I
Only Farallone’s face was untroubled.
His big, bold eyes held a kind of grim humor, and
he rolled them unblinkingly from the groom to the bride,
and back again. His duck trousers, drenched and
stained with sea-water, clung to the great muscles
of his legs, particles of damp sand glistened upon
his naked feet, and the hairless bronze of his chest
and columnar throat glowed through the openings of
his torn and buttonless shirt. Except for the
life and vitality that literally sparkled from him,
he was more like a statue of a shipwrecked sailor
than the real article itself. Yet he had not
the proper attributes of a shipwrecked sailor.
There was neither despair upon his countenance nor
hunger; instead a kind of enjoyment, and the expression
of one who has been set free. Indeed, he must
have secured a kind of liberty, for after the years
of serving one master and another, he had, in our
recent struggle with the sea, but served himself.
His was the mind and his the hand that had brought
us at length to that desert coast. He it was that
had extended to us the ghost of a chance. He
who so recently had been but one of forty in the groom’s
luxurious employ; a polisher of brass, a holy-stoner
of decks, a wage-earning paragon who was not permitted
to think, was now a thinker and a strategist, a wage-taker
from no man, and the obvious master of us three.
The bride slept on the sand where
Farallone had laid her. Her stained and draggled
clothes were beginning to dry and her hair to blaze
in the pulsing rays of the sun. Her breath came
and went with the long-drawn placidity of deep sleep.
One shoe had been torn from her by the surf, and through
a tear in her left stocking blinked a pink and tiny
toe. Her face lay upon her arm and was hidden
by it, and by her blazing hair. In the loose-jointed
abandon of exhaustion and sleep she had the effect
of a flower that has wilted; the color and the fabric
were still lovely, but the robust erectness and crispness
were gone. The groom, almost unmanned and wholly
forlorn, sat beside her in a kind of huddled attitude,
as if he was very cold. He had drawn his knees
close to his chest, and held them in that position
with thin, clasped fingers. His hair, which he
wore rather long, was in a wild tangle, and his neat
eye-glasses with their black cord looked absurdly out
of keeping with his general dishevelment. The
groom, never strong or robust, looked as if he had
shrunk. The bride, too, looked as if she had shrunk,
and I certainly felt as if I had. But, however
strong the contrast between us three small humans
and the vast stretches of empty ocean and desert coast,
there was no diminution about Farallone, but the contrary.
I have never seen the presence of a man loom so strongly
and so large. He sat upon his rock with a kind
of vastness, so bold and strong he seemed, so utterly
unperturbed.
Suddenly the groom, a kind of querulous
shiver in his voice, spoke.
“The brandy, Farallone, the brandy.”
The big sailor rolled his bold eyes
from the groom to the bride, but returned no answer.
The groom’s voice rose to a note of vexation.
“I said I wanted the brandy,” he said.
Farallone’s voice was large and free like a
fresh breeze.
“I heard you,” said he.
“Well,” snapped the groom, “get
it.”
“Get it yourself,” said
Farallone quickly, and he fell to whistling in a major
key.
The groom, born and accustomed to
command, was on his feet shaking with fury.
“You damned insolent loafer ”
he shouted.
“Cut it out cut it out,” said
the big sailor, “you’ll wake her.”
The groom’s voice sank to an angry whisper.
“Are you going to do what I tell you or not?”
“Not,” said Farallone.
“I’ll” the
groom’s voice loudened his eye sought
an ally in mine. But I turned my face away and
pretended that I had not seen or heard. There
had been born in my breast suddenly a cold unreasoning
fear of Farallone and of what he might do to us weaklings.
I heard no more words and, venturing a look, saw that
the groom was seating himself once more by the bride.
“If you sit on the other side
of her,” said Farallone, “you’ll
keep the sun off her head.”
He turned his bold eyes on me and
winked one of them. And I was so taken by surprise
that I winked back and could have kicked myself for
doing so.
