IN CAMP,
October 16, 1914.
DEAR MRS. CONEY,
The day we left the game-warden’s
was damp and lowering. It didn’t seem it
could have one good thing to its credit, but there
were several things to be thankful for. One of
them was that you were safe at home in your warm,
dry apartment. We had hardly passed the great
Block buttes when the biggest, wettest flakes of snow
began to pelt into our faces. I really like a
storm, and the kiddies would have enjoyed the snow;
but we had to keep the wagon-sheet tied down to keep
the bedding dry, and the kiddies get sick under cover.
All the pleasure I might have had was taken away by
the fact that we were making a forced drive.
We had to go. The game-warden had no more
than enough food for his family, and no horse feed.
Also, the snow was almost as deep there as it had
been higher up, so the horses could not graze.
We made it to Cora that day.
Here at last was plenty of hay and grain; we restocked
our mess-boxes and felt better toward the world.
Next day we came on here to Newfork, where we are
resting our teams before we start across the desert,
which begins just across the creek we are camped on.
We have added two to our party.
I know you will be interested to know how it happened,
and I can picture the astonishment of our neighbors
when we reach home, for our newcomers are to be members
of Mrs. O’Shaughnessy’s family. We
had all been sorry we could not visit Elizabeth or
“Danyul” and his mother. We felt almost
as if we were sneaking past them, but we consoled
ourselves with promises to see the Burneys and Grandma
Mortimer. Yesterday the children and I were riding
with Mrs. O’Shaughnessy in the buckboard.
We were trotting merrily along the lane that leads
to Newfork, thankful in our hearts to be out of the
snow, for there is no snow here. Just
ahead of us two little boys were riding along on their
ponies. There was a wire fence on both sides
of the lane, and almost at the end of the lane an old
cow had her head between the wires and was nibbling
the tall dead grass. The larger of the two boys
said, “That’s old Pendry’s cow, and
she shan’t eat a blade of grass off Dad’s
meadow.”
He rode up to the cow and began beating
her with his quirt. That frightened the cow,
and as she jerked her head up, the top wire caught
her across the top of her neck; she jerked and lunged
to free herself, and was cruelly cut by the barbs
on the wire. Then he began beating his pony.
The small boy said, “You’re
a coward an’ a fool, Billy Polk. The cow
wasn’t hurtin’ nothin’, an’
you’re just tryin’ to show off, beatin’
that pony.”
Said the other boy, “Shut up,
you beggar, or I’ll beat you; an’ I’ll
take them breeches you got on off you, an’ you
can go without any they’re mine.
My ma give ’em to you.”
The little fellow’s face was
scarlet as much of it as we could see for
the freckles and his eyes were blazing as
he replied, “You ain’t man enough.
I dare you to strike me or to tech my clothes.”
Both boys were riding bareback.
The small boy slid off his pony’s back; the
other rode up to him and raised his quirt, but the
little one seized him by the leg, and in a jiffy they
were in the road fighting like cats. I asked
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy to drive on, but she said,
“If you are in a hurry you can try walkin’;
I’m goin’ to referee this scrap.”
It looked for a minute as if the small
boy would get a severe beating, but by some trick
he hurled the other headlong into the green, slimy
water that edged the road; then, seizing the quirt
and the opportunity at the same time, he belabored
Billy without mercy as that individual climbed up
the slippery embankment, blubbering and whipped.
Still sobbing, he climbed upon his patient pony, which
stood waiting, and galloped off down the lane.
The other pony followed and the little conqueror was
left afoot.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy was beaming
with delight. “Sure, ’twas a fine
fight, a sight worth coming all this way to see.
Ah! but you’re the b’y. ‘Tis
a dollar I’d be givin’ ye, only me purse
is in me stockin’
“Oh,” the boy said quickly,
“don’t let that stop you. I’ll
look off another way.”
I don’t know if she would have
given him the money, for just then some men came into
the lane with some cattle and we had to start.
The boy got up on the back end of the buckboard and
we drove on. We could hear our wagons rumbling
along and knew they would soon catch up.
“Where is your home, b’y?” asked
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy.
“Oh, just wherever Aunt Hettie
has work,” he said. “She is at Mr.
Tom’s now, so I’m there, too, me
and Baby Girl.”
“Where are your folks?” Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
went on.
“Ma’s dead, an pa’s
gone to Alasky. I don’t know where my brothers
are. Baby Girl an’ me are with Aunt Het,
an’ that’s all there are of us.”
He grinned cheerfully in spite of the fact that one
eye was fast closing and he bore numerous bumps and
scratches on his face and head.
Just then one of the men with the
cattle galloped up and shouted, “Hello!”
It was Mr. Burney! “Where’d you get
that kid? I guess I’ll have to get the
sheriff after you for kidnapping Bud. And what
have you been doing to him, anyway?”
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy entered delightedly
into a recital of the “mixup,” and it
turned out that Mr. Tom and Mr. Burney were one.
It was like meeting an old friend; he seemed as pleased
as we and insisted on our going up to his ranch; he
said “the missus” would feel slighted if
we passed her by. So we turned into another lane,
and presently drew up before the ranch house.
“The missus” came dancing out to meet us,
and right welcome she made us feel. Mr. Burney
went back to bring the rest, but they were already
setting up the tents and had supper almost ready.
However, we stayed and had supper with the Burneys.
