Once Macavoy the giant ruled a tribe
of Northern people, achieving the dignity by the hands
of Pierre, who called him King Macavoy. Then came
a time when, tiring of his kingship, he journeyed south,
leaving all behind, even his queen, Wonta, who, in
her bed of cypresses and yarrow, came forth no more
into the morning. About Fort Guidon they still
gave him his title, and because of his guilelessness,
sincerity, and generosity, Pierre called him “The
Simple King.” His seven feet and over shambled
about, suggesting unjointed power, unshackled force.
No one hated Macavoy, many loved him, he was welcome
at the fire and the cooking-pot; yet it seemed shameful
to have so much man useless such an engine
of life, which might do great things, wasting fuel.
Nobody thought much of that at Fort Guidon, except,
perhaps, Pierre, who sometimes said, “My simple
king, some day you shall have your great chance again;
but not as a king as a giant, a man voila!”
The day did not come immediately,
but it came. When Ida, the deaf and dumb girl,
married Hilton, of the H.B.C., every man at Fort Guidon,
and some from posts beyond, sent her or brought her
presents of one kind or another. Pierre’s
gift was a Mexican saddle. He was branding Ida’s
name on it with the broken blade of a case-knife when
Macavoy entered on him, having just returned from
a vagabond visit to Fort Ste. Anne.
“Is it digging out or carvin’
in y’are?” he asked, puffing into his
beard.
Pierre looked up contemptuously, but
did not reply to the insinuation, for he never saw
an insult unless he intended to avenge it; and he would
not quarrel with Macavoy.
“What are you going to give?” he asked.
“Aw, give what to who, hop-o’-me-thumb?”
Macavoy said, stretching himself out in the doorway,
his legs in the sun, head in the shade.
“You’ve been taking a
walk in the country, then?” Pierre asked, though
he knew.
“To Fort Ste. Anne:
a buryin’, two christ’nin’s, an’
a weddin’; an’ lashin’s av
grog an’ swill-aw that, me button o’
the North!”
“La la! What a fool you
are, my simple king! You’ve got the things
end foremost. Turn your head to the open air,
for I go to light a cigarette, and if you breathe
this way, there will be a grand explode.”
“Aw, yer thumb in yer eye, Pierre!
It’s like a baby’s, me breath is, milk
and honey it is aw yis; an’ Father
Corraine, that was doin’ the trick for the love
o’ God, says he to me, ’Little Tim Macavoy,’ aw
yis, little Tim Macavoy, says he, ‘when
are you goin’ to buckle to, for the love o’
God?’ says he. Ashamed I was, Pierre, that
Father Corraine should spake to me like that, for
I’d only a twig twisted at me hips to kape me
trousies up, an’ I thought ’twas that he
had in his eye! ’Buckle to,’ says
I, ‘Father Corraine? Buckle to, yer riv’rince?’ feelin’
I was at the twigs the while. ‘Ay, little
Tim Macavoy,’ he says, says he, ’you’ve
bin ‘atin’ the husks av idleness long
enough; when are you goin’ to buckle to?
You had a kingdom and ye guv it up,’ says he;
’take a field, get a plough, and buckle to,’
says he, ‘an’ turn back no more’ like
that, says Father Corraine; and I thinkin’ all
the time ‘twas the want o’ me belt he
was drivin’ at.”
Pierre looked at him a moment idly,
then said: “Such a tom-fool! And where’s
that grand leather belt of yours, eh, my monarch?”
A laugh shook through Macavoy’s
beard. “For the weddin’ it wint:
buckled the two up wid it for better or worse an’
purty they looked, they did, standin’ there
in me cinch, an’ one hole left aw
yis, Pierre.”
“And what do you give to Ida?”
Pierre asked, with a little emphasis of the branding-iron.
Macavoy got to his feet. “Ida!
Ida!” said he. “Is that saddle for
Ida? Is it her and Hilton that’s to ate
aff one dish togither? That rose o’ the
valley, that bird wid a song in her face and none an
her tongue. That daisy dot av a thing,
steppin’ through the world like a sprig o’
glory. Aw, Pierre, thim two! an’
I’ve divil a scrap to give, good or bad.