II
Farallone helped the bride to her
feet. “That’s right,” he said
with a kind of nursely playfulness, and he turned
to the groom.
“Because I told you to help
yourself,” he said, “doesn’t mean
that I’m not going to do the lion’s share
of everything. I am. I’m fit.
You and the writer man aren’t. But you
must do just a little more than you’re able,
and that’s all we’ll ask of you. Everybody
works this voyage except the woman.”
“I can work,” said the bride.
“Rot!” said Farallone.
“We’ll ask you to walk ahead, like a kind
of north star. Only we’ll tell you which
way to turn. Do you see that sugar-loaf?
You head for that. Vamoose! We’ll overhaul
you.”
The bride moved upon the desert alone,
her face toward an easterly hill that had given Farallone
his figure of the sugar-loaf. She had no longer
the effect of a wilted flower, but walked with quick,
considered steps. What the groom carried and
what I carried is of little moment. Our packs
united would not have made the half of the lumbersome
weight that Farallone swung upon his giant shoulders.
“Follow the woman,” said
he, and we began to march upon the shoe-and-stocking
track of the bride. Farallone, rolling like a
ship (I had many a look at him over my shoulder) brought
up the rear. From time to time he flung forward
a phrase to us in explanation of his rebellious attitude.
“I take command because I’m
fit; you’re not. I give the orders because
I can get ’em obeyed; you can’t.”
And, again: “You don’t know east from
west; I do.”
All the morning he kept firing disagreeable
and very personal remarks at us. His proposition
that we were not in any way fit for anything he enlarged
upon and illustrated. He flung the groom’s
unemployed ancestry at him; he likened the groom to
Rome at the time of the fall, which he attributed
to luxury; he informed me that only men who were unable
to work, or in any way help themselves, wrote books.
“The woman’s worth the two of you,”
he said. “Her people were workers.
See it in her stride. She could milk a cow if
she had one. If anything happens to me she’ll
give the orders. Mark my words. She’s
got a head on her shoulders, she has.”
The bride halted suddenly in her tracks
and, turning, faced the groom.
“Are you going to allow this
man’s insolence to run on forever?” she
said.
The groom frowned at her and shook his head covertly.
“Pooh,” said the bride,
and I think I heard her call him “my champion,”
in a bitter whisper. She walked straight back
to Farallone and looked him fearlessly in the face.
“The bigger a man is, Mr. Farallone,”
she said, “and the stronger, the more he ought
to mind his manners. We are grateful to you for
all you have done, but if you cannot keep a civil
tongue in your head, then the sooner we part company
the better.”
For a full minute the fearless eyes
snapped at Farallone, then, suddenly abashed, softened,
and turned away.
“There mustn’t be any
more mutiny,” said Farallone. “But
you’ve got sand, you have. I could love
a woman like you. How did you come to hitch your
wagon to little Nicodemus there? He’s no
star. You deserved a man. You’ve got
sand, and when your poor feet go back on you, as they
will in this swill (here he kicked the burning sand),
I’ll carry you. But if you hadn’t
spoken up so pert, I wouldn’t. Now you walk
ahead and pretend you’re Christopher Columbus
De Soto Peary leading a flock of sheep to the Fountain
of Eternal Youth.... Bear to the left of the sage-brush,
there’s a tarantula under it....”
We went forward a few steps, when
suddenly I heard Farallone’s voice in my ear.
“Isn’t she splendid?” he said, and
at the same time he thumped me so violently between
the shoulders that I stumbled and fell. For a
moment all fear of the man left me on the wings of
rage, and I was for attacking him with my fists.
But something in his steady eye brought me to my senses.
“Why did you do that?”
I meant to speak sharply, but I think I whined.
“Because,” said Farallone,
“when the woman spoke up to me you began to
brindle and act lion-like and bold. For a minute
you looked dangerous for a little feller.
So I patted your back, in a friendly way as
a kind of reminder a feeble reminder.”
