He came in one evening at sun set
with the empty coal-train his dull young
face pale and heavy-eyed with weariness, his corduroy
suit dusty and travel-stained, his worldly possessions
tied up in the smallest of handkerchief bundles and
slung upon the stick resting on his shoulder and
naturally his first appearance attracted some attention
among the loungers about the shed dignified by the
title of “depot.” I say “naturally,”
because arrivals upon the trains to Black Creek were
so scarce as to be regarded as curiosities; which
again might be said to be natural. The line to
the mines had been in existence two months, since
the English company had taken them in hand and pushed
the matter through with an energy startling to, and
not exactly approved by, the majority of good East
Tennesseeans. After the first week or so of arrivals principally
Welsh and English miners, with an occasional Irishman the
trains had returned daily to the Creek without a passenger;
and accordingly this one created some trifling sensation.
Not that his outward appearance was
particularly interesting or suggestive of approaching
excitement. He was only a lad of nineteen or
twenty, in working English-cut garb, and with a short,
awkward figure, and a troubled, homely face a
face so homely and troubled, in fact, that its half-bewildered
look was almost pathetic.
He advanced toward the shed hesitatingly,
and touched his cap as if half in clumsy courtesy
and half in timid appeal. “Mesters,”
he said, “good-day to yo’.”
The company bestirred themselves with
one accord, and to the roughest and most laconic gave
him a brief “Good-day.”
“You’re English,”
said a good-natured Welshman, “ar’n’t
you, my lad?”
“Ay, mester,” was the reply: “I’m
fro’ Lancashire.”
He sat down on the edge of the rough
platform, and laid his stick and bundle down in a
slow, wearied fashion.
“Fro’ Lancashire,”
he repeated in a voice as wearied as his action “fro’
th’ Deepton coalmines theer. You’ll
know th’ name on ’em, I ha’ no doubt.
Th’ same company owns ’em as owns these.”
“What!” said an outsider “Langley
an ’em?”
The boy turned himself round and nodded.
“Ay,” he answered “them.
That was why I comn here. I comn to get work
fro’ fro’ him.”
He faltered in his speech oddly, and
even reddened a little, at the same time rubbing his
hands together with a nervousness which seemed habitual
to him.
“Mester Ed’ard, I mean,”
he added “th’ young mester as
is here. I heerd as he liked ‘Merika, an’ an’
I comn.”
The loungers glanced at each other,
and their glance did not mean high appreciation of
the speaker’s intellectual powers. There
was a lack of practicalness in such faith in another
man as expressed itself in the wistful, hesitant voice.
“Did he say he’d give
you work?” asked the first man who had questioned
him, the Welshman Evans.
“No. I dunnot think I
dunnot think he’d know me if he seed me.
Theer wur so many on us.”
Another exchange of glances, and then
another question: “Where are you going
to stay?”
The homely face reddened more deeply,
and the lad’s eyes dull, soft, almost
womanish eyes raised themselves to the speaker’s.
“Do yo’ knew anybody as would
be loikely to tak’ me in a bit” he said,
“until I ha’ toime to earn th’ wage
to pay? I wouldna wrong no mon a penny as
had trusted me.”
There was manifest hesitation, and
then some one spoke: “Lancashire Jack might.”
“Mester,” said the lad
to Evans, “would you moind speakin’ a word
fur me? I ha’ had a long tramp, an’
I’m fagged-loike, an’” He
stopped and rose from his seat with a hurried movement.
“Who’s that theer as is comin’?”
he demanded. “Isna it th’ young mester?”
The some one in question was a young
man on horseback, who at that moment turned the corner
and rode toward the shed with a loose rein, allowing
his horse to choose his own pace.
“Ay,” said the lad with
an actual tremor in his excited voice “it’s
him, sure enow,” and sank back on his seat again
as if he had found himself scarcely strong enough
to stand. “I I ha’ not
’aten much fur two or three days,” he
said to Evans.
There was not a man on the platform
who did not evince some degree of pleasure at the
approach of the new-comer. The last warm rays
of the sun, already sinking behind the mountains,
seemed rather to take pride in showing what a debonair
young fellow he was, in glowing kindly upon his handsome
face and strong, graceful figure, and touching up to
greater brightness his bright hair.
The face was one to be remembered
with a sentiment approaching gratitude for the mere
existence of such genial and unspoiled good looks,
but the voice that addressed the men was one to be
loved, and loved without stint, it was so clear and
light-hearted and frank.
“Boys,” said he, “good-evening
to you. Evans, if you could spare me a minute”
Evans rose at once.
“I’ll speak to him,”
he said to the lad at his side. “His word
will go further with Lancashire Jack than mine would.”
He went to the horse’s side, and stood there
for a few minutes talking in an undertone, and then
he turned to the stranger and beckoned. “Come
here,” he said.
The lad took up his bundle and obeyed
the summons, advancing with an awkward almost stumbling
step, suggestive of actual weakness as well as the
extremity of shyness. Reaching the two men, he
touched his cap humbly, and stood with timorous eyes
upraised to the young man’s face.
Langley met his glance with a somewhat
puzzled look, which presently passed away in a light
laugh. “I’m trying to remember who
you are, my lad,” he said, “but I shall
be obliged to give it up. I know your face, I
think, but I have no recollection of your name.
