Before the sun was high enough to
look over Schoolhouse Hill, the next morning, Judy
went into the garden to dig some potatoes.
Tom Warden’s boys would come,
some day before long, and dig them all, and put them
away in the cellar for the winter. But there was
no need to hurry the gathering of the full crop, so
the boys would come when it was most convenient; and,
in the meantime, Judy would continue to dig from day
to day all that were needed for the kitchen in the
little log house by the river. In spite of her
poor crooked body, the mountain girl was strong and
well used to hard work, so the light task was, for
her, no hardship at all.
As one will when first coming out
of doors in the morning, Judy paused a moment to look
about. The sky, so clear and bright the evening
before, was now a luminous gray. The mountains
were lost in a ghostly world of fog, through which
the river moved in stealthy silence, a dull
thing of mystery, with only here and there a touch
of silvery light upon its clouded surface. The
cottonwoods and willows, on the opposite shore, were
mere dreams of trees, gray, formless, and
weird. The air was filled with the dank earth-smell.
The heavy thundering roar of the never-ending war
of the waters at Elbow Rock came louder and more menacing,
but strangely unreal, as if the mist itself were filled
with threatening sound.
But to Judy, the morning was only
the beginning of another day; she looked,
but did not see. To her, the many ever-changing
moods of Nature were without meaning. With her
basket in hand, she went down to the lower end of
the garden, where she had dug potatoes the time before,
and where she had left the fork sticking upright in
the ground.
A few minutes served to fill the basket;
but, before starting back to the house, the mountain
girl paused again to look out over the river.
Perhaps it was some vague memory of Auntie Sue’s
talk, the night before, that prompted her; perhaps
it was some instinct, indefinite and obscure; whatever
it was that influenced her, Judy left her basket, and
went to the brink of the high bank above the eddy for
a closer view of the water.
The next instant, with the quick movement
of an untamed creature of her native mountain forests,
the girl sprang back, and crouched close to the ground
to hide from something she had seen at the foot of
the bank. Every movement of her twisted body
expressed amazement and fear. Her eyes were wild
and excited. She looked carefully about, as if
for dangers that might be hidden in the fog.
Once, she opened her mouth as if to call. Half-rising,
she started as if to run to the house. But, presently,
curiosity apparently overruled her fear, and, throwing
herself flat on the ground she wormed her way back
to the brink of the river-bank. Cautiously, without
making a sound, she peered through the tall grass
and weeds that fringed the rim above the eddy.
The boat, which some kindly impulse
of the river had drawn so gently aside from the stronger
current that would have carried it down the rapids
to the certain destruction waiting at Elbow Rock, still
rested with its bow grounded on the shore, against
which the eddying water had pushed it. But the
thing that had so startled Judy was a man who was
lying, apparently unconscious, on the wet and muddy
bottom-boards of the little craft.
Breathlessly, the girl, looking down
from the top of the bank, watched for some movement;
but the dirty huddled heap of wretched humanity was
so still that she could not guess whether it was living
or dead. Fearfully, she noted that there were
no oars in the boat, nor gun, nor fishing-tackle of
any sort. The man’s hat was missing.
His clothing was muddy and disarranged. His position
was such that she could not see the face.
Drawing back, Judy looked cautiously
about; then, picking up a heavy clod of dirt from
the ploughed edge of the garden, and crouching again
at the brink of the bank, ready for instant flight,
she threw the clod into the water near the boat.
The still form in the boat made no movement following
the splash. Selecting a smaller clod, the girl
threw the bit of dirt into the stern of the boat itself,
where it broke in fragments. And, at this, the
figure moved slightly.
“Hit’s alive, all right,”
commented Judy to herself, with a grin of satisfaction,
at the result of her investigation. “But
hit’s sure time he was a-gittin’ up.”
Carefully selecting a still smaller
bit of dirt, she deliberately tossed it at the figure
itself. Her aim was true, and the clod struck
the man on the shoulder, with the result that he stirred
uneasily, and, muttering something which Judy could
not hear, half-turned on his back so that the girl
saw the haggard, unshaven face. She saw, too,
that, in one hand, the man clutched an empty whisky
bottle.
At sight of the bottle, the mountain
girl rose to her feet with an understanding laugh.
“Hell!” she said aloud; “drunk, that’s
all dead drunk. I’ll sure fetch
him out of hit.” And then, grinning with
malicious delight, she proceeded to pelt the man in
the boat with clods of dirt until he scrambled to
a sitting posture, and looked up in bewildered confusion.
“If you please,” he said,
in a hoarse voice, to the sallow, old-young face that
grinned down at him from the top of the bank, “which
one of the Devil’s imps are you?”
As she looked into that upturned face,
Judy’s grin vanished. “I sure ’lowed
as how you-all was dead,” she explained.