We had dropped behind the others.
The groom had caught up with the bride, and from his
nervous, irritable gestures I gathered that the poor
soul was trying to explain and to ingratiate himself.
But she walked on, steadily averted, you might say,
her head very high, her shoulders drawn back.
The groom, his eyes intent upon her averted face, kept
stumbling with his feet.
“Just look,” said Farallone
in a friendly voice. “Those whom God hath
joined together. What did the press say of it?”
“I don’t remember,” I said.
“You lie,” said Farallone.
“The press called it an ideal match. My
God!” he cried and so loudly that
the bride and the groom must have heard “think
of being a woman like that and getting hitched to a
little bit of a fuss with a few fine feathers”;
and with a kind of sing-song he began to misquote
and extemporize:
“Just for a handful
of silver she left me,
Just
for a yacht and a mansion of stone,
Just for a little fool
nest of fine feathers
She
wed Nicodemus and left me alone.”
“But she’d never seen
me,” he went on, and mused for a moment.
“Having seen me do you guess what
she’s saying to herself? She’s saying:
’Thank God I’m not too old to begin life
over again,’ or thinking it. Look at him!
Even you wouldn’t have been such a joke.
I’ve a mind to kick the life out of him.
One little kick with bare toes. Life? There’s
no life in him nothing but a jenny-wren.”
The groom, who must have heard at
least the half of Farallone’s speech, stopped
suddenly and waited for us to come up. His face
was red and white blotchy with rage and
vindictiveness. When we were within ten feet
of him he suddenly drew a revolver and fired it point-blank
at Farallone. He had no time for a second shot.
Farallone caught his wrist and shook it till the revolver
spun through the air and fell at a distance.
Then Farallone seated himself and, drawing the groom
across his knee, spanked him. Since the beginning
of the world children have been punished by spankings,
and the event is memorable, if at all, as a something
rather comical and domestic. But to see a grown
man spanked for the crime of attempted murder is horrible.
Farallone’s fury got the better of him, and
the blows resounded in the desert. I grappled
his arm, and the recoil of it flung me head over heels.
When Farallone had finished, the groom could not stand.
He rolled in the sands, moaning and hiding his face.
The bride was white as paper; but
she had no eye for the groom.
“Did he miss you?” she said.
“No,” said Farallone, “he hit me Nicodemus
hit me.”
“Where?” said the bride.
“In the arm.”
Indeed, the left sleeve of Farallone’s shirt
was glittering with blood.
“I will bandage it for you,” she said,
“if you will tell me how.”
Farallone ripped open the sleeve of his shirt.
“What shall I bandage it with?” asked
the bride.
“Anything,” said Farallone.
The bride turned her back on us, stooped,
and we heard a sound of tearing. When she had
bandaged Farallone’s wound (it was in the flesh
and the bullet had been extracted by its own impetus)
she looked him gravely in the face.
“What’s the use of goading him?”
she said gently.
“Look,” said Farallone.
The groom was reaching for the fallen revolver.
“Drop it,” bellowed Farallone.
The groom’s hand, which had
been on the point of grasping the revolver’s
stock, jerked away. The bride walked to the revolver
and picked it up. She handed it to Farallone.
“Now,” she said, “that
all the power is with you, you will not go on abusing
it.”
“You carry it,”
said Farallone, “and any time you think
I ought to be shot, why, you just shoot me. I
won’t say a word.”
“Do you mean it?” said the bride.
“I cross my heart,” said Farallone.
“I sha’n’t forget,”
said the bride. She took the revolver and dropped
it into the pocket of her jacket.
“Vamoose!” said Farallone. And we
resumed our march.
III
The line between the desert and the
blossoming hills was as distinctly drawn as that between
a lake and its shore. The sage-brush, closer
massed than any through which we had yet passed, seemed
to have gathered itself for a serried assault upon
the lovely verdure beyond. Outposts of the sage-brush,
its unsung heroes, perhaps, showed here and there among
ferns and wild roses leafless, gaunt, and
dead; one knotted specimen even had planted its banner
of desolation in the shade of a wild lilac and there
died. A twittering of birds gladdened our dusty
ears, and from afar there came a splashing of water.
