A curious strength seemed to have
come to the man. With almost steady hands he
took down the photographs and the Sistine Madonna,
packing them neatly away in a box to be left.
From beneath his bunk he dragged a large, dusty traveling-bag,
and in this he stowed a little food, a few garments,
and a great deal of the music scattered about the room.
David, in the doorway, stared in dazed
wonder. Gradually into his eyes crept a look
never seen there before.
“Father, where are we going?”
he asked at last in a shaking voice, as he came slowly
into the room.
“Back, son; we’re going back.”
“To the village, where we get our eggs and bacon?”
“No, no, lad, not there.
The other way. We go down into the valley this
time.”
“The valley my valley, with
the Silver Lake?”
“Yes, my son; and beyond far
beyond.” The man spoke dreamily. He
was looking at a photograph in his hand. It had
slipped in among the loose sheets of music, and had
not been put away with the others. It was the
likeness of a beautiful woman.
For a moment David eyed him uncertainly; then he spoke.
“Daddy, who is that? Who
are all these people in the pictures? You’ve
never told me about any of them except the little round
one that you wear in your pocket. Who are they?”
Instead of answering, the man turned
faraway eyes on the boy and smiled wistfully.
“Ah, David, lad, how they’ll
love you! How they will love you! But you
mustn’t let them spoil you, son. You must
remember remember all I’ve told you.”
Once again David asked his question,
but this time the man only turned back to the photograph,
muttering something the boy could not understand.
After that David did not question
any more. He was too amazed, too distressed.
He had never before seen his father like this.
With nervous haste the man was setting the little
room to rights, crowding things into the bag, and
packing other things away in an old trunk. His
cheeks were very red, and his eyes very bright.
He talked, too, almost constantly, though David could
understand scarcely a word of what was said.
Later, the man caught up his violin and played; and
never before had David heard his father play like
that. The boy’s eyes filled, and his heart
ached with a pain that choked and numbed though
why, David could not have told. Still later,
the man dropped his violin and sank exhausted into
a chair; and then David, worn and frightened with it
all, crept to his bunk and fell asleep.
In the gray dawn of the morning David
awoke to a different world. His father, white-faced
and gentle, was calling him to get ready for breakfast.
The little room, dismantled of its decorations, was
bare and cold. The bag, closed and strapped,
rested on the floor by the door, together with the
two violins in their cases, ready to carry.
“We must hurry, son. It’s
a long tramp before we take the cars.”
“The cars the real
cars? Do we go in those?” David was fully
awake now.
“Yes.”
“And is that all we’re to carry?”
“Yes. Hurry, son.”
“But we come back sometime?”
There was no answer.
“Father, we’re coming back sometime?”
David’s voice was insistent now.
The man stooped and tightened a strap
that was already quite tight enough. Then he
laughed lightly.
“Why, of course you’re
coming back sometime, David. Only think of all
these things we’re leaving!”
When the last dish was put away, the
last garment adjusted, and the last look given to
the little room, the travelers picked up the bag and
the violins, and went out into the sweet freshness
of the morning. As he fastened the door the man
sighed profoundly; but David did not notice this.
His face was turned toward the east always
David looked toward the sun.
“Daddy, let’s not go,
after all! Let’s stay here,” he cried
ardently, drinking in the beauty of the morning.
“We must go, David. Come,
son.” And the man led the way across the
green slope to the west.
It was a scarcely perceptible trail,
but the man found it, and followed it with evident
confidence. There was only the pause now and then
to steady his none-too-sure step, or to ease the burden
of the bag. Very soon the forest lay all about
them, with the birds singing over their heads, and
with numberless tiny feet scurrying through the underbrush
on all sides. Just out of sight a brook babbled
noisily of its delight in being alive; and away up
in the treetops the morning sun played hide-and-seek
among the dancing leaves.
And David leaped, and laughed, and
loved it all, nor was any of it strange to him.
The birds, the trees, the sun, the brook, the scurrying
little creatures of the forest, all were friends of
his. But the man the man did not leap
or laugh, though he, too, loved it all. The man
was afraid.
He knew now that he had undertaken
more than he could carry out. Step by step the
bag had grown heavier, and hour by hour the insistent,
teasing pain in his side had increased until now it
was a torture. He had forgotten that the way
to the valley was so long; he had not realized how
nearly spent was his strength before he even started
down the trail. Throbbing through his brain was
the question, what if, after all, he could not but
even to himself he would not say the words.
