
to be your lawful wedded wife, to love and cherish
and to er provide for?”
“I do,” said the Major.
He was proud of Terry trust the Constabulary
to see a thing through!
Terry was triumphant in his success.
He unconsciously drew up his slim, muscular figure
as he turned to the bride, focussing his gaze upon
the blossom in the waves of jet locks that tumbled
smoothly about the downcast head.
“And do you, Ahma of the Hills,
take this man, John Bronner, to be your wedded lawful
husband, to love and to er care
for when he er is sick?”
She caught the groom’s whispered
instructions and grasped the wonderful import of the
unknown words that Terry had spoken. Twice her
silent lips formed the two words of response in soundless
practice, then she looked up squarely into Terry’s
eyes and pronounced them.
“I do.”
Either the clear voice was too rich
with gladness, or else she should not have turned
the starry eyes so suddenly upon him. Lost for
a long moment in the splendor of the vision opened
up to him, he forced himself back to the duty of the
minute. But he was off the track again.
He floundered for an opening.
Bits of biblical and legal phrases raced through his
tortured brain, but none seemed appropriate to this
situation. The haunt of the dark eyes obscured
his vision, the limpid “I do,” filled
his ears. “I do.” The significance
of the words brought him back to the point of interruption,
and he turned to them, desperate, vague.
“You do? You do, eh you
both do ... well, ... join hands! I do say and
declare this twenty-third day of January that you are
man and wife in accord with the law of this land,
and now
He glared at the grinning beneficiary
of the service, and finished: “And now and
now what I what God and I have joined let
no man put asunder ... till death do us part ... so
help me God, Amen!”
In an agony of torment he ripped through
the crowd and raced to the shack, where the Major
joined him after taking Ahma into Ohto’s house.
It was now broad daylight, and the huts were emptying
of the crowd waking to take up the burden of fiesta.
Terry buckled up his pack, joining
in the Major’s mirth.
“But you are married all right.
I will send you up a certificate as soon as I reach
Zamboanga, all signed and sealed and everything.”
They became serious in thought of
imminent separation. Now that the time had come
Terry dreaded leaving his friend alone in the Hills.
“I will relieve you in three months, Major,”
he said.
“You needn’t hurry don’t
forget I’m on a honeymoon, too!”
Terry hesitated, then risked the question
that had been bothering him: “After we
come what are you going to do? Will
Ahma be ready to go below?”
“No, she will not. I am
figuring on leaving her here a few months your
wife can teach her to to dress, and all
that. And I can’t take her away so long
as Ohto lives. After that, I want to take her
to the States. She learns fast, Terry, and
I want her to see Europe she will learn
a lot there, too!”
The old woman brought them their breakfast.
The Major hurried through the meal and left to secure
a guide to take Terry down, explaining that he would
join him in the woods. Terry ate under the sorrowing
eyes of the faithful woman, and when he finished he
presented her with the only gaud that remained to
him, the gold medallion from his fob. She scurried
out to display it, the proudest woman, save one, in
all the Hills.
Slinging the pack across his shoulders
he turned for a last look at the little hut that had
sheltered him. Within its cramped walls he had
suffered, had known grave peril, and great joy.
A hint of the old wistfulness flickered about the
corner of his mouth, then he left the hut and strode
through the clearing into the woods, halting to wave
cheerfully at the Hillmen who somberly watched the
departure of their future chief.
He dipped over the edge of the plateau
and found the Major awaiting him with Ahma and the
young warrior who was to guide him down. From
where they stood at the edge of a wide glade they could
see far down over the tops of the trees that matted
the slope. In the clear morning air the mists
which gleamed over the distant Gulf shone white as
billowed snow. There lay Davao! Davao, then
Zamboanga, then ! A fiercely glad light
blazed in Terry’s gray eyes, then darkened in
anticipation of leaving the Major alone and with that
melancholy with which all men face the knowledge that
even as Life turns the pages of existence into its
happiest chapter, she closes each finished page forever.
The Major spoke first. “This
guide knows the shortest route. He will take
you safe past all the man traps you should
sleep but one night on the trail. Give my regards
to Lindsey, Sears, everybody.”
Ahma looked from one to the other,
not quite understanding what they said, but understanding
fully what they did not say. That showed in the
face of each.
“Major, I have never said anything
about your how I feel about your risking
the Hills to search for me, when it meant almost certain
death.”
Death!... For an instant the
Major again stood helpless in the dark woods behind
Lindsey’s plantation embraced in coils of steel
that quivered, and heard the crash of delivering shots....
He searched the white face, in which the lines of
suffering from a chivalrously contracted fever still
lingered. An extraordinary warm cataract suddenly
obscured his vision.
“Sus-marie-hosep!” he spluttered.
“Good-by.”
Their hands gripped hard in an abiding
friendship, then Terry turned to Ahma doubtfully,
at a loss as to how to bid adieu to this creature
of the Hills who knew so few of the white man’s
words or usages. He found, too, a source of embarrassment
in her new capacity of wife. As she gazed up
at him he looked away in boyish confusion.
The Major grasped the situation and
addressed her very slowly in English: “Ahma,
say good-by to him.”
As she nodded brightly, understanding,
the Major turned to Terry as proud as Punch:
“You see she is learning fast!
Can’t you imagine her, all dressed up and everything,
in Europe?”
Terry focussed his eyes safely upon
the white line that marked the part in her hair, and
carefully pronounced each English word.
“Ahma, I am leaving for a while. Understand?”
She bobbed the dark head: “I do,”
she said.
The memories wrought by the limpid
“I do” were a bit unsettling. He
addressed the jet locks again: “Good-by.”
She looked at the capable hand he
extended toward her, puzzled at the gesture, then
looked at the Major. He said a single word in
dialect and her small white teeth glistened in a smile
of comprehension. She approached close to Terry.
“I know. You say good-night.
I know how to good-night.”
Her concentration upon the unaccustomed
pronunciations was bewitching. To relieve the
strain of embarrassment he felt in her closeness to
him, he turned to the grinning Major.
“As you say she does
learn quickly,” he offered, rather vaguely.
She came closer still. “Yes,
I know how to good-night!”
she trilled: “Good-night is kiss!”
She called it “Keez” but
Terry understood. If he did not then he did an
instant later when he felt the clasp of warm round
arms, the molding pressure of a soft form and the
swift impress of full sensitive lips.
Loosed, he straightened up. His
blush was explosive. Bewildered, he shrugged
the light pack higher on his shoulders and gestured
his readiness to the warrior who had stood watching
the inexplicable ways of these strange white folk.
Following the Hillman, Terry set off
across the glade. Midway down the green sward
he wheeled.
“I should say she DOES learn
fast!” he called. “You won’t
need to take HER to Europe!”
The two stood watching him as he followed
the powerful little savage. As the forest swallowed
up the slim form the Major blinked rapidly, and gripped
the little hand he held.
“Sus-marie-hosep!”
he exclaimed huskily. “But won’t they
be glad to see him in Davao! And in Zamboanga!”