Our feet, burned by the desert sands, torn by yucca
and cactus, trod now upon a cool and delicious moss,
above which nodded the delicate blossoms of the shooting-star,
swung at the ends of strong and delicate stems.
In the shadows the chocolate lilies and trilliums
dully glinted, and flag flowers trooped in the sunlight.
The resinous paradisiacal smell of tarweed and bay-tree
refreshed us, and the wonder of life was a something
strong and tangible like bread and wine.
The wine of it rushed in particular
to Farallone’s head; his brain became flooded
with it; his feet cavorted upon the moss; his bellowed
singing awoke the echoes, and the whole heavenly choir
of the birds answered him.
“You, Nicodemus,” he cried
gayly, “thought that man was given a nose to
be a tripod for his eye-glasses but now oh,
smell smell!”
His great bulk under its mighty pack
tripped lightly, dancingly at the bride’s elbow.
Now his agile fingers nipped some tiny, scarce perceivable
flower to delight her eye, and now his great hand scooped
up whole sheaves of strong-growing columbine, and
flung them where her feet must tread. He made
her see great beauties and minute, and whatever had
a look of smelling sweet he crushed in his hands for
her to smell.
He was no longer that limb of Satan,
that sardonic bully of the desert days, but a gay
wood-god intent upon the gentle ways of wooing.
At first the bride turned away her senses from his
offerings to eye and nostril; for a time she made
shift to turn aside from the flowers that he cast
for her feet to tread. But after a time, like
one in a trance, she began to yield up her indifference
and aloofness. The magic of the riotous spring
began to intoxicate her. I saw her turn to the
sailor and smile a gracious smile. And after
awhile she began to talk with him.
We came at length to a bright stream,
from whose guileless superabundance Farallone, with
a bent pin and a speck of red cloth, jerked a string
of gaudy rainbow-trout. He made a fire and began
to broil them; the bride searched the vicinal woods
for dried branches to feed the fire. The groom
knelt by the brook and washed the dust from his face
and ears, snuffing the cool water into his dusty nose
and blowing it out.
And I lay in the shade and wondered
by what courses the brook found its way to what sea
or lake; whether it touched in its wanderings only
the virginal wilderness, or flowed at length among
the habitations of men.
Farallone, of a sudden, jerked up
his head from the broiling and answered my unspoken
questions.
“A man,” he said, “who
followed this brook could come in a few days to the
river Maria Cleofas, and following that, to the town
of that name, in a matter of ten days more. I
tell you,” he went on, “because some day
some of you may be going that voyage; no ill-found
voyage either spring-water and trout all
the way to the river; and all the rest of the way
river-water and trout; and at this season birds’
eggs in the reeds and a turtlelike terrapin, and Brodeia
roots and wild onion, and young sassafras a
child could do it. Eat that....” he tossed
me with his fingers a split, sputtering, piping hot
trout....
We spent the rest of that day and
the night following by the stream. Farallone
was in a riotous good-humor, and the fear of him grew
less in us until we felt at ease and could take an
unmixed pleasure in the loafing.
Early the next morning he was astir,
and began to prepare himself for further marching,
but for the rest of us he said there would be one day
more of rest.
“Who knows,” he said, “but this
is Sunday?”
“Where are you going?” asked the bride
politely.
“Me?” said Farallone,
and he laughed. “I’m going house-hunting not
for a house, of course, but for a site. It’s
not so easy to pick out just the place where you want
to spend the balance of your days. The neighborhood’s
easy, but the exact spot’s hard.”
He spoke now directly to the bride, and as if her
opinion was law to him. “There must be sun
and shade, mustn’t there? Spring-water? running
water? A hill handy to take the view from?
