Brian was working in the garden.
It was early in the afternoon, and the man, as he
worked in the freshly ploughed ground, was rejoicing
at the completion of his book.
Straightening up from his labor, he
drew a deep breath of the fragrant air. About
him on every side, and far away into the blue distance,
the world was dressed in the gala dress of the season.
The river, which at the breaking of the winter had
been a yellow flood that washed the top of the bank
in front of the house and covered the bottom-lands
on the opposite side, was again its normal self, and
its voice to him, now, was a singing voice of triumphal
gladness.
For Brian, too, the world was new,
and fresh, and beautiful. The world of his winter
was gone. He had found himself in his work, and
in the glorious consciousness of the fact he felt
like shouting with sheer joy of living.
“And Auntie Sue, dear Auntie
Sue,” he thought, looking with love in his eyes
toward the house, how wonderful she had been in her
helpful understanding and never-failing faith in him.
After all, it was Auntie Sue’s triumph more
than it was his.
His happy musing was interrupted by
a neighbor who, on his way home from Thompsonville,
stopped at the garden fence with the letter for Auntie
Sue.
Brian took the letter with a jest
which brought a roar of laughter from the mountaineer,
and, when the latter had gone on his way up the hill,
started toward the house to find Auntie Sue.
Glancing at the envelope in his hand,
Brian noticed the postmark “Buenos Aires.”
He stopped suddenly, staring dumbly at the words in
the circular mark and at the name written on the envelope.
Over and over, he read “Buenos Aires, Miss
Susan Wakefield; Buenos Aires, Miss Susan
Wakefield.” Something His brain
seemed to be numb. His hands trembled. He
looked about at the familiar surroundings, and everything
seemed suddenly strange and unreal to him. He
looked again at the letter in his hand, turning it
curiously. A strange feeling of oppression and
ominous foreboding possessed him as though the bright
spring sky were all at once overcast with heavy and
menacing storm-clouds. What was it? “Buenos
Aires, Susan Wakefield?” Where had
he seen that combination before? What was it
that made the name of the Argentine city in connection
with Auntie Sue’s name seem so familiar?
Slowly, he went on to the house, and, finding Auntie
Sue, gave her the letter.
“Oh!” cried the old lady,
as she saw the postmark on the envelope. “It
must be from brother John. It is not John’s
writing, though,” she added, as she opened the
envelope.
And at her words the feeling of impending
disaster so oppressed Brian Kent that only by an effort
could he control himself. He was possessed of
the strange sensation of having at some time in the
past lived the identical experience through which
he was at that moment passing. “Susan Wakefield; a
brother John in Buenos Aires, Argentine; the
letter!” It was all so familiar that the allusion
was startling in its force. But that ominous
cloud, that sense of some great trouble
near that filled him with such unaccountable dread what
could it mean?
An exclamation from Auntie Sue drew
his attention. She looked at him with tear-filled
eyes, and her sweet voice broke as she said: “Brian!
Brian! John is dead! This this
letter is from the doctor who attended him.”
Tenderly, as he would have helped
his own mother, Brian assisted Auntie Sue to her room.
For a little while he sat with her, trying to comfort
her with such poor words as he could find.
Briefly, she told him of the brother
who had lived in Argentine for many years. He
had married a South-American woman whom Auntie Sue
had never seen, and while not wealthy had been moderately
prosperous. But he had never forgotten his sister
who was so alone in the world. “Several
times, when he could, he sent me money for my savings-bank
account,” she finished simply, her sweet old
voice low and tender with the memories of the years
that were gone. “John and I were always
very fond of each other. He was a good man, Brian.”
Brian Kent sat like a man stricken
dumb. Auntie Sue’s words, “he sent
me money for my savings-bank account,” had made
the connection between the names “Buenos Aires,
Argentine; John Wakefield; Susan Wakefield,”
and the thing for which his mind had been groping
with such a sense of impending disaster.
In her grief over the death of her
brother, and in her memories of their home years so
long past, dear old Auntie Sue had forgotten the peculiar
meaning her words might have for the former clerk of
the Empire Consolidated Savings Bank who sat beside
her, and to whom she turned in her sorrow as a mother
to a dearly beloved son.