I’ve nothin’ at all in the wide wurruld
but the clothes an me back, an’ thim hangin’
on the underbrush!” giving a little
twist to the twigs. “An’ many a meal
an’ many a dipper o’ drink she’s
guv me, little smiles dancin’ at her lips.”
He sat down in the doorway again,
with his face turned towards Pierre, and the back
of his head in the sun. He was a picture of perfect
health, sumptuous, huge, a bull in beauty, the heart
of a child looking out of his eyes, but a sort of
despair, too, in his bearing.
Pierre watched him with a furtive
humour for a time, then he said languidly: “Never
mind your clothes, give yourself.”
“Yer tongue in yer cheek, me
spot o’ vinegar. Give meself! What’s
that for? A purty weddin’ gift, says I?
Handy thing to have in the house! Use me for
a clothes-horse, or shtand me in the garden for a fairy
bower-aw yis, wid a hole in me face that’d ate
thim out o’ house and home!”
Pierre drew a piece of brown paper
towards him, and wrote on it with a burnt match.
Presently he held it up. “Voila, my simple
king, the thing for you to do: a grand gift,
and to cost you nothing now. Come, read it out,
and tell me what you think.”
Macavoy took the paper, and in a large,
judicial way, read slowly:
“On demand, for value received,
I promise to pay to... Ida Hilton...
or order, meself, Tim Macavoy, standin’ seven
foot three on me bare fût, wid interest at nothin’
at all.”
Macavoy ended with a loud smack of
the lips. “McGuire!” he said, and
nothing more.
McGuire was his strongest expression.
In the most important moments of his career he had
said it, and it sounded deep, strange, and more powerful
than many usual oaths. A moment later he said
again “McGuire!” Then he read the paper
once more out loud. “What’s that,
me Frinchman?” he asked. “What Ballzeboob’s
tricks are y’at now?”
Pierre was complacently eyeing his
handiwork on the saddle. He now settled back
with his shoulders to the wall, and said: “See,
then, it’s a little promissory note for a wedding-gift
to Ida. When she says some day, ’Tim Macavoy,
I want you to do this or that, or to go here or there,
or to sell you or trade you, or use you for a clothes-horse,
or a bridge over a canyon, or to hold up a house,
or blow out a prairie-fire, or be my second husband,’
you shall say, ‘Here I am’; and you shall
travel from Heaven to Halifax, but you shall come at
the call of this promissory.”
Pierre’s teeth glistened behind
a smile as he spoke, and Macavoy broke into a roar
of laughter. “Black’s the white o’
yer eye,” he said at last, “an’
a joke’s a joke. Seven fût three I
am, an’ sound av wind an’ limb an’
a weddin’-gift to that swate rose o’ the
valley! Aisy, aisy, Pierre. A
bit o’ foolin’ ’twas ye put on the
paper, but truth I’ll make it, me cock o’
the walk. That’s me gift to her an’
Hilton, an’ no other. An’ a dab wid
red wax it shall have, an’ what more be the word
o’ Freddy Tarlton the lawyer?”
“You’re a great man,”
said Pierre with a touch of gentle irony, for his
natural malice had no play against the huge ex-king
of his own making. With these big creatures he
had connived with several in his time he
had ever been superior, protective, making them to
feel that they were as children beside him. He
looked at Macavoy musingly, and said to himself:
“Well, why not? If it is a joke, then it
is a joke; if it is a thing to make the world stand
still for a minute sometime, so much the better.
He is all waste now. By the holy, he shall do
it. It is amusing, and it may be great by and
by.”
Presently Pierre said aloud:
“Well, my Macavoy, what will you do? Send
this good gift?”
“Aw yis, Pierre; I shtand by
that from the crown av me head to the sole
av me fût sure. Face like a mornin’
in May, and hands like the tunes of an organ, she
has. Spakes wid a look av her eye and
a twist av her purty lips an’ swaying
body, an’ talkin’ to you widout a word.
Aw motion motion motion; yis,
that’s it. An’ I’ve seen her
an tap av a hill wid the wind blowin’ her
hair free, and the yellow buds on the tree, and the
grass green beneath her feet, the world smilin’
betune her and the sun: pictures pictures,
aw yis! Promissory notice on demand is it anny
toime? Seven fût three on me bare toes but
Father o’ Sin! when she calls I come, yis.”