An easterly slope to be out of the trades? A big
tree or two.... I’ll find ’em all
before dark. I’ll be back by dark or at
late moonrise, and you rest yourselves, because to-morrow
or the next day we go at house-raising.”
Had he left us then and there, I think
that we would have waited for him. He had us,
so to speak, abjectly under his thumbs. His word
had come to be our law, since it was but child’s
play for him to enforce it. But it so happened
that he now took a step which was to call into life
and action that last vestige of manhood and independence
that flickered in the groom and me. For suddenly,
and not till after a moment of consideration, he took
a step toward the bride, caught her around the waist,
crushed her to his breast, and kissed her on the mouth.
But she must have bitten him, for
the tender passion changed in him to an unmanly fury.
“You damned cat!” he cried;
and he struck her heavily upon the face with his open
palm. Not once only, but twice, three, four times,
till she fell at his feet.
By that the groom and I, poor, helpless
atoms, had made shift to grapple with him. I
heard his giant laugh. I had one glimpse of the
groom’s face rushing at mine and
then it was as if showers of stars fell about me.
What little strength I had was loosened from my joints,
and more than half-senseless I fell full length upon
my back. Farallone had foiled our attack by the
simple method of catching us by the hair and knocking
our heads together.
I could hear his great mocking laugh
resounding through the forest.
“Let him go,” I heard the groom moan.
The bride laughed. It was a very
curious laugh. I could not make it out.
There seemed to be no anger in it, and yet how, I wondered,
could there be anything else?
IV
When distance had blotted from our
ears the sound of Farallone’s laughter, and
when we had humbled ourselves to the bride for allowing
her to be maltreated, I told the groom what Farallone
had said about a man who should follow the stream
by which we were encamped.
“See,” I said, “we
have a whole day’s start of him. Even he
can’t make that up. We must go at once,
and there mustn’t be any letting up till we
get somewhere.”
The groom was all for running away,
and the bride, silent and white, acquiesced with a
nod. We made three light packs, and started bolted
is the better word.
For a mile or more, so thick was the
underwood, we walked in the bed of the stream; now
freely, where it was smooth-spread sand, and now where
it narrowed and deepened among rocks, scramblingly
and with many a splashing stumble. The bride
met her various mishaps with a kind of silent disdain;
she made no complaints, not even comments. She
made me think of a sleep-walker. There was a
set, far-off, cold expression upon her usually gentle
and vivacious face, and once or twice it occurred to
me that she went with us unwillingly. But when
I remembered the humiliation that Farallone had put
upon her and the blows that he had struck her, I could
not well credit the recurrent doubt of her willingness.
The groom, on the other hand, recovered his long-lost
spirits with immeasurable rapidity. He talked
gayly and bravely, and you would have said that he
was a man who had never had occasion to be ashamed
of himself. He went ahead, the bride following
next, and he kept giving a constant string of advices
and imperatives. “That stone’s loose”;
“keep to the left, there’s a hole.”
“Splash dash damn, look
out for that one.” Branches that hung low
across our course he bent and held back until the
bride had passed. Now he turned and smiled in
her face, and now he offered her the helping hand.
But she met his courtesies, and the whole punctilious
fabric of his behavior, with the utmost absence and
nonchalance. He had, it seemed, been too long
in contempt to recover soon his former position of
husband and beloved. For long days she had contemplated
his naked soul, limited, weak, incapable. He
had shown a certain capacity for sudden, explosive
temper, but not for courage of any kind, or force.
Nor had he played the gentleman in his helplessness.
Nor had I. We had not in us the stuff of heroes; at
first sight of instruments of torture we were of those
who would confess to anything, abjure, swear falsely,
beg for mercy, change our so-called religions anything.
The bride had learned to despise us from the bottom
of her heart. She despised us still. And
I would have staked my last dollar, or, better, my
hopes of escaping from Farallone, that as man and
wife she and the groom would never live together again.
