There
is always work,
And tools to work withal,
for those who will;
And blessed are the horny
hands of toil!
Lowell.
“Do you remember Gabriel Betteredge?”
asked Adam, a day or so later, as he watched her set
the house in order after their breakfast. “You
know in times of great mental perturbation he always
sought comfort and counsel from the pages of ‘Robinson
Crusoe.’ When in doubt he waited until
to-morrow, as Robinson advised; and no matter what
his perplexities, he always found just what he wanted
in that infallible book. If I remember correctly,
but it’s years since I read it, Robinson goes
on a voyage of discovery the first thing.”
“He built a raft to get away
from the wreck first, I think,” she said reflectively.
“Or did he build the raft to get to the wreck?
I can’t remember. And then he built a house.
Somewhere along there he wrote down his situation
in a deadly parallel; I have sometimes wondered if
he was the inventor of that style. But he offset
the debit of being cast away with gratitude for having
escaped with his life. We’re not, at least
I’m not, sure that belongs on the credit side.”
“We don’t want to do much
exploring yet,” he answered. “If we
have no wreck to supply us with all sorts of things,
we have a house ready to hand, not exactly as we would
either of us have ordered it, I fancy, but better
than we could build. Do you know what there is
in it? We might begin our investigations here.”
“‘With lamp in hand we
will explore,’” she hummed, “but
two rooms and a cellar do not promise much. There
is nothing to see in this room, except what we do
see, and the contents of that chest, which is locked.”
Adam tried the lock, then shook the
chest. “There’s nothing in it, anyhow,”
he said.
“As to the other room,”
she went on, “there is a bedroom set, a
better one than I should have expected to find in a
place like this, and a closet with some
clothes in it. The man was about your size, but
the feminine garments well they
are all about the length of my bicycle skirt, and
on the shelf there is a pile of bedding. There
is no trap door leading into either subterranean or
overhead apartments. In fact, there is nothing
else, except a chair. It’s very uninteresting.”
Adam had been moving about the room,
and stopped before the bookshelf. He wound the
clock mechanically, and read the titles of the books
aloud. A chemistry, a book on electricity, a Bible,
a worn copy of Tennyson, the “Yankee at King
Arthur’s Court,” and a patent medicine
almanac made up the list.
“There is one mysterious thing,”
he said, “and that is the packing cases out
under the shed. I can’t make up my mind
what they contain, and I don’t quite feel that
we ought to open them; I should like to; they look
as if they might hold
“Canned goods?” she said interrogatively.
“I was going to say books, but
I suppose we need canned lobster more,” he assented.
“If you are sure they contain oats, peas, beans,
or barley, or anything that the farmer knows, that
would justify me in opening them.” He took
up a hatchet, and they went out and inspected the
boxes, which were very large and strong.
“Let’s not open them yet,”
she said. “There is one other treasure in
one of the bureau drawers; it is a box with seeds of
almost every kind. They ought to have known most
of those things wouldn’t grow up this close
to timber-line.”
“Probably they were sent by
the congressman from this district,” Adam said
dryly. “But I’m not so sure they won’t
grow. Have you noticed how warm it is, how very
unlike what it has always been? Let us go to the
stables, and see what we can find there.”
They went up a path, past a garden,
fenced with woven wire, through which the chickens
looked longingly. Under some sashes forming a
primitive greenhouse, lettuce and radishes were making
good headway. Nothing else had come up, though
there were many beds, with small slips of board, like
miniature tombstones, showing what had been planted.
The stables and cow-barn were all under one roof, and
would accommodate several horses and a few cows.
There was hay and fodder in a lot adjoining, and a
few ordinary farm implements, a plow, a harrow, and
a cultivator in a shed addition.
“Do you know what it is for?”
she asked mischievously, as he pulled out the plow.
“Do you think I never remembered
the granger vote in my ambitions?” he answered.
“I can plow, and I have planted and snapped corn,
and cut fodder, and dug potatoes I wonder
if there are any here?”
“Yes,” she answered; “in
the cellar, at least a bushel, mostly gone to eyes,
but I forget how thick to cut them. If we were
only ’The Swiss Family Robinson,’”
she went on, “we should find yams and pineapples
and oranges and sugar-cane and bananas coming up between
the rocks. As it is, I am thankful to the congressman
who sent the peas and morning-glories.”
“There is only about enough
wheat and corn to plant fifteen acres,” Adam
said, making a rough calculation in his mind.
“I will plow a little over that, so as to have
a patch for the potatoes, and get it ready as soon
as possible.”
“I know how to plant corn and
potatoes,” she said eagerly. “Just
as soon as you get part of the land ready, I will
begin. You didn’t know I was brought up
on a ranch, did you? I never was very fond of
recalling it. It is a perpetual round of conditions
unlike any theory ever heard of.” She shrugged
her shoulders, and stopped at the rude table under
the porch to crumb some slices of what looked like
a kind of cornbread.
“What is it?” he asked curiously.
“That is to enable us to make
light of our troubles,” she replied solemnly.
“Or, for thy more sweet understanding it is,
or at least I hope it will be, yeast. I found
a Twin Brothers yeast cake, and from it, behold the
brethren! I know that raised bread is unhealthy,
and that to get the worth of your money you ought
to eat the bran also, and that the best bread, from
the hygienic standpoint, is made from wheat-paste,
and is about the consistency of sole leather; but even
if yeast does shorten our lives, I don’t know
that I shall give it up on that account.”
The planting of their crops took several
weeks, and was very hard work, for neither of them
was an expert farmer. When the corn and wheat
came up there were almost no weeds, and the stand was
better than usual for sod land; but they were kept
busy warding off the horses and cattle that preferred
the fresh young corn and wheat to the indifferent
natural grass.
“I thought,” she said
wearily, after driving away the intruders for the
third time, “I thought fences were
a sign of civilization, but they seem to be the first
necessity of the wilderness.”
She was sitting on a rock, fanning
her flushed face with her sombrero, when Adam came
to her assistance.
“You should have waited,”
he said. “I was coming, but I had to hitch
the team.” He turned and looked at her,
and laughed boyishly. “The run hasn’t
hurt you,” he said; “you look like a wild
rose. I believe I shall call you so; may I?
I can’t call you by the old name.”
She colored hotly, then turned quite
pale, and there was a touch of reserve in her voice
as she answered rather too indifferently, “If
you choose, still I think, O Adam Crusoe, that Friday
or Robinson would be a better name.”
“We’ll compromise on Robin,”
he said. “A rose by any other name is just
as sweet.”
“I wish we had a fence,”
she said turning the subject hastily.
“We have,” he answered.
“If we were to build one ourselves, it would
have to be of rocks, but Nature has provided a magnificent
stone barrier. We have only to drive the animals
we are not using through the gateway, and fasten that
little wooden concern after them. There is good
pasture outside, and if we need them we can go after
them. Lassie will look after Daisy and Lily,
won’t you, little dog? I will go and open
the gate and drive them through. You help Lassie
keep those two back.”
She stood undecidedly, and he turned
and said gently, “I will come back without passing
through the gateway. I will never pass it without
you. I wouldn’t dare. Now see how nicely
Lassie will conduct this round-up.”
As he went toward the gateway, her
eyes followed him with a look he would hardly have
comprehended, it was so full of relief and gratitude.
He understood and reassured her without noticing her
fears or smiling at her weakness. Every day and
many times she thanked God that, of all the men who
might have been left by this modern deluge, it was
Adam who had been with her and was with her in this
terrible experience.