In the early gray dawn David awoke.
His first sensation was the physical numbness and
stiffness that came from his hard bed on the floor.
“Why, daddy,” he began,
pulling himself half-erect, “I slept all night
on ” He stopped suddenly, brushing
his eyes with the backs of his hands. “Why,
daddy, where ” Then full consciousness
came to him.
With a low cry he sprang to his feet
and ran to the window. Through the trees he could
see the sunrise glow of the eastern sky. Down
in the yard no one was in sight; but the barn door
was open, and, with a quick indrawing of his breath,
David turned back into the room and began to thrust
himself into his clothing.
The gold in his sagging pockets clinked
and jingled musically; and once half a dozen pieces
rolled out upon the floor. For a moment the boy
looked as if he were going to let them remain where
they were. But the next minute, with an impatient
gesture, he had picked them up and thrust them deep
into one of his pockets, silencing their jingling with
his handkerchief.
Once dressed, David picked up his
violin and stepped softly into the hall. At first
no sound reached his ears; then from the kitchen below
came the clatter of brisk feet and the rattle of tins
and crockery. Tightening his clasp on the violin,
David slipped quietly down the back stairs and out
to the yard. It was only a few seconds then before
he was hurrying through the open doorway of the barn
and up the narrow stairway to the loft above.
At the top, however, he came to a
sharp pause, with a low cry. The next moment
he turned to see a kindly-faced man looking up at him
from the foot of the stairs.
“Oh, sir, please please,
where is he? What have you done with him?”
appealed the boy, almost plunging headlong down the
stairs in his haste to reach the bottom.
Into the man’s weather-beaten
face came a look of sincere but awkward sympathy.
“Oh, hullo, sonny! So you’re
the boy, are ye?” he began diffidently.
“Yes, yes, I’m David.
But where is he my father, you know?
I mean the the part he he left
behind him?” choked the boy. “The
part like the ice-coat?”
The man stared. Then, involuntarily,
he began to back away.
“Well, ye see, I I ”
“But, maybe you don’t
know,” interrupted David feverishly. “You
aren’t the man I saw last night. Who are
you? Where is he the other one, please?”
“No, I I wa’n’t
here that is, not at the first,” spoke
up the man quickly, still unconsciously backing away.
“Me I’m only Larson, Perry
Larson, ye know. ’T was Mr. Holly you see
last night him that I works for.”
“Then, where is Mr. Holly, please?”
faltered the boy, hurrying toward the barn door.
“Maybe he would know about father.
Oh, there he is!” And David ran out of the barn
and across the yard to the kitchen porch.
It was an unhappy ten minutes that
David spent then. Besides Mr. Holly, there were
Mrs. Holly, and the man, Perry Larson. And they
all talked. But little of what they said could
David understand. To none of his questions could
he obtain an answer that satisfied.
Neither, on his part, could he seem
to reply to their questions in a way that pleased
them.
They went in to breakfast then, Mr.
and Mrs. Holly, and the man, Perry Larson. They
asked David to go at least, Mrs. Holly asked
him. But David shook his head and said “No,
no, thank you very much; I’d rather not, if
you please not now.” Then he
dropped himself down on the steps to think. As
if he could eat with that great choking
lump in his throat that refused to be swallowed!
David was thoroughly dazed, frightened,
and dismayed. He knew now that never again in
this world would he see his dear father, or hear him
speak. This much had been made very clear to him
during the last ten minutes. Why this should
be so, or what his father would want him to do, he
could not seem to find out. Not until now had
he realized at all what this going away of his father
was to mean to him. And he told himself frantically
that he could not have it so. He could
not have it so! But even
as he said the words, he knew that it was so irrevocably
so.
David began then to long for his
mountain home. There at least he would have his
dear forest all about him, with the birds and the
squirrels and the friendly little brooks. There
he would have his Silver Lake to look at, too, and
all of them would speak to him of his father.
He believed, indeed, that up there it would almost
seem as if his father were really with him. And,
anyway, if his father ever should come back, it would
be there that he would be sure to seek him up
there in the little mountain home so dear to them both.
Back to the cabin he would go now, then. Yes;
indeed he would!