I dare say I have seen you often enough. You
came from Deepton, Evans tells me.”
“Ay, mester, fro’ Deepton.”
“A long journey for a lad like
you to take alone,” with inward pity for the
heavy face.
“Ay, mester.”
“And now you want work?”
“If you please, mester.”
“Well, well!” cheerily,
“we will give it to you. There’s work
enough, though it isn’t such as you had at Deepton.
What is your name?”
“Seth, mester Seth
Raynor,” shifting the stick and bundle in uneasy
eagerness from one shoulder to another. “An’
I’m used to hard work, mester. It wur na
easy work we had at th’ Deepton mine, an’
I’m stronger than I look. It’s th’
faggedness as makes me trembly an’
hunger.”
“Hunger?”
“I ha’ not tasted sin’
th’ neet afore last,” shamefacedly.
“I hadna th’ money to buy, an’ it
seemt loike I could howd out.”
“Hold out!” echoed Langley
in some excitement. “That’s a poor
business, my lad. Here, come with me. The
other matter can wait, Evans.”
The downcast face and ungainly figure
troubled him in no slight degree as they moved off
together, they seemed to express in some indescribable
fashion so much of dull and patient pain, and they
were so much at variance with the free grandeur of
the scene surrounding them. It was as if a new
element were introduced into the very air itself.
Black Creek was too young yet to have known hunger
or actual want of any kind. The wild things on
the mountain sides had scarcely had time to learn to
fear the invaders of their haunts or understand that
they were to be driven backward. The warm wind
was fragrant with the keen freshness of pine and cedar.
Mountain and forest and sky were stronger than the
human stragglers they closed around and shut out from
the world.
“We don’t see anything
like that in Lancashire,” said Langley.
“That kind of thing is new to us, my lad, isn’t
it?” with a light gesture toward the mountain,
in whose side the workers had burrowed.
“Ay, mester,” raising
troubled eyes to its grandeur “iverything’s
new. I feel aw lost some-toimes, an’ feared-loike.”
Langley lifted his hat from his brow
to meet a little passing breeze, and as it swept softly
by he smiled in the enjoyment of its coolness.
“Afraid?” he said. “I don’t
understand that.”
“I dunnot see into it mysen’,
mester. Happen it’s th’ bigness, an’
quiet, an’ th’ lonely look, an’ happen
it’s summat wrong in mysen’. I’ve
lived in th’ cool an’ smoke an/ crowd an’
work so long as it troubles me in a manner to to
ha’ to look so high.”
“Does it?” said Langley,
a few faint lines showing themselves on his forehead.
“That’s a queer fancy. So high!”
turning his glance upward to where the tallest pine
swayed its dark plume against the clear blue.
“Well, so it is. But you will get used to
it in time,” shaking off a rather unpleasant
sensation.
“Happen so, mester, in toime,”
was the simple answer; and then silence fell upon
them again.
They had not very far to go.
The houses of the miners rough shanties
hurriedly erected to supply immediate needs were
most of them congregated together, or at most stood
at short distances from each other, the larger ones
signifying the presence oL feminine members in a family
and perhaps two or three juvenile pioneers the
smaller ones being occupied by younger miners, who
lived in couples, or sometimes even alone.
Before one of the larger shanties
Langley reined in his horse. “A Lancashire
man lives here,” he said, “and I am going
to leave you with him.”
In answer to his summons a woman came
to the door a young woman whose rather
unresponsive face wakened somewhat when she saw who
waited.
“Feyther,” she called
out, “it’s Mester Langley, an’ he’s
getten a stranger wi’ him.”
“Feyther,” approaching
the door, showed himself a burly individual, with
traces of coal-dust in all comers not to be reached
by hurried and not too fastidious ablutions.
Clouds of tobacco-smoke preceded and followed him,
and much stale incense from the fragrant weed exhaled
itself from his well-worn corduroys. “I
ha’ not nivver seed him afore,” he remarked
after a gruff by no means-ill-natured greeting, signifying
the stranger by a duck of the head in his direction.
“A Lancashire lad, Janner,”
answered Langley, “I want a home for him.”
Janner regarded him with evident interest,
but shook his head dubiously. “Ax th’
missus,” he remarked succinctly: “dunnot
ax me.”
Langley’s good-humored laugh
had a touch of conscious power in it. If it depended
upon “th’ missus” he was safe enough.
His bright good looks and gay grace of manner never
failed with the women. The most practical and
uncompromising melted, however unwillingly, before
his sunshine, and the suggestion of chivalric deference
which seemed a second nature with him. So it
was easy enough to parley with “th’ missus.”
“A Lancashire lad, Mrs. Janner,”
he said, “and so I know you’ll take care
of him. Lancashire folk have a sort of fellow
feeling for each other, you see; that was why I could
not make up my mind to leave him until I saw him in
good hands; and yours are good ones. Give him
a square meal as soon as possible,” he added
in a lower voice: “I will be accountable
for him myself.”
When he lifted his hat and rode away,
the group watched him until he was almost out of sight,
the general sentiment expressing itself in every countenance.
“Theer’s summat noice
about that theer young chap,” Janner remarked
with the slowness of a man who was rather mystified
by the fascination under whose influence he found
himself “sum-mat as goes wi’
th’ grain loike.”