“On your oath, Macavoy?”
asked Pierre; “by the book av the Mass?”
Macavoy stood up straight till his
head scraped the cobwebs between the rafters, the
wild indignation of a child in his eye. “D’ye
think I’m a thafe to stale me own word?
Hut! I’ll break ye in two, ye wisp o’
straw, if ye doubt me word to a lady. There’s
me note av hand, and ye shall have me fist
on it, in writin’, at Freddy Tarlton’s
office, wid a blotch av red an’ the
Queen’s head at the bottom. McGuire!”
he said again, and paused, puffing his lips through
his beard.
Pierre looked at him a moment, then
waving his fingers idly, said, “So, my straw-breaker!
Then tomorrow morning at ten you will fetch your wedding-gift.
But come so soon now to M’sieu’ Tarlton’s
office, and we will have it all as you say, with the
red seal and the turn of your fist yes.
Well, well, we travel far in the world, and sometimes
we see strange things, and no two strange things are
alike no; there is only one Macavoy in
the world, there was only one Shon McGann. Shon
McGann was a fine fool, but he did something at last,
truly yes: Tim Macavoy, perhaps, will do something
at last on his own hook. Hey, I wonder!”
He felt the muscles of Macavoy’s arm musingly,
and then laughed up in the giant’s face.
“Once I made you a king, my own, and you threw
it all away; now I make you a slave, and we shall
see what you will do. Come along, for M’sieu’
Tarlton.”
Macavoy dropped a heavy hand on Pierre’s
shoulder. “’Tis hard to be a king, Pierre,
but ‘tis aisy to be a slave for the likes
o’ her. I’d kiss her dirty shoe sure!”
As they passed through the door, Pierre
said, “Dis done, perhaps, when all is done,
she will sell you for old bones and rags. Then
I will buy you, and I will burn your bones and the
rags, and I will scatter to the four winds of the
earth the ashes of a king, a slave, a fool, and an
Irishman truly!”
“Bedad, ye’ll have more
earth in yer hands then, Pierre, than ye’ll ever
earn, and more heaven than ye’ll ever shtand
in.”
Half an hour later they were in Freddy
Tarlton’s office on the banks of the Little
Big Swan, which tumbled past, swelled by the first
rain of the early autumn. Freddy Tarlton, who
had a gift of humour, entered into the spirit of the
thing, and treated it seriously; but in vain did he
protest that the large red seal with Her Majesty’s
head on it was unnecessary; Macavoy insisted, and
wrote his name across it with a large indistinctness
worthy of a king. Before the night was over everybody
at Guidon Hill, save Hilton and Ida, knew what gift
would come from Macavoy to the wedded pair.
II-
The next morning was almost painfully
beautiful, so delicate in its clearness, so exalted
by the glory of the hills, so grand in the limitless
stretch of the green-brown prairie north and south.
It was a day for God’s creatures to meet in,
and speed away, and having flown round the boundaries
of that spacious domain, to return again to the nest
of home on the large plateau between the sea and the
stars. Gathered about Ida’s home was everybody
who lived within a radius of a hundred miles.
In the large front room all the presents were set:
rich furs from the far north, cunningly carved bowls,
rocking-chairs made by hand, knives, cooking utensils,
a copy of Shakespeare in six volumes from the Protestant
missionary who performed the ceremony, a nugget of
gold from the Long Light River; and outside the door,
a horse, Hilton’s own present to his wife, on
which was put Pierre’s saddle, with its silver
mounting and Ida’s name branded deep on pommel
and flap. When Macavoy arrived, a cheer went
up, which was carried on waves of laughter into the
house to Hilton and Ida, who even then were listening
to the first words of the brief service which begins,
“I charge you both if you do know any just cause
or impediment ” and so on.