“Well,” returned the man
in the boat, wearily, “I can assure you that
it’s not in the least my fault if I disappoint
you. I feel as bad about it as you do. However,
I don’t think I am so much alive that it makes
any material difference.” He lifted the
whisky bottle, and studied it thoughtfully.
“You-all come dad burned near
not bein’ ary bit alive,” returned the
girl.
“Yes?” said the man, inquiringly.
“Yep; you sure did come mighty
nigh hit. If your old John-boat had a-carried
you-all on down ter Elbow Rock, ‘stead of bein’
ketched in the eddy here, you-all would sure ‘nough
been a-talkin’ to the Devil by now.”
The man, looking out over the river
into the fog, muttered to himself, “I can’t
even make a success of dying, it seems.”
Again, he regarded the empty bottle
in his hand with studied interest. Then, tossing
the bottle into the river, he looked up, once more,
to the girl on the bank above.
“Listen, sister!” he said,
nervously. “Is there any place around here
where I can buy a drink? I need something rather
badly. Where am I, anyway?”
“You-all are at Auntie Sue’s
place,” said Judy; “an’ there sure
ain’t no chance for you-all ter git ary licker
here. Where’d you-all come from, anyhow?
How’d you-all git here ‘thout no oars ner
paddle ner nothin’? Where was you-all aimin’
ter go?”
“Your questions, my good girl,
are immaterial and irrelevant,” returned the
man in the boat. “The all-important matter
before us for consideration is, how can
I get a drink? I must have a drink, I tell
you!” He held up his hands, and they were shaking
as if with palsy. “And I must have it damned
quick!”
“You-all sure do talk some powerful
big words,” said Judy, with critical interest.
“You-all sure must be some eddecated. Auntie
Sue, now, she talks
The man interrupted her: “Who is ’Auntie
Sue’?”
“I don’t know,”
Judy returned; “she’s just Auntie Sue that’s
all I know. She sure is
Again the man interrupted: “I
think it would be well for me to interview this worthy
aunt of yours.” And then, while he raised
himself, unsteadily, to his feet, he continued, in
a muttering undertone: “You don’t
seem to appreciate the situation. If I don’t
get some sort of liquor soon, things are bound to
happen.”
He attempted to step from the boat
to the shore; but the instability of the light, flat-bottomed
skiff, together with his own unsteady weakness, combined
to land him half in the water and half on the muddy
bank where he struggled helplessly, and, in his weakened
condition, would have slipped wholly into the river
had not Judy rushed down the rude steps to his assistance.
With a strength surprising in one
of her apparent weakness, the mountain girl caught
the stranger under his shoulders and literally dragged
him from the water. When she had further helped
him to his feet, Judy surveyed the wretched object
of her beneficence with amused and curious interest.
The man, with his unkempt hair, unshaven,
haggard face, bloodshot eyes, and slovenly dishevelled
dress, had appeared repulsive enough while in the
boat; but, now, as he stood dripping with water and
covered with mud, there was a touch of the ridiculous
in his appearance that brought a grin to the unlovely
face of his rescuer, and caused her to exclaim with
unnecessary frankness: “I’ll be dad
burned if you-all ain’t a thing ter look at,
mister!”
As the poor creature, who was shaking
as if with the ague, regarded the twisted form, the
wry neck, and the sallow, old-young face of the girl,
who was laughing at him, a gleam of sardonic humor
flashed in his bloodshot eyes. “Thanks,”
he said, huskily; “you are something of a vision
yourself, aren’t you?”
The laughter went from Judy’s
face as she caught the meaning of the cruel words.
“I ain’t never laid no claim ter bein’
a beauty,” she retorted in her shrill, drawling
monotone. “But, I kin tell you-all one
thing, mister: Hit was God-A’mighty Hisself
an’ my drunken pap what made me ter look like
I do. While you, damn you! you-all
just naturally made yourself what you be.”
At the mountain girl’s illiterate
words, so pregnant with meaning, a remarkable change
came over the face and manner of the man. His
voice, even, for the moment, lost its huskiness, and
vibrated with sincere feeling as he steadied himself;
and, bowing with courteous deference, said: “I
beg your pardon, miss. That was unkind. You
really should have left me to the river.”
“You-all would a-drownded, sure,
if I had,” she retorted, somewhat mollified
by the effect of her observation.
“Which,” he returned,
“would have been so beautifully right and fitting
that it evidently could not be.” And with
this cynical remark, his momentary bearing of self-respect
was gone.
“Are you-all a-meanin’
ter say that you-all was a-wantin’ ter drown?”
“Something like that,”
he returned. And then, with a hint of ugliness
in his voice and eyes, he rasped: “But,
look here, girl! do you think I’m going to stand
like this all day indulging in idle conversation with
you? Where is this aunt of yours? Can’t
you see that I’ve got to have a drink?”
He started uncertainly toward the
steps that led to the top of the bank, and Judy, holding
him by his arm, helped him to climb the steep way.