“Ay,” answered his wife,
“so theer is; an’ its natur’ too.
Coom along in, lad,” to Seth, “an ha’
summat to eat: yo’ look faintish.”
Black Creek found him a wonderfully
quiet member of society, the lad Seth. He came
and went to and from the mine with mechanical regularity,
working with the rest, taking his meals with the Janners,
and sleeping in a small shanty left vacant by the
desertion of a young miner who had found life at the
settlement too monotonous to suit his tastes.
No new knowledge of his antecedents was arrived at.
He had come “fro’ Deepton,” and
that was the beginning and end of the matter.
In fact, his seemed to be a peculiarly silent nature.
He was fond of being alone, and spent most of his
spare time in the desolate little shanty. Attempts
at conversation appeared to trouble him, it was discovered,
and accordingly he was left to himself as not worth
the cultivating.
“Why does na’ tha’
talk more?” demanded Janner’s daughter,
who was a strong, brusque young woman, with a sharp
tongue.
“I ha’ not gotten nowt
to say,” was the meekly deprecating response.
Miss Janner, regarding the humble
face with some impatience, remarkably enough, found
nothing to deride in it, though, being neither a beauty
nor in her first bloom, and sharp of tongue, as I have
said, she was somewhat given to derision as a rule.
In truth, the uncomplaining patience in the dull,
soft eyes made her feel a little uncomfortable.
“I dunnot know what ails thee,”
she remarked with unceremonious candor, “but
theer’s summat as does.”
“It’s nowt as can be cured,”
said the lad, and turned his quiet face away.
In his silent fashion he evinced a
certain degree of partially for his host’s daughter.
Occasionally, after his meals, he lingered for a few
moments watching her at her work when she was alone,
sitting by the fire or near the door, and regarding
her business-like movements with a wistful air of
wonder and admiration. And yet so unobtrusive
were these mute attentions that Bess Janner was never
roused to any form of resentment of them.
“Tha’s goin’ to
ha’ a sweetheart at last, my lass,” was
one of Janner’s favorite witticisms, but Bess
bore it with characteristic coolness. “I’m
noan as big a foo’ as I look,” she would
say, “an’ I dunnot moind him no
more nor if he wus a wench hissen’.”
Small as was the element of female
society at Black Creek, this young woman was scarcely
popular. She was neither fair nor fond: a
predominance of muscle and a certain rough deftness
of hand were her chief charms. Ordinary sentiment
would have been thrown away upon her; and, fortunately,
she was spared it.
“She’s noan hurt wi’
good looks, our Bess,” her father remarked with
graceful chivalrousness on more than one occasion,
“but hoo con heave a’most as much as I
con, an’ that’s summat.”
Consequently, it did not seem likely
that the feeling she had evidently awakened in the
breast of their lodger was akin to the tender passion.
“Am I in yo’re way?”
he would ask apologetically; and the answer was invariably
a gracious if curt one: “No no
more than th’ cat. Stay wheer yo’
are, lad, an’ make yo’resen’ comfortable.”
There came a change, however, in the
nature of their intercourse, but this did not occur
until the lad had been with them some three months.
For several days he had been ailing and unlike himself.
He had been even more silent than usual; he had eaten
little, and lagged on his way to and from his work;
he looked thinner, and his step was slow and uncertain.
There was so great an alteration in him, in fact, that
Bess softened toward him visibly. She secretly
bestowed the best morsels upon him, and even went
so far as to attempt conversation. “Let
yo’re work go a bit,” she advised:
“yo’re noan fit fur it.”
But he did not give up until the third
week of illness, and then one warm day at noon, Bess,
at work in her kitchen among dishes and pans, was
startled from her labors by his appearing at the door
and staggering toward her. “What’s
up wi’ yo’?” she demanded.
“Yo’ look loike death.”
“I dunnot know,” he faltered,
and then, staggering again, caught at her dress with
feeble hands “Dunnot yo’,” he
whispered, sinking forward “dunnot
yo’ let no one come anigh me.”
She flung a strong arm around him,
and saved him from a heavy fall. His head dropped
helplessly against her breast.
“He’s fainted dead away,”
she said: “he mun ha’ been worse than
he thowt fur.”
She laid him down, and, loosening
his clothes at the throat, went for water; but a few
minutes after she had bent over him for the second
time an exclamation, which was almost a cry, broke
from’ her. “Lord ha’ mercy!”
she said, and fell back, losing something of color
herself.
She had scarcely recovered herself
even when, after prolonged efforts, she succeeded
in restoring animation to the prostrate figure under
her hands. The heavy eyes opening met hers in
piteous appeal and protest.
“I thowt it wur death
comn,” said the lad. “I wur hopin’
as it wur death.”
“What ha’ yo’
done as yo’ need wish that?” said.
Bess; and then, her voice shaking with excitement
which got the better of her and forced her to reveal
herself, she added, “I’ve fun’ out
that as yo’ve been hidin’.”
Abrupt and unprefaced as her speech
was, it scarcely produced the effect she had expected
it would. Her charge neither flinched nor reddened.
He laid a weak, rough hand upon her dress with a feebly
pleading touch. “Dunnot yo’
turn agen me,” he whispered: “yo’
wouldna if yo’ knew.”