They did not turn to see what it was,
for just at that moment they themselves were the very
centre of the universe. Ida being deaf and dumb,
it was necessary to interpret to her the words of the
service by signs, as the missionary read it, and this
was done by Pierre himself, the half-breed Catholic,
the man who had brought Hilton and Ida together, for
he and Ida had been old friends. After Father
Corraine had taught her the language of signs, Pierre
had learned them from her, until at last his gestures
had become as vital as her own. The delicate
precision of his every movement, the suggestiveness
of look and motion, were suited to a language which
was nearer to the instincts of his own nature than
word of mouth. All men did not trust Pierre, but
all women did; with those he had a touch of Machiavelli,
with these he had no sign of Méphistophélès, and few
were the occasions in his life when he showed outward
tenderness to either: which was equally effective.
He had learnt, or knew by instinct, that exclusiveness
as to men and indifference as to women are the greatest
influences on both. As he stood there, slowly
interpreting to Ida, by graceful allusive signs, the
words of the service, one could not think that behind
his impassive face there was any feeling for the man
or for the woman. He had that disdainful smile
which men acquire who are all their lives aloof from
the hopes of the hearthstone and acknowledge no laws
but their own.
More than once the eyes of the girl
filled with tears, as the pregnancy of some phrase
in the service came home to her. Her face responded
to Pierre’s gestures, as do one’s nerves
to the delights of good music, and there was something
so unique, so impressive in the ceremony, that the
laughter which had greeted Macavoy passed away, and
a dead silence; beginning from where the two stood,
crept out until it covered all the prairie. Nothing
was heard except Hilton’s voice in strong tones
saying, “I take thee to be my wedded wife,”
etc.; but when the last words of the service
were said, and the newmade bride turned to her husband’s
embrace, and a little sound of joy broke from her lips,
there was plenty of noise and laughter again, for
Macavoy stood in the doorway, or rather outside it,
stooping to look in upon the scene. Someone had
lent him the cinch of a broncho and he had belted
himself with it, no longer carrying his clothes about
“on the underbrush.” Hilton laughed
and stretched out his hand. “Come in, King,”
he said, “come and wish us joy.”
Macavoy parted the crowd easily, forcing
his way, and instantly was stooping before the pair for
he could not stand upright in the room.
“Aw, now, Hilton, is it you,
is it you, that’s pluckin’ the rose
av the valley, snatchin’ the stars out
av the sky! aw, Hilton, the like o’ that!
Travel down I did yesterday from Fort Ste.
Anne, and divil a word I knew till Pierre hit me in
the eye wid it last night and no time for
a present, for a wedding-gift no, aw no!”
Just here Ida reached up and touched
him on the shoulder. He smiled down on her, puffing
and blowing in his beard, bursting to speak to her,
yet knowing no word by signs to say; but he nodded
his head at her, and he patted Hilton’s shoulder,
and he took their hands and joined them together,
hers on top of Hilton’s, and shook them in one
of his own till she almost winced. Presently,
with a look at Hilton, who nodded in reply, Ida lifted
her cheek to Macavoy to kiss Macavoy, the
idle, ill-cared-for, boisterous giant. His face
became red like that of a child caught in an awkward
act, and with an absurd shyness he stooped and touched
her cheek. Then he turned to Hilton, and blurted
out, “Aw, the rose o’ the valley, the
pride o’ the wide wurruld! aw, the bloom o’
the hills! I’d have kissed her dirty shoe.
McQuire!”
A burst of laughter rolled out on
the clear air of the prairie, and the hills seemed
to stir with the pleasure of life. Then it was
that Macavoy, following Hilton and Ida outside, suddenly
stopped beside the horse, drew from his pocket the
promissory note that Pierre had written, and said,
“Yis, but all the weddin’-gifts aren’t
in. ‘Tis nothin’ I had to give-divil
a cent in the wurruld, divil a pound av baccy,
or a pot for the fire, or a bit av linin
for the table; nothin’ but meself and me dirty
clothes, standin’ seven fût three an me
bare toes. What was I to do? There was only
meself to give, so I give it free and hearty, and
here it is wid the Queen’s head an it, done in
Mr. Tarlton’s office. Ye’d better
had had a dog, or a gun, or a ladder, or a horse, or
a saddle, or a quart o’ brown brandy; but such
as it is I give it ye I give it to the
rose o’ the valley and the star o’ the
wide wurruld.”
In a loud voice he read the promissory
note, and handed it to Ida. Men laughed till
there were tears in their eyes, and a keg of whisky
was opened; but somehow Ida did not laugh. She
and Pierre had seen a serious side to Macavoy’s
gift: the childlike manliness in it. It went
home to her woman’s heart without a touch of
ludicrousness, without a sound of laughter.