With a low word and a passionately
intent expression, David got to his feet, picked up
his violin, and hurried, firm-footed, down the driveway
and out upon the main highway, turning in the direction
from whence he had come with his father the night
before.
The Hollys had just finished breakfast
when Higgins, the coroner, drove into the yard accompanied
by William Streeter, the town’s most prominent
farmer, and the most miserly one, if report
was to be credited.
“Well, could you get anything
out of the boy?” demanded Higgins, without ceremony,
as Simeon Holly and Larson appeared on the kitchen
porch.
“Very little. Really nothing
of importance,” answered Simeon Holly.
“Where is he now?”
“Why, he was here on the steps
a few minutes ago.” Simeon Holly looked
about him a bit impatiently.
“Well, I want to see him. I’ve got
a letter for him.”
“A letter!” exclaimed Simeon Holly and
Larson in amazed unison.
“Yes. Found it in his father’s
pocket,” nodded the coroner, with all the tantalizing
brevity of a man who knows he has a choice morsel of
information that is eagerly awaited. “It’s
addressed to ‘My boy David,’ so I calculated
we’d better give it to him first without reading
it, seeing it’s his. After he reads it,
though, I want to see it. I want to see if what
it says is any nearer being horse-sense than the other
one is.”
“The other one!” exclaimed the amazed
chorus again.
“Oh, yes, there’s another
one,” spoke up William Streeter tersely.
“And I’ve read it all but the
scrawl at the end. There couldn’t anybody
read that!” Higgins laughed.
“Well, I’m free to confess
’t is a sticker that name,”
he admitted. “And it’s the name we
want, of course, to tell us who they are since
it seems the boy don’t know, from what you said
last night. I was in hopes, by this morning,
you’d have found out more from him.”
Simeon Holly shook his head.
“’T was impossible.”
“Gosh! I should say ‘t
was,” cut in Perry Larson, with emphasis.
“An’ queer ain’t no name for it.
One minute he’d be talkin’ good common
sense like anybody: an’ the next he’d
be chatterin’ of coats made o’ ice, an’
birds an’ squirrels an’ babbling brooks.
He sure is dippy! Listen. He actually don’t
seem ter know the diff’rence between himself
an’ his fiddle. We was tryin’ ter
find out this mornin’ what he could do, an’
what he wanted ter do, when if he didn’t up an’
say that his father told him it didn’t make
so much diff’rence what he did so long
as he kept hisself in tune an’ didn’t strike
false notes. Now, what do yer think o’
that?”
“Yes, I, know” nodded
Higgins musingly. “There was something
queer about them, and they weren’t just ordinary
tramps. Did I tell you? I overtook them
last night away up on the Fairbanks road by the Taylor
place, and I gave ’em a lift. I particularly
noticed what a decent sort they were. They were
clean and quiet-spoken, and their clothes were good,
even if they were rough. Yet they didn’t
have any baggage but them fiddles.”
“But what was that second letter
you mentioned?” asked Simeon Holly.
Higgins smiled oddly, and reached into his pocket.
“The letter? Oh, you’re
welcome to read the letter,” he said, as he
handed over a bit of folded paper.
Simeon took it gingerly and examined it.
It was a leaf torn apparently from
a note book. It was folded three times, and bore
on the outside the superscription “To whom it
may concern.” The handwriting was peculiar,
irregular, and not very legible. But as near
as it could be deciphered, the note ran thus:
Now that the time has come when I
must give David back to the world, I have set out
for that purpose.
But I am ill very ill,
and should Death have swifter feet than I, I must
leave my task for others to complete. Deal gently
with him. He knows only that which is good and
beautiful. He knows nothing of sin nor evil.
Then followed the signature a
thing of scrawls and flourishes that conveyed no sort
of meaning to Simeon Holly’s puzzled eyes.
“Well?” prompted Higgins expectantly.
Simeon Holly shook his head.
“I can make little of it. It certainly
is a most remarkable note.”
“Could you read the name?”
“No.”
“Well, I couldn’t.
Neither could half a dozen others that’s seen
it. But where’s the boy? Mebbe his
note’ll talk sense.”
“I’ll go find him,” volunteered
Larson. “He must be somewheres ’round.”