“But I dunnot know,” Bess
answered, a trifle doggedly, despite her inward relentings.
“I comn to yo’,”
persisted the lad, “because I thowt yo’
wouldna turn agen me: yo’ wouldna,”
patiently again, “if yo’ knew.”
Gradually the ponderous witticism
in which Janner had indulged became an accepted joke
in the settlement. Bess had fallen a victim to
the tender sentiment at last. She had found an
adorer, and had apparently succumbed to his importunities.
Seth spent less time in his shanty and more in her
society. He lingered in her vicinity on all possible
occasions, and seemed to derive comfort from her mere
presence. And Bess not only tolerated but encouraged
him. Not that her manner was in the least degree
effusive: she rather extended a rough protection
to her admirer, and displayed a tendency to fight
his battles and employ her sharper wit as a weapon
in his behalf.
“Yo’ may get th’
best o’ him,” she said dryly once to the
wit of the Creek, who had been jocular at his expense,
“but yo’ conna get th’ best
o’ me. Try me a bit, lad. I’m
better worth yo’re mettle.”
“What’s takken yo’,
lass?” said her mother at another time.
“Yo’re that theer soft about th chap as
theer’s no makkin’ yo’ out.
Yo’ wur nivver loike to be soft afore,”
somewhat testily. “An’ it’s
noan his good looks, neyther.”
“No,” said Bess “it’s
noan his good looks.”
“Happen it’s his lack on ’em, then?”
“Happen it is.” And there the discussion
ended for want of material.
There was one person, however, who
did not join in the jesting; and this was Langley.
When he began to understand the matter he regarded
the two with sympathetic curiosity and interest.
Why should not their primitive and uncouth love develop
and form a tie to bind the homely lives together,
and warm and brighten them? It may have been that
his own mental condition at this time was such as
would tend to often his heart, for an innocent passion,
long cherished in its bud, had burst into its full
blooming during the months he had spent amid the novel
beauty and loneliness, and perhaps his new bliss subdued
him somewhat. Always ready with a kindly word,
he was specially ready with it where Seth was concerned.
He never passed him without one, and frequently reined
in his horse to speak to him at greater length.
Now and then, on his way home at night, he stopped
at the shanty’s door, and summoning the lad
detained him for a few minutes chatting in the odorous
evening air. It was thoroughly in accordance
with the impulses of his frank and generous nature
that he should endeavor to win upon him and gain his
confidence. “We are both Deepton men,”
he would say, “and it is natural that we should
be friends, We are both alone and a long way from home.”
But the lad was always timid and slow of speech.
His gratitude showed itself in ways
enough, but it rarely took the form of words.
Only, one night as the horse moved away, he laid his
hand upon the bridle and held it a moment, some powerful
emotion showing itself in his face, and lowering his
voice until it was almost a whisper. “Mester,”
he said, “if theer’s ivver owt to be done
as is hard an’ loike to bring pain an’
danger, yo’ll yo’ll not forget
me?”
Langley looked down at him with a
mingled feeling of warm pity and deep bewilderment.
“Forget you?” he echoed.
The dullness seemed to have dropped
away from the commonplace face as if it had been a
veil; the eyes were burning with a hungry pathos and
fire and passion; they were raised to his and held
him with the power of an indescribable anguish.
“Dunnot forget as I’m here,” the
voice growing sharp and intense, “ready an’
eager an’ waitin’ fur th’ toime to
come. Let me do summat or brave summat or suffer
summat, for God’s sake!”
When the young man rode away it was
with a sense of weight and pain upon him. He
was mystified. People were often grateful to him,
but their gratitude was not such as this; this oppressed
and disturbed him. It was suggestive of a mental
condition whose existence seemed almost impossible.
What a life this poor fellow must have led since the
simplest kindliness aroused within him such emotion
as this! “It is hard to understand,”
he murmured; “it is even a little horrible.
One fancies these duller natures do not reach our
heights and depths of happiness and pain, and yet Cathie,
Cathie, my dear,” breaking off suddenly and
turning his face upward to the broad free blue of the
sky as he quickened his horse’s pace, “let
me think of you; this hurts me.”
But he was drawn nearer to the boy,
and did his best to cheer and help him. His interest
in him grew as he saw him oftener, and there was not
only the old interest, but a new one. Something
in the lad’s face a something which
had struck him as familiar even at first began
to haunt him constantly. He could not rid himself
of the impression it left upon him, and yet he never
found himself a shade nearer a solution of the mystery.
“Raynor,” he said to him
on one of the evenings when he had stopped before
the shanty, “I wish I knew why your face troubles
me so.”
“Does it trouble yo’, mester?”
“Yes,” with a half laugh,
“I think I may say it troubles me. I have
tried to recollect every lad in Deepton, and I have
no remembrance of you.”
“Happen not, mester,”
meekly. “I nivver wur much noticed, yo’
see: I’m one o’ them as foak is more
loike to pass by.”
An early train arriving next morning
brought visitors to the Creek a business-like
elderly gentleman and his daughter, a pretty girl,
with large bright eyes and an innocent rosy face,
which became rosier and prettier than ever when Mr.