They are powerfully happy and talked
eagerly of themselves and their prospects. “It’s
just grand to have a home of your own and some one
to do for. I just love to mend for Tommy,
but I always hated to mend before,” said the
missus.
“You bet,” Mr. Burney
answered, “it is sure fine to know there’s
somebody at home with a pretty pink dress on, waitin’
for a fellow when he comes in from a long day in the
saddle.”
And so they kept up their thoughtless
chatter; but every word was as a stab to poor Aunt
Hettie. She had Baby Girl on her lap and was giving
the children their supper, but I noticed that she ate
nothing. It was easy to see that she was not
strong. Baby Girl is four years old and is the
fattest little thing. She has very dark blue eyes
with long, black lashes, and the shortest, most turned-up
little nose. She is so plump and rosy that even
the faded old blue denim dress could not hide her
loveliness.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy could not
keep her eyes off the children. “What is
the little girl’s name?” she asked.
“Caroline Agnes Lucia Lavina
Ida Eunice,” was the astonishing reply.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy gasped.
“My goodness,” she exclaimed; “is
that all?”
“Oh, no,” Aunt Hettie
went on placidly; “you see, her mother couldn’t
call her all the names, so she just used the first
letters. They spell Callie; so that is what she
called her. But I don’t like the name.
I call her Baby Girl.”
I asked her how she ever came to name
her that way, and she said, “My sister wanted
a girl, but there were six boys before this little
one came. Each time she hoped it would be a girl,
and accordingly selected a name for a girl. So
there were six names saved up, and as there wasn’t
much else to give her, my sister gave them all
to the baby.”
After supper the Burneys rode down
to camp with us. We had the same camping ground
that we had when we came up. The cabin across
the creek, where we met Grandma Mortimer, is silent
and deserted; the young couple have moved away with
their baby.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy kept talking
about the fight, and Mr. Burney gave us the history
of the children. “Their mother,” he
began, “has been dead about eighteen months.
She really died with a broken heart. Baby Girl
was only a few weeks old when the father went to Alaska,
and I guess he’s dead. He was to ‘a’
been back in three years, and no one has ever heard
a word from him. His name was Bolton; he was a
good fellow, only he went bughouse over the gold fields
and just fretted till he got away sold
everything for a grub stake left his wife
and seven kids almost homeless. But they managed
some way till the mother died. With her last
breath she asked that the two youngest be kept together;
she knew the oldest ones would have to be separated.
She never did give up looking for Bolton and she wanted
him to have the babies.
“Her sister Hettie has worked
around here for years; her and Rob Langley have been
going to marry ever since I can remember, but always
there has something cropped up. And now that Hettie
has got to take care of the kids I guess they won’t
never marry; she won’t burden him with them.
It is hard for her to support them, too. Work
is scarce, and she can’t get it, lots of times,
because of the kids.”
The Burneys soon went home and the
rest of us went to bed, all except Mrs. OShaughnessy, who was so cranky and
snappy that we left her by the fire. It seemed hours after when I awoke.
She was still sitting by the fire; she was absently marking in the ashes with a
stick. I happened to be the first one up next morning and as I stirred up
the fire I saw Baby written in the ashes. We had breakfasted and the men
had gone their ways when Mrs. OShaughnessy said to me,
“It is a blessed old soul Mrs.
Mortimer is. Do you mind any good lesson that
she taught us in the cabin beyont?” I did not
remember. “She said, ’The pangs of
motherhood make us mothers not only of our own, but
of every child that needs mothering, especially
if our own little children need us no longer.
Fill their little places with ones who do need us.’
Them’s her very words, and it’s sweet truth
it is. Both my Katie and Sheridan have been grown
and gone these many years and my heart has ached for
childher, and there’s none but Cora Belle.
I am goin’ to get them childher this day.
What do you think about it?”
I thought so well of it that in about
two minutes we were harnessing the horses and were
off to lay the plan before Hettie in record-breaking
time.
Poor Hettie: she wept quietly
while the advantages of the scheme were being pointed
out. She said, “I love the children, dearly,
but I am not sure I can always feed and clothe them;
that has worried me a lot. I am almost sure Bolton
is dead. I’ll miss the little things, but
I am glad to know they are well provided for.
You can take them.”
“Now,” said Mrs. O’Shaughnessy,
“you go on an’ marry your man if he is
a decent sort. Do it right away before something
else happens. It is an illigant wedding present
I’ll be sendin’ you. You must come
to see the childher often. What’s the b’y’s
name?”
“We never did name him; you
see we had kind of run out of boys’ names.
We just called him Buddy.”
“I can find a name for him,”
said Mrs. O’Shaughnessy. “Is there
a Joseph in the family?” Hettie said no.
“Well, then, he is named Joseph Bolton O’Shaughnessy,
and I’ll have them both baptized as soon as
we get to Green River.”
So in the morning we start with two
new members. Mrs. O’Shaughnessy is very
happy. I am so glad myself that I can hardly express
myself. We are all happy except Mr. Murry;
he has at last given up hopes, and gone. Mr.
Haynes growls a little about having to travel along
with a rolling nursery, but he is just bluffing.
I am longing to see Junior. We have not heard
one word since we left them, and I am so homesick
for mother and my boy. And you, best of
friends, when shall I see your beloved face?
To-morrow night we shall camp at Ten Trees and we
shall be one day nearer home.
With
much love,
ELINORE
RUPERT STEWART.