I felt terribly sorry for the groom. He had,
as had I, been utterly inefficient, helpless, babyish,
and cowardly yet the odds against us had
seemed overwhelming. But now as we journeyed
down the river, and the distance between us and Farallone
grew more, I kept thinking of men whom I had known;
men physically weaker than the groom and I, who, had
Farallone offered to bully them, would have fought
him and endured his torture till they died. In
my immediate past, then, there was nothing of which
I was not burningly ashamed, and in the not-too-distant
future I hoped to separate from the bride and the
groom, and never see them or hear of them in this
world again. At that, I had a real affection for
the bride, a real admiration. On the yacht, before
trouble showed me up, we had bid fair to become fast
and enduring friends. But that was all over a
bud, nipped by the frost of conduct and circumstance,
or ever the fruit could so much as set. For many
days now I had avoided her eye; I had avoided addressing
her; I had exerted my ingenuity to keep out of her
sight. It is a terrible thing for a man to be
thrown daily into the society of a woman who has found
him out, and who despises him, mind, soul, marrow,
and bone.
The stream broke at length from the
forest and, swelled by a sizable tributary, flowed
broad and deep into a rolling, park-like landscape.
Grass spread over the country’s undulations and
looked in the distance like well-kept lawns; and at
wide intervals splendidly grown live-oaks lent an
effect of calculated planting. Here our flight,
for our muscles were hardened to walking, became easy
and swift. I think there were hours when we must
have covered our four miles, and even on long, upward
slopes we must have made better than three. There
is in swift walking, when the muscles are hard, the
wind long, and the atmosphere exhilarating, a buoyant
rhythm that more, perhaps, than merited success, or
valorous conduct, smoothes out the creases in a man’s
soul. And so quick is a man to recover from his
own baseness, and to ape outwardly his transient inner
feelings, that I found myself presently, walking with
a high head and a mind full of martial thoughts.
All that day, except for a short halt
at noon, we followed the river across the great natural
park; now paralleling its convolutions, and now cutting
diagonals. Late in the afternoon we came to the
end of the park land. A more or less precipitous
formation of glistening quartz marked its boundary,
and into a fissure of this the stream, now a small
river, plunged with accelerated speed. The going
became difficult. The walls of the fissure through
which the river rushed were smooth and water-worn,
impossible to ascend; and between the brink of the
river and the base of the walls were congestións
of boulders, jammed drift-wood, and tangled alder
bushes. There were times when we had to crawl
upon our hands and knees, under one log and over the
next. To add to our difficulties darkness was
swiftly falling, and we were glad, indeed, when the
wall of the fissure leaned at length so far from the
perpendicular that we were able to scramble up it.
We found ourselves upon a levelish little meadow of
grass. In the centre of it there grew a monstrous
and gigantic live-oak, between two of whose roots
there glittered a spring. On all sides of the
meadow, except on that toward the river, were superimpending
cliffs of quartz. Along the base of these was
a dense growth of bushes.
“We’ll rest here,”
said the groom. “What a place. It’s
a natural fortress. Only one way into it.”
He stood looking down at the noisy river and considering
the steep slope we had just climbed. “See
this boulder?” he said. “It’s
wobbly. If that damned longshoreman tries to
get us here, all we’ve got to do is to choose
the psychological moment and push it over on him.”
The groom looked quite bellicose and
daring. Suddenly he flung his fragment of a cap
high into the air and at the very top of his lungs
cried: “Liberty!”
The echoes answered him, and the glorious,
abused word was tossed from cliff to cliff, across
the river and back, and presently died away.
At that, from the very branches of
the great oak that stood in the centre of the meadow
there burst a titanic clap of laughter, and Farallone,
literally bursting with merriment, dropped lightly
into our midst.
I can only speak for myself.
I was frightened I say it deliberately and
truthfully almost into a fit.
And for fully five minutes I could not command either
of my legs. The groom, I believe, screamed.