Ed ward Langley advanced from the depot shed with
uncovered head and extended hand. “Cathie!”
he said, when the first greetings had been interchanged,
“what a delight this is to me! I did not
hope for such happiness as this.”
“Father wanted to see the mines,”
answered Cathie, sweetly demure, “and I I
wanted to see Black Creek; your letters were so enthusiastic.”
“A day will suffice, I suppose?”
her paternal parent was wandering on amiably.
“A man should always investigate such matters
for himself. I can see enough to satisfy me between
now and the time for the return train.”
“I cannot,” whispered
Langley to Cathie: “a century would not
suffice. If the sun would but stand still!”
The lad Seth was late for dinner that
day, and when he entered the house Bess turned from
her dish-washing to give him a sharp, troubled look,
“Art tha’ ill again?” she asked.
“Nay,” he answered, “nobbut a bit
tired an heavy-loike.”
He sat down upon the door-step with
wearily-clasped hands, and eyes wandering toward the
mountain, whose pine-crowned summit towered above
him. He had not even yet outlived the awe of its
majesty, but he had learned to love it and draw comfort
from its beauty and strength.
“Does tha’ want thy dinner?” asked
Bess.
“No, thank yo’,” he said; “I
couldna eat.”
The dish-washing was deserted incontinently,
and Bess came to the door, towel in hand, her expression
at once softened and shaded with discontent.
“Summat’s hurt yo’,” she
said. “What is it? Summat’s hurt
yo’ sore.”
The labor-roughened hands moved with
their old nervous habit, and the answer came in an
odd, jerky, half-connected way: “I dunnot
know why it should ha’ done. I mun be mad,
or summat. I nivver had no hope nor nothin’:
theer nivver wur no reason why I should ha’ had.
Ay, I mun be wrong somehow, or it wouldna stick to
me i’ this road. I conna get rid on it,
an’ I conna feel as if I want to. What’s
up wi’ me? What’s takken howd on
me?” his voice breaking and the words ending
in a sharp hysterical gasp like a sob.
Bess wrung her towel with a desperate
strength which spoke of no small degree of tempestuous
feeling. Her brow knit itself and her lips were
compressed. “What’s happened?”
she demanded after a pause. “I conna mak’
thee out.”
The look that fell upon her companion’s
face had something of shame in it. His eyes left
the mountain side and drooped upon his clasped hands.
“Theer wur a lass coom to look at ’th place
today,” he said “a lady lass,
wi’ her feyther an’ him.
She wur aw rosy red an’ fair white, an’
it seemt as if she wur that happy as her laughin’
made th’ birds mock back at her. He took
her up th’ mountain, an’ we heard ’em
both even high up among th’ laurels. Th’
sound o’ their joy a-floatin’ down from
the height, so nigh th’ blue sky, made me sick
an’ weak-loike. They wur na so gay
when they comn back, but her eyes wur shinin’,
an’ so wur his, an’ I heerd him say to
her as ‘Foak didna know how nigh heaven th’
top o’ th’ mountain wur.’”
Bess wrung her towel again, and regarded
the mountain with manifest impatience and trouble.
“Happen it’ll coom reet some day,”
she said.
“Reet!” repeated the lad,
as if mechanically. “I hadna towd mysen’
as owt wur exactly wrong; on’y I conna see things
clear. I niwer could, an’ th’ more
I ax mysen’ questions th’ worse it gets.
Wheer wheer could I lay th’ blame?”
“Th’ blame!” said
Bess. “Coom tha’ an’ get a bite
to eat;” and she shook out the towel with a
snap and turned away. “Coom tha,”
she repeated; “I mun get my work done.”
That night, as Seth lay upon his pallet
in the shanty, the sound of Langley’s horse’s
hoofs reached him with an accompaniment of a clear,
young masculine voice singing a verse of some sentimental
modern carol a tender song ephemeral and
sweet. As the sounds neared the cabin the lad
sprang up restlessly, and so was standing at the open
door when the singer passed. “Good-neet,
mester,” he said.
The singer slackened his pace and
turned his bright face toward him in the moonlight,
waving his hand. “Good-night,” he
said, “and pleasant dreams! Mine will be
pleasant ones, I know. This has been a happy day
for me, Raynor. Goodnight.”
When the two met again the brighter
face had sadly changed; its beauty was marred with
pain, and the shadow of death lay upon it.
Entering Janner’s shanty the
following morning, Seth found the family sitting around
the breakfast-table in ominous silence. The meal
stood untouched, and even Bess looked pale and anxious.
All three glanced toward him questioningly as he approached,
and when he sat down Janner spoke: “Hasna
tha’ heerd th’ news?” he asked.
“Nay,” Seth answered, “I ha’
heerd nowt.”
Bess interposed hurriedly: “Dunnot
yo’ fear him, feyther,” she said.
“Happen it isna so bad, after aw. Four or
live foak wur takken down ill last neet, Seth, an’
th’ young mester wur among ’em; an’
theer’s them as says it’s cholera.”
It seemed as if he had not caught
the full meaning of her words; he only stared at her
in a startled, bewildered fashion. “Cholera!”
he repeated dully.
“Theer’s them as knows
it’s cholera,” said Janner, with gloomy
significance. “An’ if it’s cholera,
it’s death;” and he let his hand fall
heavily upon the table.