III-
After a time the interest in this
wedding-gift declined at Fort Guidon, and but three
people remembered it with any singular distinctness Ida,
Pierre, and Macavoy. Pierre was interested, for
in his primitive mind he knew that, however wild a
promise, life is so wild in its events, there comes
the hour for redemption of all I O U’s.
Meanwhile, weeks, months, and even
a couple of years passed, Macavoy and Pierre coming
and going, sometimes together, sometimes not, in all
manner of words at war, in all manner of fact at peace.
And Ida, out of the bounty of her nature, gave the
two vagabonds a place at her fireside whenever they
chose to come. Perhaps, where speech was not given,
a gift of divination entered into her instead, and
she valued what others found useless, and held aloof
from what others found good. She had powers which
had ever been the admiration of Guidon Hill. Birds
and animals were her friends she called
them her kinsmen. A peculiar sympathy joined
them; so that when, at last, she tamed a white wild
duck, and made it do the duties of a carrier-pigeon,
no one thought it strange.
Up in the hills, beside the White
Sun River, lived her sister and her sister’s
children; and, by and by, the duck carried messages
back and forth, so that when, in the winter, Ida’s
health became delicate, she had comfort in the solicitude
and cheerfulness of her sister, and the gaiety of
the young birds of her nest, who sent Ida many a sprightly
message and tales of their good vagrancy in the hills.
In these days Pierre and Macavoy were little at the
Post, save now and then to sit with Hilton beside
the fire, waiting for spring and telling tales.
Upon Hilton had settled that peaceful, abstracted
expectancy which shows man at his best, as he waits
for the time when, through the half-lights of his
fatherhood, he shall see the broad fine dawn of motherhood
spreading up the world which, all being
said and done, is that place called Home. Something
gentle came over him while he grew stouter in body
and in all other ways made a larger figure among the
people of the West.
As Pierre said, whose wisdom was more
to be trusted than his general morality, “It
is strange that most men think not enough of themselves
till a woman shows them how. But it is the great
wonder that the woman does not despise him for it.
Quel caractère! She has so often to
show him his way like a babe, and yet she says to
him, Mon grand homme! my master! my lord!
Pshaw! I have often thought that women are half
saints, half fools, and men half fools, half rogues.
But Quelle vie! what life! without
a woman you are half a man; with one you are bound
to a single spot in the world, you are tied by the
leg, your wing is clipped you cannot have
all. Quelle vie what life!”
To this Macavoy said: “Spit-spat!
But what the devil good does all yer thinkin’
do ye, Pierre? It’s argufy here and argufy
there, an’ while yer at that, me an’ the
rest av us is squeezin’ the fun out
o’ life. Aw, go ‘long wid ye.
Y’are only a bit o’ hell and grammar, annyway.
Wid all yer cuttin’ and carvin’ things
to see the internals av thim, I’d do more
to the call av a woman’s finger than for
all the logic and knowalogy y’ ever chewed an’
there y’are, me little tailor o’ jur’sprudince!”
“To the finger call of Hilton’s wife,
eh?”
Macavoy was not quite sure what Pierre’s
enigmatical tone meant. A wild light showed in
his eyes, and his tongue blundered out: “Yis,
Hilton’s wife’s finger, or a look
av her eye, or nothin’ at all. Aisy,
aisy, ye wasp! Ye’d go stalkin’
divils in hell for her yerself, so ye would. But
the tongue av ye but, it’s gall
to the tip.”
“Maybe, my king. But I’d
go hunting because I wanted; you because you must.
You’re a slave to come and to go, with a Queen’s
seal on the promissory.”
Macavoy leaned back and roared.
“Aw, that! The rose o’ the valley the
joy o’ the wurruld! S’t, Pierre ”
his voice grew softer on a sudden, as a fresh thought
came to him “did y’ ever think
that the child might be dumb like the mother?”
This was a day in the early spring,
when the snows were melting in the hills, and freshets
were sweeping down the valleys far and near. That
night a warm heavy rain came on, and in the morning
every stream and river was swollen to twice its size.
