For nearly two weeks they waited,
while the wind alternately raved and whispered over
them as it scurried the snow south or east, or shifted
to the south in the night, bringing “the north
end of a south wind,” the most intolerable and
cutting of winds. Day after day the restless
snow sifted or leaped across the waste of glittering
crust; day after day the sun shone in dazzling splendor,
but so white and cold that the thermometer still kept
down among the thirties. They were absolutely
alone on the plain, except that now and then a desperate
wolf or inquisitive owl came by.
These were long days for the settlers.
They would have been longer had it not been for little
Elga, or “Flaxen,” as they took to calling
her. They racked their brains to amuse her, and
in the intervals of tending the cattle and of cooking,
or of washing dishes, rummaged through all their books
and pictures, taught her “cat’s cradle,”
played “jack-straws” with her, and with
all their resources of song and pantomime strove to
fill up the little one’s lonely days, happy when
they succeeded in making her laugh.
“That settles it!” said
Bert one day, whanging the basin back into the empty
flour-barrel.
“What’s the matter?”
“Matter is, we’ve reached
the bottom o’ the flour-barrel, an’ it’s
got to be filled; no two ways about that. We
can get along on biscuit an’ pancakes in place
o’ meat, but we can’t put anythin’
in the place o’ bread. If it looks favorable
to-morrow, we’ve got to make a break for Summit
an’ see if we can’t stock up.”
Early the next morning they brought
out the shivering team and piled into the box all
the quilts and robes they had, and bundling little
Flaxen in, started across the trackless plain toward
the low line of hills to the east, twenty-five or
thirty miles. From four o’clock in the
morning till nearly noon they toiled across the sod,
now ploughing through the deep snow where the unburned
grass had held it, now scraping across the bare, burned
earth, now wandering up or down the swales, seeking
the shallowest places, now shovelling a pathway through.
The sun rose unobscured as usual,
and shone down with unusual warmth, which afforded
the men the satisfaction of seeing little Flaxen warm
and merry. She chattered away in her own tongue,
and clapped her little hands in glee at sight of the
snowbirds running and fluttering about. As they
approached the low hills the swales got deeper and
more difficult to cross, but about eleven o’clock
they came to Burdon’s Ranch, a sort of half-way
haven between their own claim and Summit, the end
of the railway.
Captain Burdon was away, but Mrs.
Burdon, a big, slatternly Missourian, with all the
kindliness of a universal mother in her swarthy face
and flaccid bosom, ushered them into the cave-like
dwelling set in the sunny side of Water Moccasin.
“Set down, set right down.
Young uns, git out some o’ them cheers
an’ let the strangers set. Purty tol’able
tough weather? A feller don’t git out much
such weather as this ’ere ‘thout he’s
jes’ naturally ’bleeged to. Suse,
heave in another twist, an’ help the little un
to take off her shawl.”
After Mrs. Burdon’s little flurry
of hospitality was over, Anson found time to tell
briefly the history of the child.
“Heavens to Betsey! I wan’
to know!” she cried, her fat hands on her knees
and her eyes bulging. “Wal! wal! I
declare, it beats the Dutch! So that woman jest
frizzed right burside the babe! Wal, I never!
An’ the ol’ man he ain’t showed
up? Wal, now, he ain’t likely to. I
reckon I saw that Norsk go by here that very day,
an’ I says to Cap’n, says I, ’If
that feller don’t reach home inside an hour,
he’ll go through heaven a-gittin’ home,’
says I to the Cap’n.”
“Well, now,” said Anson,
stopping the old woman’s garrulous flow, “I’ve
got to be off f’r Summit, but I wish you’d
jest look after this little one here till we git back.
It’s purty hard weather f’r her to be out,
an’ I don’t think she ought to.”
“Yaas; leave her, o’ course.
She’ll enjoy playin’ with the young uns.
I reckon y’ did all y’ could for that
woman. Y’ can’t burry her now; the
ground’s like linkum-vity.”
But as Anson turned to leave, the
little creature sprang up with a torrent of wild words,
catching him by the coat, and pleading strenuously
to go with him. Her accent was unmistakable.
“You wan’ to go with Ans?”
he inquired, looking down into the little tearful
face with a strange stirring in his bachelor heart.
“I believe on my soul she does.”
“Sure’s y’re born!”
replied Mrs. Burdon. “She’d rather
go with you than to stay an’ fool with the young
uns; that’s what she’s tryin’
to say.”
“Do y’ wan’ to go?”
asked Ans again, opening his arms. She sprang
toward him, raising her eager little hands as high
as she could, and when he lifted her she twined her
arms around his neck.
“Poor little critter! she ain’t
got no pap ner mam now,” the old woman explained
to the ring of children, who still stared silently
at the stranger almost without moving.
“Ain’t he her pa-a-p?”
drawled one of the older girls, sticking a finger
at Anson.
“He is now,” laughed Ans,
and that settled the question over which he had been
pondering for days. It meant that as long as she
wanted to stay she should be his Flaxen and he would
be her “pap.” “And you can
be Uncle Bert, hey?” he said to Bert.
“Good enough,” said Bert.