But David was very evidently not “somewheres
’round.” At least he was not in the
barn, the shed, the kitchen bedroom, nor anywhere else
that Larson looked; and the man was just coming back
with a crestfallen, perplexed frown, when Mrs. Holly
hurried out on to the porch.
“Mr. Higgins,” she cried,
in obvious excitement, “your wife has just telephoned
that her sister Mollie has just telephoned her
that that little tramp boy with the violin is at her
house.”
“At Mollie’s!” exclaimed
Higgins. “Why, that’s a mile or more
from here.”
“So that’s where he is!”
interposed Larson, hurrying forward. “Doggone
the little rascal! He must ‘a’ slipped
away while we was eatin’ breakfast.”
“Yes. But, Simeon, Mr.
Higgins, we hadn’t ought to let him
go like that,” appealed Mrs. Holly tremulously.
“Your wife said Mollie said she found him crying
at the crossroads, because he didn’t know which
way to take. He said he was going back home.
He means to that wretched cabin on the mountain, you
know; and we can’t let him do that alone a
child like that!”
“Where is he now?” demanded Higgins.
“In Mollie’s kitchen eating
bread and milk; but she said she had an awful time
getting him to eat. And she wants to know what
to do with him. That’s why she telephoned
your wife. She thought you ought to know he was
there.”
“Yes, of course. Well,
tell her to tell him to come back.”
“Mollie said she tried to have
him come back, but that he said, no, thank you, he’d
rather not. He was going home where his father
could find him if he should ever want him. Mr.
Higgins, we we can’t let him
go off like that. Why, the child would die up
there alone in those dreadful woods, even if he could
get there in the first place which I very
much doubt.”
“Yes, of course, of course,”
muttered Higgins, with a thoughtful frown. “There’s
his letter, too. Say!” he added, brightening,
“what’ll you bet that letter won’t
fetch him? He seems to think the world and all
of his daddy. Here,” he directed, turning
to Mrs. Holly, “you tell my wife to tell better
yet, you telephone Mollie yourself, please, and tell
her to tell the boy we’ve got a letter here
for him from his father, and he can have it if he’ll
come back.”.
“I will, I will,” called
Mrs. Holly, over her shoulder, as she hurried into
the house. In an unbelievably short time she was
back, her face beaming.
“He’s started, so soon,”
she nodded. “He’s crazy with joy,
Mollie said. He even left part of his breakfast,
he was in such a hurry. So I guess we’ll
see him all right.”
“Oh, yes, we’ll see him
all right,” echoed Simeon Holly grimly.
“But that isn’t telling what we’ll
do with him when we do see him.”
“Oh, well, maybe this letter
of his will help us out on that,” suggested
Higgins soothingly. “Anyhow, even if it
doesn’t, I’m not worrying any. I
guess some one will want him a good healthy
boy like that.”
“Did you find any money on the body?”
asked Streeter.
“A little change a
few cents. Nothing to count. If the boy’s
letter doesn’t tell us where any of their folks
are, it’ll be up to the town to bury him all
right.”
“He had a fiddle, didn’t
he? And the boy had one, too. Wouldn’t
they bring anything?” Streeter’s round
blue eyes gleamed shrewdly.
Higgins gave a slow shake of his head.
“Maybe if there was
a market for ’em. But who’d buy ’em?
There ain’t a soul in town plays but Jack Gurnsey;
and he’s got one. Besides, he’s sick,
and got all he can do to buy bread and butter for him
and his sister without taking in more fiddles, I guess.
He wouldn’t buy ’em.”
“Hm m; maybe not,
maybe not,” grunted Streeter. “An’,
as you say, he’s the only one that’s got
any use for ’em here; an’ like enough they
ain’t worth much, anyway. So I guess ’t
is up to the town all right.”
“Yes; but if yer’ll
take it from me,” interrupted Larson, “you’ll
be wise if ye keep still before the boy. It’s
no use askin’ him anythin’.
We’ve proved that fast enough. An’
if he once turns ‘round an’ begins ter
ask you questions, yer done for!”
“I guess you’re right,”
nodded Higgins, with a quizzical smile. “And
as long as questioning can’t do any good,
why, we’ll just keep whist before the boy.