“But it is all right, Brian,
dear,” she said with brave cheerfulness.
“When one has watched the sunsets for seventy
years, one ceases to fear the coming of the night,
for always there is the morning. Just let me
rest here alone for a little while, and I will be myself
again.”
She looked up at him with a smile,
and Brian Kent, kneeling beside the bed, bowed his
head and caught the dear old hands to his lips.
Without trusting himself to speak again, the man left
the room, closing the door.
He moved about the apartment as one
in a dream. With a vividness that was torture,
he lived again that hour in the bank when, opening
the afternoon mail, he had found the letter from Susan
Wakefield with the Argentine notes, which her letter
said she had received from her brother John in Buenos
Aires, and which she was sending to the bank for deposit
to her little account. It had been a very unbusinesslike
letter and a very unbusinesslike way to transmit money.
It was, indeed, this nature of the transaction that
had tempted the hard-pressed clerk.
Mechanically, Brian stopped at his
writing-table to finger the manuscript which he had
finished the evening before. Was it only the
evening before? Taking up the volume of closely
written sheets which were bound together by a shoestring
that Auntie Sue had laughingly found for him, when
he had so joyously announced the completion of the
last page of his book, he turned the leaves idly, reading
here and there a sentence with curious interest.
The terrific mental strain of his situation completely
divorced him, as it were, from the life which he had
lived during those happy months just past, and which
was so fully represented by his work.
Again the river, swinging around a
sudden turn in its course, had come upon a passage
where its peaceful flow was broken by the wild turmoil
of the troubled waters.
“And Auntie Sue,” something
within the man’s self was saying, “dear
Auntie Sue, who had saved him, not only from death,
but from the hell of the life that he had formerly
lived, as well; and whose loving companionship and
sympathetic understanding had so inspired and strengthened
him in the work which had been the passionate desire
of his heart; the gentle old teacher whose
life had been so completely given to others, and who,
in the helplessness of her last years, was so alone, Auntie
Sue was depending upon that money which her brother
had sent her as the only support of the closing days
of her life. Auntie Sue believed that her money
was safe in the bank. That belief was to her
a daily comfort. Auntie Sue did not know that
she was almost penniless; that the man
whom she had saved with such a wondrous salvation
had robbed her, and left her so shamefully without
means for the necessities of life. Auntie Sue
did not know. But she would know,” that
inner voice went on. “The time would come
when she would learn the truth. It was certain
to come. It might come any day. Then then
As one moving without conscious purpose,
Brian Kent went from the house, the manuscript
in his hand.
Judy was sitting idly on the porch
steps. At sight of the mountain girl the man
knew all at once that there was one thing he must do.
He must make sure that there was no mistake.
He was already sure, of course; but still, as a condemned
man at the scaffold hopes against hope for a stay
of sentence, so he caught at the shadowy suggestion
of a possibility.
“Come with me, Judy,”
he said, forcing himself to speak coolly; “I
want to talk with you.”
Judy arose, and, looking at him in
her stealthy, oblique way, said, in her drawling monotone:
“What’s happened ter Auntie Sue? Was
there somethin’ in that there letter Bud Jackson
give you-all for her what’s upset her?”
“Auntie Sue’s brother
is dead, Judy,” Brian answered. “She
wishes to be alone, and we must not disturb her.
She will be all right in a little while. Come,
let us walk down toward the bluff.”
When they had reached a spot on the
river-bank a short distance above the Elbow Rock cliff,
Brian said to his companion: “Judy, I want
you to tell me something. Did Auntie Sue ever
send money in a letter to the Empire Consolidated
Savings Bank, in Chicago?”
“The black, beady eyes shifted
evasively, and the mountain girl turned her sallow,
old-young face away from Brian’s direct gaze.
“Look at me, Judy.”
She sent a stealthy, oblique glance in his direction.
“You must tell me.”
“I done started ter tell you-all
onct, that time pap ketched me, an’
you-all ‘lowed as how I oughten ter tell nothin’
’bout Auntie Sue to nobody.”