A part of the ascent he made on hands and knees.
Several times he would have fallen except for the
girl’s support. But, at last, they gained
the top, and stood in the garden.
“That there is the house,”
said Judy, pointing. “But I don’t
reckon as how you-all kin git ary licker there.”
The wretched man made no reply; but,
with Judy still supporting him, stumbled forward across
the rows of vegetables.
The two had nearly reached the steps
at the end of the porch when Auntie Sue came from
the house to see why Judy did not return with the
potatoes. The dear old lady paused a moment, startled
at the presence of the unprepossessing stranger in
her garden. Then, with an exclamation of pity,
she hurried to meet them.
The man, whose gaze as he shambled
along was fixed on the ground, did not notice Auntie
Sue until, feeling Judy stop, he also paused, and
raising his head looked full at the beautiful old lady.
“Why, Judy!” cried Auntie
Sue, her low, sweet voice filled with gentle concern.
“What in the world has happened?”
With an expression of questioning
bewilderment and rebuke on his haggard face, the man
also turned to the mountain girl beside him.
“I found him in er John-boat
what done come ashore last night, down there in the
eddy,” Judy explained to Auntie Sue. To
the man, she said: “This here is Auntie
Sue, mister; but, I don’t reckon as how she’s
got ary licker for you.”
“’Liquor’?”
questioned Auntie Sue. “What in the world
do you mean, child?” Then quickly to the stranger; “My
dear man, you are wringing wet. You must have
been in the river. Come, come right in, and let
us do something for you.” As she spoke,
she went toward him with outstretched hands.
But the wretched creature shrank back
from her, as if in fear; his whole body
shaking with emotion; his fluttering hands raised in
a gesture of imploring protest; while the
eyes that looked up at the saintly countenance of
the old gentlewoman were the eyes of a soul sunken
in the deepest hell of shame and humiliation.
Shocked with pitying horror, Auntie Sue paused.
The man’s haggard, unshaven
face twitched and worked with the pain of his suffering.
He bit his lips and fingered his quivering chin in
a vain effort at self-control; and then, as he looked
up at her, the sunken, bloodshot eyes filled with
tears that the tormented spirit had no power to check.
And Auntie Sue turned her face away.
For a little, they stood so.
Then, as Auntie Sue faced him again, the stranger,
with a supreme effort of his will, gained a momentary
control of his shattered nerves. Drawing himself
erect and standing steady and tall before her, he
raised a hand to his uncovered head as if to remove
his hat. When his hand found no hat to remove,
he smiled as if at some jest at his own expense.
“I am so sorry, madam,”
he said, and his voice was musically clear
and cultured. “Please pardon me for disturbing
you? I did not know. This young woman should
have explained. You see, when she spoke of ’Auntie
Sue,’ I assumed, of course, I mean, I
expected to find a native woman who would ”
He paused, smiling again, as if to assure her that
he fully appreciated the humor of his ridiculous predicament.
“But, my dear sir,” cried
Auntie Sue, eagerly, “there is nothing to pardon.
Please do come into the house and let us help you.”
But the stranger drew back, shaking
his head sadly. “You do not understand,
madam. It is not that my clothes are unpresentable, it
is I, myself, who am unfit to stand in your presence,
much less to enter your house. I thank you, but
I must go.”
He was turning away, when Auntie Sue
reached his side and placed her gentle old hand lightly
on his arm.
“Please, won’t you come
in, sir? I shall never forgive myself if I let
you go like this.”
The man’s voice was hoarse and
shaking, now, as he answered: “For God’s
sake, madam, don’t touch me! Let me go!
You must! I I am not myself!
You might not be safe with me! Ask her she
knows!” He turned to Judy.
“He’s done said hit, ma’m,”
said Judy, in answer to Auntie Sue’s questioning
look. “My pap, he was that way when he done
smashed me up agin the wall, when I was nothin’
but a baby, an’ hit made me grow up all crooked
an’ ugly like what I be now.”
With one shamed glance at Auntie Sue,
the wretched fellow looked down at the ground.
His head drooped forward. His shoulders sagged.
His whole body seemed to shrink. Turning sadly
away, he again started back toward the river.
“Stop!” Auntie Sue’s voice rang
out imperiously.
The man halted.
“Look at me,” she commanded.
Slowly, he raised his eyes. The
gentle old teacher spoke with fine spirit, now, but
kindly still: “This is sheer nonsense, my
boy. You wouldn’t hurt me. Why, you
couldn’t! Of course, you are not yourself;
but, do you think that I do not know a gentleman when
I meet one? Come ” She held
out her hand.
A moment he stood, gazing at her in
wondering awe. Then his far-overtaxed strength
failed; his abused nerves refused to bear
more, and he sank, a pitiful,
cowering heap at her feet. Hiding his face in
his shaking hands, he sobbed like a child.