“Ay,” put in Mrs. Janner
in a fretful wail, “fur they say as it’s
worse i’ these parts than it is i’ England th’
heat mak’s it worse an’ here
we are i’ th’ midst o’ th’
summer-toime, an’ theer’s no knowin’
wheer it’ll end. I wish tha’d takken
my advice, Janner, an’ stayed i’ Lancashire.
Ay, I wish we wur safe at home. Better less wage
an’ more safety. Yo’d niwer ha’
coom if yo’d listened to me.”
“Howd thy tongue, mother,”
said Bess, but the words were not ungently spoken,
notwithstanding their bluntness. “Dunnot
let us mak’ it worse than it need be. Seth,
lad, eat thy breakfast.”
But there was little breakfast eaten.
The fact was, that at the first spreading of the report
a panic had seized upon the settlement, and Janner
and his wife were by no means the least influenced
by it A stolidly stubborn courage upheld Bess, but
even she was subdued and somewhat awed.
“I niwer heerd much about th’
cholera,” Seth said to her after breakfast.
“Is this here true, this as thy feyther says?”
“I dunnot know fur sure,”
Bess answered gravely, “but it’s bad enow.”
“Coom out wi’ me into
th’ fresh air,” said the lad, laying his
hand upon her sleeve: “I mun say a word
or so to thee.” And they went out together.
There was no work done in the mine
that day. Two of three new cases broke out, and
the terror spread itself and grew stronger. In
fact, Black Creek scarcely comported itself as stoically
as might have been expected. A messenger was
dispatched to the nearest town for a doctor, and his
arrival by the night train was awaited with excited
impatience.
When he came, however, the matter
became worse. He had bad news to tell himself.
The epidemic had broken out in the town he had left,
and great fears were entertained by its inhabitants.
“If you had not been so entirely thrown on your
own resources,” he said, “I could not have
come.”
A heavy enough responsibility rested
upon his shoulders during the next few weeks.
He had little help from the settlement. Those
who were un-stricken looked on at the progress of
the disease with helpless fear: few indeed escaped
a slight attack, and those who did were scarcely more
useful than his patients. In the whole place he
found only two reliable and unterrified assistants.
His first visit was to a small farm-house
round the foot of the mountain and a short distance
from the mine. There he found the family huddled
in a back room like a flock of frightened sheep, and
in the only chamber a handsome, bright-haired young
fellow lying, upon the bed with a pinched and ominous
look upon his comely face. The only person with
him was a lad roughly clad in miner’s clothes a
lad who stood by chafing his hands, and who turned
desperate eyes to the door when it opened. “Yo’re
too late, mester,” he said “yo’re
too late.”
But young as he was and
he was a very young man the doctor had
presence of mind and energy, and he flung his whole
soul and strength into the case. The beauty and
solitariness of his patient roused his sympathy almost
as if it had been the beauty of a woman; he felt drawn
toward the stalwart, helpless young figure lying upon
the humble couch in such apparent utter loneliness.
He did not count much upon the lad at first he
seemed too much bewildered and shaken but
it was not long before he changed his mind. “You
are getting over your fear,” he said.
“It wasna fear, mester,”
was the answer he received; “or at least it
wasna fear for mysen’.”
“What is your name?”
“Seth Ray nor, mester.
Him an’ me,” with a gesture toward the
bed, “comn from th’ same place. Th’
cholera couldna fear me fro’ him nor
nowt else if he wur i’ need.”
So it was Seth Raynor who watched
by the bedside, and labored with loving care and a
patience which knew no weariness, until the worst was
over and Langley was among the convalescent.
“The poor fellow and Bess Janner
were my only stay,” the young doctor was wont
to say. “Only such care as his would have
saved you, and you had a close race of it as it was.”
During the convalescence nurse and
invalid were drawn together with a stronger tie through
every hour. Wearied and weak, Langley’s
old interest in the lad became a warm affection.
He could scarcely bear to lose sight of the awkward
boyish figure, and never rested so completely as when
it was by his bedside.
“Give me your hand, dear fellow,”
he would say, “and let me hold it. I shall
sleep better for knowing you are near me.”
He fell asleep thus one morning, and
awakened suddenly to a consciousness of some new presence
in the room. Seth no longer sat in the chair
near his pillow, but stood a little apart; and surely
he would have been no lover if the feeble blood had
not leaped in his veins at the sight of the face bending
over him the innocent, fair young face
which had so haunted his pained and troubled dreams.
“Cathie!” he cried out aloud.
The-girl fell upon her knees and caught
his extended hand with a passionate little gesture
of love and pity. “I did not know,”
she poured forth in hurried, broken tones. “I
have been away ever since the sickness broke out at
home. They sent me away, and I only heard yesterday Father,
tell him, for I cannot.”
He scarcely heard the more definite
explanation, he was at once so happy and so fearful.
“Sweetheart,” he said,
“I can scarcely bear to think of what may come
of this; and yet how blessed it is to have you near
me again! The danger for me is all over:
even your dear self could not have cared for me more
faithfully than I have been cared for. Raynor
there has saved my life.”
But Cathie could only answer with
a piteous, remorseful jealousy: “Why was
it not I who saved it? why was it not I?”