“But it is different now, Judy,”
returned Brian. “Something has happened
that makes it necessary for me to know.”
“Meanin’ that there letter
‘bout her brother bein’ dead?” asked
Judy, shrewdly.
“Yes.”
“What you-all got ter know for?”
“Because ” Brian could not
finish.
Judy’s beady eyes were watching
him intently, now. “Hit looks like you-all
ain’t a-needin’ me ter tell you-all anythin’,”
she observed dryly.
“Then Auntie Sue did send money?”
“She sure did. I seed her
fix hit in the letter, myself,” came the answer.
“What kind of money?”
“I dunno, some funny
kind hit was, what her brother done sent
her from some funny place, I dunno just where.”
“When did she send it?”
“’Bout a month ’fore you come.”
“And and did any
letter ever come from the bank to tell her that the
money was received by them all right?”
The mountain girl did not answer, but again turned
her face away.
“Tell me,” Brian insisted.
“I I must know, Judy,”
and his voice was harsh and broken with emotion.
The answer came reluctantly:
“I reckon you-all knows where that there money
went ter.”
The girl’s answer sent a new
thought like a hot iron into Brian Kent’s tortured
brain. He caught Judy’s arm in quick and
fearful excitement. “Judy!” he gasped,
imploringly, “Judy, do you ? does Auntie
Sue know ? does she know that I ?”
“How could she help knowin’?
She ain’t no fool. An’ I done heard
that there Sheriff an’ the deteckertive man
tellin’ her ‘bout you an’ the bank.
An’ the Sheriff, he done give her a paper what
he said told all ‘bout what you-all done, an’
she must er burned the paper, or done somethin’
with hit, ’cause I couldn’t never find
hit after that night. An’ what would she
do that for? And what for did she make me promise
not ter ever say nothin’ ter you-all ‘bout
that there money letter? An’ why ain’t
she said nothin’ to you ‘bout the letter
from the bank not comin’, if she didn’t
know hit was you ’stead of them what done got
the money?”
The girl paused for a moment, and
then went on in a tone of reverent wonder: “An’
to think that all the time she could a-turned you-all
over to that there Sheriff an’ got the money-reward
to pay her back what you-all done tuck.”
Brian Kent was as one who had received
a mortal hurt. His features were distorted with
suffering. With eyes that could not see, he looked
down at the manuscript to which he still unconsciously
clung; and, again, he fingered the pages of his work
as though some blind instinct were sending his tormented
soul to seek relief in the message which, during the
happy months just past, he had written for others.
And the deformed mountain girl, who
stood before him with twisted body and old-young face,
grew fearful as she watched the suffering of this
man whom she had come to look upon as a superior being
from some world which she, in her ignorance, could
never know.
“Mr. Burns,” she said
at last, putting out her hand and plucking at his
sleeve, “Mr. Burns, you-all ain’t got no
call ter be like this. You-all ain’t plumb
bad. I knows you ain’t, ’count of
the way you-all have been ter me an’ ‘cause
you kept pap from hurtin’ me, an’ ’cause
you are takin’ care of Auntie Sue like you’re
doin’. Hit ain’t no matter ’bout
the money, now, ’cause you-all kin take care
of her allus.”
Brian looked up from the manuscript
in his hand, and stared dumbly at the girl, as if
he failed to hear her clearly.
“An’ just think ’bout
your book,” Judy continued pleadingly. “Think
’bout all them fine things you-all have done
wrote down for everybody ter read, ’bout
the river allus a-goin’ on just the same,
no matter what happens, an’ ’bout Auntie
Sue an’
She stopped, and drew away from him,
frightened at the look that came into the man’s
face.
“Don’t, Mr. Burns!
Don’t!” she half-screamed. “’Fore
God, you-all oughten ter look like that!”
The man threw up his head, and laughed, laughed
as the wild, reckless and lost Brian Kent had laughed
that black night when, in the drifting boat, he had
cursed the life he was leaving and had drunk his profane
toast to the darkness into which he was being carried.