Meanwhile I wish the little rascal would hurry up and
get here. I want to see the inside of that letter
to him. I’m relying on that being
some help to unsnarl this tangle of telling who they
are.”
“Well, he’s started,”
reiterated Mrs. Holly, as she turned back into the
house; “so I guess he’ll get here if you
wait long enough.”
“Oh, yes, he’ll get here
if we wait long enough,” echoed Simeon Holly
again, crustily.
The two men in the wagon settled themselves
more comfortably in their seats, and Perry Larson,
after a half-uneasy, half-apologetic glance at his
employer, dropped himself onto the bottom step.
Simeon Holly had already sat down stiffly in one of
the porch chairs. Simeon Holly never “dropped
himself” anywhere. Indeed, according to
Perry Larson, if there were a hard way to do a thing,
Simeon Holly found it and did it. The
fact that, this morning, he had allowed, and was still
allowing, the sacred routine of the day’s work
to be thus interrupted, for nothing more important
than the expected arrival of a strolling urchin, was
something Larson would not have believed had he not
seen it. Even now he was conscious once or twice
of an involuntary desire to rub his eyes to make sure
they were not deceiving him.
Impatient as the waiting men were
for the arrival of David, they were yet almost surprised,
so soon did he appear, running up the driveway.
“Oh, where is it, please?”
he panted. “They said you had a letter for
me from daddy!”
“You’re right, sonny;
we have. And here it is,” answered Higgins
promptly, holding out the folded paper.
Plainly eager as he was, David did
not open the note till he had first carefully set
down the case holding his violin; then he devoured
it with eager eyes.
As he read, the four men watched his
face. They saw first the quick tears that had
to be blinked away. Then they saw the radiant
glow that grew and deepened until the whole boyish
face was aflame with the splendor of it. They
saw the shining wonder of his eyes, too, as he looked
up from the letter.
“And daddy wrote this to me
from the far country?” he breathed.
Simeon Holly scowled. Larson
choked over a stifled chuckle. William Streeter
stared and shrugged his shoulders; but Higgins flushed
a dull red.
“No, sonny,” he stammered.
“We found it on the er I
mean, it er your father left
it in his pocket for you,” finished the man,
a little explosively.
A swift shadow crossed the boy’s face.
“Oh, I hoped I’d heard ”
he began. Then suddenly he stopped, his face
once more alight. “But it’s ’most
the same as if he wrote it from there, isn’t
it? He left it for me, and he told me what to
do.”
“What’s that, what’s
that?” cried Higgins, instantly alert.
“Did he tell you what to do? Then,
let’s have it, so we’ll know.
You will let us read it, won’t you, boy?”
“Why, y yes,”
stammered David, holding it out politely, but with
evident reluctance.
“Thank you,” nodded Higgins, as he reached
for the note.
David’s letter was very different
from the other one. It was longer, but it did
not help much, though it was easily read. In his
letter, in spite of the wavering lines, each word
was formed with a care that told of a father’s
thought for the young eyes that would read it.
It was written on two of the notebook’s leaves,
and at the end came the single word “Daddy.”
David, my boy [read Higgins aloud],
in the far country I am waiting for you. Do not
grieve, for that will grieve me. I shall not return,
but some day you will come to me, your violin at your
chin, and the bow drawn across the strings to greet
me. See that it tells me of the beautiful world
you have left for it is a beautiful world,
David; never forget that. And if sometime you
are tempted to think it is not a beautiful world,
just remember that you yourself can make it beautiful
if you will.
You are among new faces, surrounded
by things and people that are strange to you.
Some of them you will not understand; some of them
you may not like. But do not fear, David, and
do not plead to go back to the hills. Remember
this, my boy, in your violin lie all the
things you long for. You have only to play, and
the broad skies of your mountain home will be over
you, and the dear friends and comrades of your mountain
forests will be about you.
Daddy.
“Gorry! that’s worse than
the other,” groaned Higgins, when he had finished
the note. “There’s actually nothing
in it! Wouldn’t you think if
a man wrote anything at such a time that
he’d ‘a’ wrote something that had
some sense to it something that one could
get hold of, and find out who the boy is?”
There was no answering this.
The assembled men could only grunt and nod in agreement,
which, after all, was no real help.