Many persons, themselves city-bred
and city-reared, have fled to the soil and succeeded
in winning great happiness. In such cases they
have succeeded only by going through a process of
savage disillusionment. But with Dede and Daylight
it was different. They had both been born on
the soil, and they knew its naked simplicities and
rawer ways. They were like two persons, after
far wandering, who had merely come home again.
There was less of the unexpected in their dealings
with nature, while theirs was all the delight of reminiscence.
What might appear sordid and squalid to the fastidiously
reared, was to them eminently wholesome and natural.
The commerce of nature was to them no unknown and
untried trade. They made fewer mistakes.
They already knew, and it was a joy to remember what
they had forgotten.
And another thing they learned was
that it was easier for one who has gorged at the flesh-pots
to content himself with the meagerness of a crust,
than for one who has known only the crust.
Not that their life was meagre.
It was that they found keener delights and deeper
satisfactions in little things. Daylight, who
had played the game in its biggest and most fantastic
aspects, found that here, on the slopes of Sonoma
Mountain, it was still the same old game. Man
had still work to perform, forces to combat, obstacles
to overcome. When he experimented in a small
way at raising a few pigeons for market, he found
no less zest in calculating in squabs than formerly
when he had calculated in millions. Achievement
was no less achievement, while the process of it seemed
more rational and received the sanction of his reason.
The domestic cat that had gone wild
and that preyed on his pigeons, he found, by the comparative
standard, to be of no less paramount menace than a
Charles Klinkner in the field of finance, trying to
raid him for several millions. The hawks and
weasels and ’coons were so many Dowsetts, Lettons,
and Guggenhammers that struck at him secretly.
The sea of wild vegetation that tossed its surf against
the boundaries of all his clearings and that sometimes
crept in and flooded in a single week was no mean
enemy to contend with and subdue. His fat-soiled
vegetable-garden in the nook of hills that failed of
its best was a problem of engrossing importance, and
when he had solved it by putting in drain-tile, the
joy of the achievement was ever with him. He
never worked in it and found the soil unpacked and
tractable without experiencing the thrill of accomplishment.
There was the matter of the plumbing.
He was enabled to purchase the materials through
a lucky sale of a number of his hair bridles.
The work he did himself, though more than once he
was forced to call in Dede to hold tight with a pipe-wrench.
And in the end, when the bath-tub and the stationary
tubs were installed and in working order, he could
scarcely tear himself away from the contemplation of
what his hands had wrought. The first evening,
missing him, Dede sought and found him, lamp in hand,
staring with silent glee at the tubs. He rubbed
his hand over their smooth wooden lips and laughed
aloud, and was as shamefaced as any boy when she caught
him thus secretly exulting in his own prowess.
It was this adventure in wood-working
and plumbing that brought about the building of the
little workshop, where he slowly gathered a collection
of loved tools. And he, who in the old days,
out of his millions, could purchase immediately whatever
he might desire, learned the new joy of the possession
that follows upon rigid economy and desire long delayed.
He waited three months before daring the extravagance
of a Yankee screw-driver, and his glee in the marvelous
little mechanism was so keen that Dede conceived forthright
a great idea. For six months she saved her egg-money,
which was hers by right of allotment, and on his birthday
presented him with a turning-lathe of wonderful simplicity
and multifarious efficiencies. And their mutual
delight in the tool, which was his, was only equalled
by their delight in Mab’s first foal, which
was Dede’s special private property.
It was not until the second summer
that Daylight built the huge fireplace that outrivalled
Ferguson’s across the valley. For all these
things took time, and Dede and Daylight were not in
a hurry. Theirs was not the mistake of the average
city-dweller who flees in ultra-modern innocence to
the soil. They did not essay too much.
Neither did they have a mortgage to clear, nor did
they desire wealth. They wanted little in the
way of food, and they had no rent to pay. So
they planned unambiguously, reserving their lives for
each other and for the compensations of country-dwelling
from which the average country-dweller is barred.
From Ferguson’s example, too, they profited
much. Here was a man who asked for but the plainest
fare; who ministered to his own simple needs with
his own hands; who worked out as a laborer only when
he needed money to buy books and magazines; and who
saw to it that the major portion of his waking time
was for enjoyment. He loved to loaf long afternoons
in the shade with his books or to be up with the dawn
and away over the hills.