Raising the manuscript, which represented
all that the past months of his re-created life had
meant to him, and grasping it in both hands, he shook
it contemptuously, as he said, with indescribable bitterness
and the reckless surrendering of every hope:
“’All them fine things that I have wrote
down for everybody ter read.’” He mimicked
her voice with a sneer, and laughed again. Then:
“It’s all a lie, Judy, dear; a
damned lie. Auntie Sue is a saint, and believes
it. She made me believe it for a little while, her
beautiful, impossible dream-philosophy of the river.
The river, hell! the river is
as treacherous and cruel and false and tricky and
crooked as life itself! And I am as warped and
twisted in mind and soul as you are in body, Judy,
dear. Neither of us can help it. We were
made that way by the river. To hell with the whole
impossible mess of things!” With a gesture of
violent rage, he turned toward the river, and, taking
a step forward, lifted the manuscript high above his
head.
Judy screamed, “Mr. Burns, don’t!”
He paused an instant, and, turning
his head, looked at her with another laugh.
“’Fore God, you dassn’t do that!”
she implored.
And then, as the man turned his face
from her, and his arms went back above his head for
the swing that would send the manuscript far out into
the tumbling waters of the rapids, she leaped toward
him, and, catching his arm, hampered his movement
so that the book fell a few feet from the shore, where
the water, checked a little in its onward rush to the
cliff by the irregular bank, boiled and eddied among
the rocky ledges and huge boulders that retarded its
force. Another leap carried the mountain girl
to the edge of the bank, where she crouched like a
runner ready for the report of the starter’s
pistol, her black, beady eyes searching the stream
for the volume of manuscript, which had disappeared
from sight, drawn down by the troubled swirling currents.
The man, watching her, laughed in
derision; but, while his mocking laughter was still
on his lips, the boiling currents brought the book,
again, to the surface, and Brian saw the girl leave
the bank as if thrown by a powerful spring. Straight
and true she dived for the book, and even as she disappeared
beneath the surface her hands clutched the manuscript.
For a second, Brian Kent held his
place as if paralyzed with horror. Then, as Judy’s
head appeared farther down the stream, he ran with
all his strength along the bank to gain a point a little
ahead of the swimming girl before he should leap to
her rescue.
But Judy, trained from her birth on
that mountain river, knew better than Brian what to
do. A short distance below the point where she
had plunged into the stream, a huge boulder, some
two or three feet from the shore, caused a split in
the current, one fork of which set in toward the bank.
Swimming desperately, the girl gained the advantage
of this current, and, just as Brian reached the spot,
she was swept against the bank, where, with her free
hand, she caught and held fast to a projecting root.
Had she been carried past that point, nothing could
have saved her from being swept on into the wild turmoil
of the waters at Elbow Rock.
It was the work of a moment for Brian
to throw himself flat on the ground at the edge of
the bank and, reaching down, to grasp the girl’s
wrist. Another moment, and she was safe beside
him, his manuscript still tightly held under one arm.
Not realizing, in his excitement,
what he was doing, Brian shook the girl, saying angrily:
“What in the world do you mean, taking such a
crazy-fool chance as that!”
She broke away from him with:
“Well, what’d you-all go an’ do such
a dad burned fool thing for? Hit’s you-all
what’s crazy yourself plumb crazy!”
Brian held out his hand: “Give me that
manuscript!”
Judy clutched the book tighter, and
drew back defiantly. “I won’t.
You-all done throwed hit away onct. ’Tain’t
your’n no more, nohow.”
“Well, what do you purpose to
do with it?” said the puzzled man, in a gentler
tone.
“I aims ter give hit ter Auntie
Sue,” came the startling reply. “I
reckon she’ll know what ter do. Hit allus
was more her’n than your’n, anyhow.
You done said so yourself. I heard you only last
night when you-all was so dad burned tickled at gittin’
hit done. You-all ain’t got no right ter
sling hit inter the river, an’, anyway, I ain’t
a-goin’ ter let you.”
“Which sounds very sensible
to me,” came a clear voice from a few feet distant.
Judy and Brian turned quickly, to
face a young woman who stood regarding them thoughtfully,
with a suggestion of a smile on her very attractive
face.