The mountains seemed to have stripped themselves of
snow, and the vivid sun began at once to colour the
foothills with green. As Pierre and Macavoy stood
at their door, looking out upon the earth cleansing
itself, Macavoy suddenly said: “Aw, look,
look, Pierre her white duck off to the nest
on Champak Hill!”
They both shaded their eyes with their
hands. Circling round two or three times above
the Post, the duck then stretched out its neck to the
west, and floated away beyond Guidon Hill, and was
hid from view.
Pierre, without a word, began cleaning
his rifle, while Macavoy smoked, and sat looking into
the distance, surveying the sweet warmth and light.
His face blossomed with colour, and the look of his
eyes was that of an irresponsible child. Once
or twice he smiled and puffed in his beard, but perhaps
that was involuntary, or was, maybe, a vague reflection
of his dreams, themselves most vague, for he was only
soaking in sun and air and life.
Within an hour they saw the wild duck-again
passing the crest of Guidon, and they watched it sailing
down to the Post, Pierre idly fondling the gun, Macavoy
half roused from his dreams. But presently they
were altogether roused, the gun was put away, and
both were on their feet; for after the pigeon arrived
there was a stir at the Post, and Hilton could be
seen running from the store to his house, not far away.
“Something’s wrong there,” said
Pierre.
“D’ye think ’twas the duck brought
it?” asked Macavoy.
Without a word Pierre started away
towards the Post, Macavoy following. As they
did so, a half-breed boy came from the house, hurrying
towards them.
Inside the house Hilton’s wife
lay in her bed, her great hour coming on before the
time, because of ill news from beyond the Guidon.
There was with her an old Frenchwoman, who herself,
in her time, had brought many children into the world,
whose heart brooded tenderly, if uncouthly, over the
dumb girl. She it was who had handed to Hilton
the paper the wild duck had brought, after Ida had
read it and fallen in a faint on the floor.
The message that had felled the young
wife was brief and awful. A cloud-burst had fallen
on Champak Hill, had torn part of it away, and a part
of this part had swept down into the path that led
to the little house, having been stopped by some falling
trees and a great boulder. It blocked the only
way to escape above, and beneath, the river was creeping
up to sweep away the little house. So, there the
mother and her children waited (the father was in
the farthest north), facing death below and above.
The wild duck had carried the tale in its terrible
simplicity. The last words were, “There
mayn’t be any help for me and my sweet chicks,
but I am still hoping, and you must send a man or many.
But send soon, for we are cut off, and the end may
come any hour.”
Macavoy and Pierre were soon at the
Post, and knew from Hilton all there was to know.
At once Pierre began to gather men, though what one
or many could do none could say. Eight white
men and three Indians watched the wild duck sailing
away again from the bedroom window where Ida lay, to
carry a word of comfort to Champak Hill. Before
it went, Ida asked for Macavoy, and he was brought
to her bedroom by Hilton. He saw a pale, almost
unearthly, yet beautiful face, flushing and paling
with a coming agony, looking up at him; and presently
two trembling hands made those mystic signs which
are the primal language of the soul. Hilton interpreted
to him this: “I have sent for you.
There is no man so big or strong as you in the north.
I did not know that I should ever ask you to redeem
the note. I want my gift, and I will give you
your paper with the Queen’s head on it.
Those little lives, those pretty little dears, you
will not see them die. If there is a way, any
way, you will save them. Sometimes one man can
do what twenty cannot. You were my wedding-gift:
I claim you now.”
She paused, and then motioned to the
nurse, who laid the piece of brown paper in Macavoy’s
hand. He held it for a moment as delicately as
if it were a fragile bit of glass, something that
his huge fingers might crush by touching. Then
he reached over and laid it on the bed beside her and
said, looking Hilton in the eyes, “Tell her,
the slip av a saint she is, if the breakin’
av me bones, or the lettin’ av me blood’s
what’ll set all right at Champak Hill, let her
mind be aisy aw yis!”
Soon afterwards they were all on their
way all save Hilton, whose duty was beside
this other danger, for the old nurse said that, “like
as not,” her life would hang upon the news from
Champak Hill; and if ill came, his place was beside
the speechless traveller on the Brink.