The bride became whiter than paper then
suddenly the color rushed into her cheeks, and she
laughed. She laughed until she had to sit down,
until the tears literally gushed from her eyes.
It was not hysterics either could it have
been amusement? After a while, and many prolonged
gasps and relapses, she stopped.
“This,” said Farallone,
“is my building site. Do you like it?”
“Oh, oh,” said the bride,
“I think it’s the m most am ma musing
site I ever saw,” and she went into another
uncontrollable burst of laughter.
“Oh oh,” she
said at length, and her shining eyes were turned from
the groom to me, and back and forth between us, “if
you could have seen your faces!”
V
It seemed strange to us, an alteration
in the logical and natural, but neither the groom
nor I received corporal punishment for our attempt
at escape. Farallone had read our minds like
an open book; he had, as it were, put us up to the
escapade in order to have the pure joy of thwarting
us. That we should have been drawn to his exact
waiting-place like needles to the magnet had a smack
of the supernatural, but was in reality a simple and
explicable happening. For if we had not ascended
to the little meadow, Farallone, alertly watching,
would have descended from it, and surprised us at
some further point. That we should have caught
no glimpse of his great bulk anywhere ahead of us in
the day-long stretch of open, park-like country was
also easily explained. For Farallone had made
the most of the journey in the stream itself, drifting
with a log.
And although, as I have said, we were
not to receive corporal punishment, Farallone visited
his power upon us in other ways. He would not
at first admit that we had intended to escape, but
kept praising us for having followed him so loyally
and devotedly, for saving him the trouble of a return
journey, and for thinking to bring along the bulk of
our worldly possessions. Tiring at length of this,
he switched to the opposite point of view. He
goaded us nearly to madness with his criticisms of
our inefficiency, and he mocked repeatedly the groom’s
ill-timed cry of Liberty.
“Liberty!” he said, “you
never knew, you never will know, what that is you
miserable little pin-head. Liberty is for great
natures.
’Stone walls do
not a prison make,
Nor
iron bars a cage.’
But the woman shall know what liberty
is. If she had wanted to leave me there was nothing
to stop her. Do you think she’d have followed
the river, leaving a broad trail? Do you think
she’d have walked right into this meadow unless
she hadn’t cared? Not she. Did you
ask her advice, you self-sufficiencies? Not you.
You were the men-folk, you thought, and you were to
have the ordering of everything. You make me sick,
the pair of you....”
He kept us awake until far into the
night with his jibes and his laughter.
“Well,” he said lastly,
“good-night, girls. I’m about sick
of you, and in the morning we part company....”
At the break of dawn he waked us from
heavy sleep me with a cuff, the groom with
a kick, the bride with a feline touch upon the hair.
“And now,” said he, “be off.”
He caught the bride by the shoulder.
“Not you,” he said.
“I am to stay?” she asked,
as if to settle some trivial and unimportant point.
“Do you ask?” said he;
“Was man meant to live alone? This will
be enough home for us.” And he turned to
the groom. “Get,” he said savagely.
“Mr. Farallone,” said
the bride she was very white, but calm,
apparently, and collected “you have
had your joke. Let us go now, or better, come
with us. We will forget our former differences,
and you will never regret your future kindnesses.”
“Don’t you want
to stay?” exclaimed Farallone in a tone of astonishment.
“If I did,” said the bride
gently, “I could not, and I would not.”
“What’s to stop you?” asked Farallone.
“My place is with my husband,”
said the bride, “whom I have sworn to love,
and to honor, and to obey.”
“Woman,” said Farallone,
“do you love him, do you honor him?”
She pondered a moment, then held her head high.
“I do,” she said.
“God bless you,” cried the groom.
“Rats,” said Farallone,
and he laughed bitterly. “But you’ll
get over it,” he went on. “Let’s
have no more words.” He turned to the groom
and to me.
“Will you climb down the cliff or shall I throw
you?”