At noon they paused for luncheon,
and at night they camped where the chattering brook
had stopped to rest in a still, black pool. The
next morning the man and the boy picked up the trail
again, but without the bag. Under some leaves
in a little hollow, the man had hidden the bag, and
had then said, as if casually:
“I believe, after all, I won’t
carry this along. There’s nothing in it
that we really need, you know, now that I’ve
taken out the luncheon box, and by night we’ll
be down in the valley.”
“Of course!” laughed David.
“We don’t need that.” And he
laughed again, for pure joy. Little use had David
for bags or baggage!
They were more than halfway down the
mountain now, and soon they reached a grass-grown
road, little traveled, but yet a road. Still
later they came to where four ways crossed, and two
of them bore the marks of many wheels. By sundown
the little brook at their side murmured softly of
quiet fields and meadows, and David knew that the
valley was reached.
David was not laughing now. He
was watching his father with startled eyes. David
had not known what anxiety was. He was finding
out now though he but vaguely realized
that something was not right. For some time his
father had said but little, and that little had been
in a voice that was thick and unnatural-sounding.
He was walking fast, yet David noticed that every
step seemed an effort, and that every breath came
in short gasps. His eyes were very bright, and
were fixedly bent on the road ahead, as if even the
haste he was making was not haste enough. Twice
David spoke to him, but he did not answer; and the
boy could only trudge along on his weary little feet
and sigh for the dear home on the mountain-top which
they had left behind them the morning before.
They met few fellow travelers, and
those they did meet paid scant attention to the man
and the boy carrying the violins. As it chanced,
there was no one in sight when the man, walking in
the grass at the side of the road, stumbled and fell
heavily to the ground.
David sprang quickly forward.
“Father, what is it? What is
it?”
There was no answer.
“Daddy, why don’t you speak to me?
See, it’s David!”
With a painful effort the man roused
himself and sat up. For a moment he gazed dully
into the boy’s face; then a half-forgotten something
seemed to stir him into feverish action. With
shaking fingers he handed David his watch and a small
ivory miniature. Then he searched his pockets
until on the ground before him lay a shining pile of
gold-pieces to David there seemed to be
a hundred of them.
“Take them hide them keep
them. David, until you need them,”
panted the man. “Then go go
on. I can’t.”
“Alone? Without you?”
demurred the boy, aghast. “Why, father,
I couldn’t! I don’t know the way.
Besides, I’d rather stay with you,” he
added soothingly, as he slipped the watch and the miniature
into his pocket; “then we can both go.”
And he dropped himself down at his father’s
side.
The man shook his head feebly, and
pointed again to the gold-pieces.
“Take them, David, hide
them,” he chattered with pale lips.
Almost impatiently the boy began picking
up the money and tucking it into his pockets.
“But, father, I’m not
going without you,” he declared stoutly, as the
last bit of gold slipped out of sight, and a horse
and wagon rattled around the turn of the road above.
The driver of the horse glanced disapprovingly
at the man and the boy by the roadside; but he did
not stop. After he had passed, the boy turned
again to his father. The man was fumbling once
more in his pockets. This time from his coat
he produced a pencil and a small notebook from which
he tore a page, and began to write, laboriously, painfully.
David sighed and looked about him.
He was tired and hungry, and he did not understand
things at all. Something very wrong, very terrible,
must be the matter with his father. Here it was
almost dark, yet they had no place to go, no supper
to eat, while far, far up on the mountain-side was
their own dear home sad and lonely without them.
Up there, too, the sun still shone, doubtless, at
least there were the rose-glow and the Silver Lake
to look at, while down here there was nothing, nothing
but gray shadows, a long dreary road, and a straggling
house or two in sight. From above, the valley
might look to be a fairyland of loveliness, but in
reality it was nothing but a dismal waste of gloom,
decided David.
David’s father had torn a second
page from his book and was beginning another note,
when the boy suddenly jumped to his feet. One
of the straggling houses was near the road where they
sat, and its presence had given David an idea.
With swift steps he hurried to the front door and
knocked upon it. In answer a tall, unsmiling woman
appeared, and said, “Well?”
David removed his cap as his father
had taught him to do when one of the mountain women
spoke to him.
“Good evening, lady; I’m
David,” he began frankly. “My father
is so tired he fell down back there, and we should
like very much to stay with you all night, if you
don’t mind.”
The woman in the doorway stared.
For a moment she was dumb with amazement. Her
eyes swept the plain, rather rough garments of the
boy, then sought the half-recumbent figure of the
man by the roadside. Her chin came up angrily.
“Oh, would you, indeed!
Well, upon my word!” she scouted. “Humph!
We don’t accommodate tramps, little boy.”