And the place where Seth had stood
waiting was vacant, for he had left it at the sound
of Langley’s first joyous cry. When he returned
an hour or so later, the more restful look Langley
had fancied he had seen on his face of late had faded
out: the old unawakened heaviness had returned.
He was nervous and ill at ease, shrinking and conscious.
“I’ve comn to say good-neet
to yo’,” he said hesitatingly to the
invalid. “Th’ young lady says as she
an’ her feyther will tak’ my place a bit.
I’ll coom i’ th’ mornin’.”
“You want rest,” said
Langley; “you are tired, poor fellow!”
“Ay,” quietly, “I’m
tired; an’ th’ worst is over, yo’
see, an’ she’s here,” with a patient
smile. “Yo’ wunnot need me, and theer’s
them as does.”
From that hour his work at this one
place seemed done. For several days he made his
appearance regularly to see if he was needed, and then
his visits gradually ended. He had found a fresh
field of labor among the sufferers in the settlement
itself. He was as faithful to them as he had
been to his first charge. The same unflagging
patience showed itself, the same silent constancy
and self-sacrifice. Scarcely a man or woman had
not some cause to remember him with gratitude, and
there was not one of those who had jested at and neglected
him but thought of their jests and neglect with secret
shame.
There came a day, however, when they
missed him from among them. If he was not at
one house he was surely at another, it appeared for
some time; but when, after making his round of visits,
the doctor did not find him, he became anxious.
He might be at Janner’s; but he was not there,
nor among the miners, who had gradually resumed their
work as the epidemic weakened its strength and their
spirits lightened. Making these discoveries at
nightfall, the doctor touched up his horse in some
secret dread. He had learned earlier than the
rest to feel warmly toward this simple co-laborer.
“Perhaps he’s gone out to pay Langley a
visit,” he said: “I’ll call
and see. He may have stopped to have a rest.”
But before he had passed the last
group of cabins he met Langley himself, who by this
time was well enough to resume his place in the small
world, and, hearing his story, Langley’s anxiety
was greater than his own. “I saw him last
night on my way home,” he said. “About
this time, too, for I remember he was sitting in the
moonlight at the door of his shanty. We exchanged
a few words, as we always do, and he said he was there
because he was not needed, and thought a quiet night
would do him good. Is it possible no one has
seen him since?” in sudden alarm.
“Come with me,” said his companion.
Overwhelmed by a mutual dread, neither
spoke until they reached the shanty itself. There
was no sign of human life about it: the door
stood open, and the only sound to be heard was the
rustle of the wind whispering among the pines upon
the mountain side. Both men flung themselves
from their horses with loudly-beating hearts.
“God grant he is not here!”
uttered Langley. “God grant he is anywhere
else! The place is so drearily desolate.”
Desolate indeed! The moonbeams
streaming through the door threw their fair light
upon the rough boards and upon the walls, and upon
the quiet figure lying on the pallet in one of the
corners, touching with pitying whiteness the homely
face upon the pillow and the hand that rested motionless
upon the floor.
The doctor went down on his knees
at the pallet’s side, and thrust his hand into
the breast of the coarse garments with a half-checked
groan.
“Asleep?” broke from Langley’s
white lips in a desperate whisper. “Not not”
“Dead!” said the doctor “dead
for hours!” There was actual anguish in his
voice as he uttered the words, but another element
predominated in the exclamation which burst from him
scarcely a second later. “Good God!”
he cried “good God!”
Langley bent down and caught him almost
fiercely by the arm: the exclamation jarred upon
him. “What is it?” he demanded, “What
do you mean?”
“It is a woman!”
Even as they gazed at each other in
speechless questioning the silence was broken in upon.
Swift, heavy footsteps neared the door, crossed the
threshold, and Janner’s daughter stood before
them.
There was no need for questioning.
One glance told her all. She made her way to
the moonlit corner, pushed both aside with rough strength,
and knelt down. “I might ha’ knowed,”
she said with helpless bitterness “I
might ha’ knowed;” and she laid her face
against the dead hand in a sudden passion of weeping.
“I might ha’ knowed, Jinny lass,”
she cried, “but I didna. It was loike aw
th’ rest as tha’ should lay thee down an’
die loike this. Tha’ wast alone aw along,
an’ tha’’ wast alone at th’
last. But dunnot blame me, poor lass. Nay,
I know tha’ wiltna.”
The two men stood apart, stirred by
an emotion too deep for any spoken attempt at sympathy.
She scarcely seemed to see them: she seemed to
recognize no presence but that of the unresponsive
figure upon its lowly couch. She spoke to it
as if it had been a living thing, her voice broken
and tender, stroking the hair now and then with a touch
all womanly and loving. “Yo’ were
nigher to me than most foak, Jinny,” she said;
“an’ tha’ trusted me, I know.”
They left her to her grief until at
last she grew calmer and her sobs died away into silence.
Then she rose and approaching Langley, who stood at
the door, spoke to him, scarcely raising her tear-stained
eyes. “I ha’ summat to tell yo’
an’ sum-mat to ax yo’,” she
said, “an’ I mun tell it to yo’
alone. Will yo’ coom out here?”
He followed her, wondering and sad.