In a few hours the rescuers stood
on the top of Champak Hill, looking down. There
stood the little house, as it were, between two dooms.
Even Pierre’s face became drawn and pale as
he saw what a very few hours or minutes might do.
Macavoy had spoken no word, had answered no question
since they had left the Post. There was in his
eye the large seriousness, the intentness which might
be found in the face of a brave boy, who had not learned
fear, and yet saw a vast ditch of danger at which
he must leap. There was ever before him the face
of the dumb wife; there was in his ears the sound
of pain that had followed him from Hilton’s
house out into the brilliant day.
The men stood helpless, and looked
at each other. They could not say to the river
that it must rise no farther, and they could not go
to the house, nor let a rope down, and there was the
crumbled moiety of the hill which blocked the way
to the house: elsewhere it was sheer precipice
without trees.
There was no corner in these hills
that Macavoy and Pierre did not know, and at last,
when despair seemed to settle on the group, Macavoy,
having spoken a low word to Pierre, said: “There’s
wan way, an’ maybe I can an’ maybe I can’t,
but I’m fit to try. I’ll go up the
river to an aisy p’int a mile above, get
in, and drift down to a p’int below there, thin
climb up and loose the stuff.”
Every man present knew the double
danger: the swift headlong river, and the sudden
rush of rocks and stones, which must be loosed on the
side of the narrow ravine opposite the little house.
Macavoy had nothing to say to the head-shakes of the
others, and they did not try to dissuade him; for
women and children were in the question, and there
they were below beside the house, the children gathered
round the mother, she waiting waiting.
Macavoy, stripped to the waist, and
carrying only a hatchet and a coil of rope tied round
him, started away alone up the river. The others
waited, now and again calling comfort to the woman
below, though their words could not be heard.
About half an hour passed, and then someone called
out: “Here he comes!” Presently they
could see the rough head and the bare shoulders of
the giant in the wild churning stream. There was
only one point where he could get a hold on the hillside the
jutting bole of a tree just beneath them, and beneath
the dyke of rock and trees.
It was a great moment. The current
swayed him out, but he plunged forward, catching at
the bole. His hand seized a small branch.
It held him an instant, as he was swung round, then
it snapt. But the other hand clenched the bole,
and to a loud cheer, which Pierre prompted, Macavoy
drew himself up. After that they could not see
him. He alone was studying the situation.
He found the key-rock to the dyked
slide of earth. To loosen it was to divert the
slide away, or partly away, from the little house.
But it could not be loosened from above, if at all,
and he himself would be in the path of the destroying
hill.
“Aisy, aisy, Tim Macavoy,”
he said to himself. “It’s the woman
and the darlins av her, an’ the rose o’
the valley down there at the Post!”
A minute afterwards, having chopped
down a hickory sapling, he began to pry at the boulder
which held the mass. Presently a tree came crashing
down, and a small rush of earth followed it, and the
hearts of the men above and the woman and children
below stood still for an instant. An hour passed
as Macavoy toiled with a strange careful skill and
a superhuman concentration. His body was all
shining with sweat, and sweat dripped like water from
his forehead. His eyes were on the keyrock and
the pile, alert, measuring, intent. At last he
paused. He looked round at the hills-down at
the river, up at the sky-humanity was shut away from
his sight. He was alone. A long hot breath
broke from his pressed lips, stirring his big red
beard. Then he gave a call, a long call that
echoed through the hills weirdly and solemnly.
It reached the ears of those above
like a greeting from an outside world. They answered,
“Right, Macavoy!”
Years afterwards these men told how
then there came in reply one word, ringing roundly
through the hills the note and symbol of
a crisis, the fantastic cipher of a soul:
“M’Guire!”
There was a loud booming sound, the
dyke was loosed, the ravine split into the swollen
stream its choking mouthful of earth and rock; and
a minute afterwards the path was clear to the top
of Champak Hill. To it came the unharmed children
and their mother, who, from the warm peak sent the
wild duck “to the rose o’ the valley,”
which, till the message came, was trembling on the
stem of life. But Joy, that marvellous healer,
kept it blooming with a little Eden bird nestling near,
whose happy tongue was taught in after years to tell
of the gift of the Simple King; who had redeemed,
on demand, the promissory note for ever.