“Let us all go,” said
the bride, and she caught at his trembling arm, “and
I will bless you, and wish you all good things and
kiss you good-by.”
“If you go,” said Farallone,
and his great voice trembled, “I die. You
are everything. You know that. Would I have
hit you if I hadn’t loved you so poor
little cheek!” His voice became a kind of mumble.
“Let us go,” said the bride, “if
you love me.”
“Not you,” said
Farallone, “while I live. I would not be
such a fool. Don’t you know that in a little
while you’ll be glad?”
“Is that your final word?” said the bride.
“It must be,” said Farallone. “Are
you not a gift to me from God?”
“I think you must be mad,” said the bride.
“I am unalterable,” said
Farallone, “as God made me I am.
And you are mine to take.”
“Do you remember,” said
the bride, “what you said when you gave me the
revolver? You said that if ever I thought it best
to shoot you you would let me do it.”
“I remember,” said Farallone, and he smiled.
“That was just talk, of course?” said
the bride.
“It was not,” said Farallone; “shoot
me.”
“Let us go,” said the bride. Her
voice faltered.
“Not you,” said Farallone, “while
I live.”
His voice, low and gentle, had in
it a kind of far-off sadness. He turned his eyes
from the bride and looked the rising sun in the face.
He turned back to her and smiled.
“You haven’t the heart to shoot me,”
he said. “My darling.”
“Let us go.”
“Let you go!”
He laughed. “Send away my mate!”
His eyes clouded and became vacant.
He blinked them rapidly and raised his hand to his
brow. It seemed to me that in that instant, suddenly
come and suddenly gone, I perceived a look of insanity
in his face. The bride, too, perhaps, saw something
of the kind, for like a flash she had the revolver
out and cocked it.
“Splendid,” cried Farallone,
and his eyes blazed with a tremendous love and admiration.
“This is something like,” he cried.
“Two forces face to face a man and
a bullet love behind them both. Ah,
you do love me don’t you?”
“Let us go,” said the bride. Her
voice shook violently.
“Not you,” said Farallone, “while
I live.”
He took a step toward her, his eyes
dancing and smiling. “Do you know,”
he said, “I don’t know if you’ll
do it or not. By my soul, I don’t know.
This is living, this is. This is gambling.
I’ll do nothing violent,” he said, “until
my hands are touching you. I’ll move toward
you slowly one slow step at a time with
my arms open like this you’ll
have plenty of chance to shoot me we’ll
see if you’ll do it.”
“We shall see,” said the bride.
They faced each other motionless.
Then Farallone, his eyes glorious with excitement
and passion, his arms open, moved toward her one slow,
deliberate step.
“Wait,” he cried suddenly.
“This is too good for them.”
He jerked his thumb toward the groom and me.
“This is a sight for gods not jackasses.
Go down to the river,” he said to us. “If
you hear a shot come back. If you hear a scream then
as you value your miserable hides get!”
We did not move.
The bride, her voice tense and high-pitched, turned
to us.
“Do as you’re told,”
she cried, “or I shall ask this man to throw
you over the cliff.” She stamped her foot.
“And this man,” said Farallone, “will
do as he’s told.”
There was nothing for it. We
left them alone in the meadow and descended the cliff
to the river. And there we stood for what seemed
the ages of ages, listening and trembling.
A faint, far-off detonation, followed
swiftly by louder and fainter echoes, broke suddenly
upon the rushing noises of the river. We commenced
feverishly to scramble back up the cliff. Half-way
to the top we heard another shot, a second later a
third, and after a longer interval, as if to put a
quietus upon some final show of life a fourth.
A nebulous drift of smoke hung above the meadow.
Farallone lay upon his face at the
bride’s feet. The groom sprang to her side
and threw a trembling arm about her.
“Come away,” he cried, “come away.”
But the bride freed herself gently
from his encircling arm, and her eyes still bent upon
Farallone
“Not till I have buried my dead,” she
said.