His heart was heavy with the pain and mystery the
narrow walls inclosed. When they paused a few
yards from the house, the one face was scarcely more
full of sorrow than the other, only that the woman’s
was wet with tears. She was not given to many
words, Bess Janner, and she wasted few in the story
she had to tell. “Yo’ know th’
secret as she carried,” she said, “or I
wouldna tell yo’ even now; an’ now
I tell it yo’ that she may carry the secret
to her grave, an’ ha’ no gossiping tongue
to threep at her. I dunnot want foak starin’
an’ wonderin’ an’ makkin’ talk.
She’s borne enow.”
“It shall be as you wish, whether
you tell me the story or not,” said Langley.
“We will keep it as sacred as you have done.”
She hesitated a moment, seemingly
pondering with herself before she answered him.
“Ay,” she said, “but I ha’
another reason behind. I want summat fro’
yo’: I want yo’re pity.
Happen it moight do her good even now.”
She did not look at him as she proceeded, but stood
with her face a little turned away and her eyes resting
upon the shadow on the mountain. “Theer
wur a lass as worked at th’ Deepton mines,”
she said “a lass as had a weakly
brother as worked an’ lodged wi’ her.
Her name wur Jinny, an’ she wur quiet and plain-favored.
Theer wur other wenches as wur well-lookin’,
but she wasna; theer wur others as had homes, and
she hadna one; theer wur plenty as had wit an’
sharpness, but she hadna them neyther. She wur
nowt but a desolate, homely lass, as seemt to ha’
no place i’ th’ world, an’ yet wur
tender and weak-hearted to th’ core. She
wur allus longin’ fur summat as she wur
na loike to get; an’ she nivver did get
it, fur her brother wasna one as cared fur owt but
his own doin’s. But theer were one among
aw th’ rest as nivver passed her by, an’
he wur th’ mester’s son. He wur a
bright, handsome chap, as won his way ivverywheer,
an’ had a koind word or a laugh fur aw.
So he gave th’ lass a smile, an’ did her
a favor now and then loike as not without
givin’ it more than a thowt until
she learned to live on th’ hope o’ seein’
him. An’, bein’ weak an’ tender,
it grew on her fro’ day to day, until it seemt
to give th’ strength to her an’ tak’
it both i’ one.”
She stopped and looked at Langley
here. “Does tha’ see owt now, as I’m
getten this fur?” she asked.
“Yes,” he answered, his
agitation almost master ing him. “And now
I have found the lost face that haunted me so.”
“Ay,” said Bess, “it
was hers;” and she hurried on huskily: “When
you went away she couldna abide th’ lonesomeness,
an’ so one day she said to her brother, ‘Dave,
let us go to th’ new mine wheer Mester Ed’ard
is;’ an’ him bein’ allus ready
fur a move, they started out together. But on
th’ way th’ lad took sick and died sudden,
an’ Jinny wur left to hersen’. An’
then she seed new trouble. She wur beset wi’
danger as she’d niwer thowt on, an’ before
long she foun’ out as women didna work o’
this side o’ the sea as they did o’ ours.
So at last she wur driv’ upon a strange-loike
plan. It sounds wild, happen, but it wasna so
wild after aw. Her bits of clothes giv’
out an’ she had no money; an’ theer wur
Dave’s things. She’d wore th’
loike at her work i’ Deepton, an’ she
made up her moind to wear ’em agen. Yo’
didna know her when she coom here, an’ no one
else guessed at th’ truth. She didna expect
nowt, yo’ see; she on’y wanted th’
comfort o’ hearin’ th’ voice she’d
longed an’ hungered fur; an’ here wur
wheer she could hear it. When I fun’ her
out by accident, she towd me, an’ sin’
then we ‘ve kept th’ secret together.
Do yo’ guess what else theer’s
been betwixt us, mester?”
“I think I do,” he answered.
“God forgive me for my share in her pain!”
“Nay,” she returned, “it
was no fault o’ thine. She niwer had a thowt
o’ that. She had a patient way wi’
her, had Jinny, an’ she bore her trouble better
than them as hopes. She didna ax nor hope neyther;
an’ when theer coom fresh hurt to her she wur
ready an’ waiting knowin’ as it moight
comn ony day. Happen th’ Lord knows what
life wur give her fur I dunnot, but it’s
ower now an’ happen she knows hersen’.
I hurried here to-neet,” she added, battling
with a sob, “as soon as I heerd as she was missin’,
th’ truth struck to my heart, an’ I thowt
as I should be here first, but I wasna I ha’
not gotten no more to say.”
They went back to the shanty, and
with her own hands she did for the poor clay the last
service it would need, Langley and his companion waiting
the while outside. When her task was at an end
she came to them, and this time it was Langley who
addressed himself to her. “May I go in?”
he asked.
She bent her head in assent, and without
speaking he left them and entered the shanty alone.
The moonlight, streaming in as before, fell upon the
closed eyes, and hands folded in the old, old fashion
upon the fustian jacket: the low whisper of the
pines crept downward like a sigh. Kneeling beside
the pallet, the young man bent his head and touched
the pale forehead with reverent lips. “God
bless you for your love and faith,” he said,
“and give you rest!”
And when he rose a few minutes later,
and saw that the little dead flower he had worn had
dropped from its place and lay upon the pulseless
breast, he did not move it, but turned away and left
it resting; there.