And she shut the door hard.
It was David’s turn to stare.
Just what a tramp might be, he did not know; but never
before had a request of his been so angrily refused.
He knew that. A fierce something rose within
him a fierce new something that sent the
swift red to his neck and brow. He raised a determined
hand to the doorknob he had something to
say to that woman! when the door suddenly
opened again from the inside.
“See here, boy,” began
the woman, looking out at him a little less unkindly,
“if you’re hungry I’ll give you some
milk and bread. Go around to the back porch and
I’ll get it for you.” And she shut
the door again.
David’s hand dropped to his
side. The red still stayed on his face and neck,
however, and that fierce new something within him bade
him refuse to take food from this woman.... But
there was his father his poor father, who
was so tired; and there was his own stomach clamoring
to be fed. No, he could not refuse. And
with slow steps and hanging head David went around
the corner of the house to the rear.
As the half-loaf of bread and the
pail of milk were placed in his hands, David remembered
suddenly that in the village store on the mountain,
his father paid money for his food. David was
glad, now, that he had those gold-pieces in his pocket,
for he could pay money. Instantly his head came
up. Once more erect with self-respect, he shifted
his burdens to one hand and thrust the other into his
pocket. A moment later he presented on his outstretched
palm a shining disk of gold.
“Will you take this, to pay,
please, for the bread and milk?” he asked proudly.
The woman began to shake her head;
but, as her eyes fell on the money, she started, and
bent closer to examine it. The next instant she
jerked herself upright with an angry exclamation.
“It’s gold! A ten-dollar
gold-piece! So you’re a thief, too, are
you, as well as a tramp? Humph! Well, I
guess you don’t need this then,” she finished
sharply, snatching the bread and the pail of milk from
the boy’s hand.
The next moment David stood alone
on the doorstep, with the sound of a quickly thrown
bolt in his ears.
A thief! David knew little of
thieves, but he knew what they were. Only a month
before a man had tried to steal the violins from the
cabin; and he was a thief, the milk-boy said.
David flushed now again, angrily, as he faced the
closed door. But he did not tarry. He turned
and ran to his father.
“Father, come away, quick!
You must come away,” he choked.
So urgent was the boy’s voice
that almost unconsciously the sick man got to his
feet. With shaking hands he thrust the notes he
had been writing into his pocket. The little
book, from which he had torn the leaves for this purpose,
had already dropped unheeded into the grass at his
feet.
“Yes, son, yes, we’ll
go,” muttered the man. “I feel better
now. I can walk.”
And he did walk, though very slowly,
ten, a dozen, twenty steps. From behind came
the sound of wheels that stopped close beside them.
“Hullo, there! Going to the village?”
called a voice.
“Yes, sir.” David’s
answer was unhesitating. Where “the village”
was, he did not know; he knew only that it must be
somewhere away from the woman who had called him a
thief. And that was all he cared to know.
“I’m going ’most
there myself. Want a lift?” asked the man,
still kindly.
“Yes, sir. Thank you!”
cried the boy joyfully. And together they aided
his father to climb into the roomy wagon-body.
There were few words said. The
man at the reins drove rapidly, and paid little attention
to anything but his horses. The sick man dozed
and rested. The boy sat, wistful-eyed and silent,
watching the trees and houses flit by. The sun
had long ago set, but it was not dark, for the moon
was round and bright, and the sky was cloudless.
Where the road forked sharply the man drew his horses
to a stop.
“Well, I’m sorry, but
I guess I’ll have to drop you here, friends.
I turn off to the right; but ’t ain’t
more ’n a quarter of a mile for you, now”
he finished cheerily, pointing with his whip to a cluster
of twinkling lights.
“Thank you, sir, thank you,”
breathed David gratefully, steadying his father’s
steps. “You’ve helped us lots.
Thank you!”
In David’s heart was a wild
desire to lay at his good man’s feet all of
his shining gold-pieces as payment for this timely
aid. But caution held him back: it seemed
that only in stores did money pay; outside it branded
one as a thief!
Alone with his father, David faced
once more his problem. Where should they go for
the night? Plainly his father could not walk far.
He had begun to talk again, too, low, half-finished
sentences that David could not understand, and that
vaguely troubled him. There was a house near
by, and several others down the road toward the village;
but David had had all the experience he wanted that
night with strange houses, and strange women.
There was a barn, a big one, which was nearest of
all; and it was toward this barn that David finally
turned his father’s steps.
“We’ll go there, daddy,
if we can get in,” he proposed softly. “And
we’ll stay all night and rest.”