On occasion he accompanied Dede and
Daylight on deer hunts through the wild canons and
over the rugged steeps of Hood Mountain, though more
often Dede and Daylight were out alone. This riding
was one of their chief joys. Every wrinkle and
crease in the hills they explored, and they came to
know every secret spring and hidden dell in the whole
surrounding wall of the valley. They learned
all the trails and cow-paths; but nothing delighted
them more than to essay the roughest and most impossible
rides, where they were glad to crouch and crawl along
the narrowest deer-runs, Bob and Mab struggling and
forcing their way along behind. Back from their
rides they brought the seeds and bulbs of wild flowers
to plant in favoring nooks on the ranch. Along
the foot trail which led down the side of the big canon
to the intake of the water-pipe, they established
their fernery. It was not a formal affair, and
the ferns were left to themselves. Dede and Daylight
merely introduced new ones from time to time, changing
them from one wild habitat to another. It was
the same with the wild lilac, which Daylight had sent
to him from Mendocino County. It became part
of the wildness of the ranch, and, after being helped
for a season, was left to its own devices they used
to gather the seeds of the California poppy and scatter
them over their own acres, so that the orange-colored
blossoms spangled the fields of mountain hay and prospered
in flaming drifts in the fence corners and along the
edges of the clearings.
Dede, who had a fondness for cattails,
established a fringe of them along the meadow stream,
where they were left to fight it out with the water-cress.
And when the latter was threatened with extinction,
Daylight developed one of the shaded springs into his
water-cress garden and declared war upon any invading
cattail. On her wedding day Dede had discovered
a long dog-tooth violet by the zigzag trail above
the redwood spring, and here she continued to plant
more and more. The open hillside above the tiny
meadow became a colony of Mariposa lilies. This
was due mainly to her efforts, while Daylight, who
rode with a short-handled ax on his saddle-bow, cleared
the little manzanita wood on the rocky hill of all
its dead and dying and overcrowded weaklings.
They did not labor at these tasks.
Nor were they tasks. Merely in passing, they
paused, from time to time, and lent a hand to nature.
These flowers and shrubs grew of themselves, and their
presence was no violation of the natural environment.
The man and the woman made no effort to introduce
a flower or shrub that did not of its own right belong.
Nor did they protect them from their enemies.
The horses and the colts and the cows and the calves
ran at pasture among them or over them, and flower
or shrub had to take its chance. But the beasts
were not noticeably destructive, for they were few
in number and the ranch was large.
On the other hand, Daylight could
have taken in fully a dozen horses to pasture, which
would have earned him a dollar and a half per head
per month. But this he refused to do, because
of the devastation such close pasturing would produce.
Ferguson came over to celebrate the
housewarming that followed the achievement of the
great stone fireplace. Daylight had ridden across
the valley more than once to confer with him about
the undertaking, and he was the only other present
at the sacred function of lighting the first fire.
By removing a partition, Daylight had thrown two rooms
into one, and this was the big living-room where Dede’s
treasures were placed her books, and paintings
and photographs, her piano, the Crouched Venus, the
chafing-dish and all its glittering accessories.
Already, in addition to her own wild-animal skins,
were those of deer and coyote and one mountain-lion
which Daylight had killed. The tanning he had
done himself, slowly and laboriously, in frontier
fashion.
He handed the match to Dede, who struck
it and lighted the fire. The crisp manzanita
wood crackled as the flames leaped up and assailed
the dry bark of the larger logs. Then she leaned
in the shelter of her husband’s arm, and the
three stood and looked in breathless suspense.
When Ferguson gave judgment, it was with beaming face
and extended hand.
“She draws! By crickey, she draws!”
he cried.
He shook Daylight’s hand ecstatically,
and Daylight shook his with equal fervor, and, bending,
kissed Dede on the lips. They were as exultant
over the success of their simple handiwork as any great
captain at astonishing victory. In Ferguson’s
eyes was actually a suspicious moisture while the
woman pressed even more closely against the man whose
achievement it was. He caught her up suddenly
in his arms and whirled her away to the piano, crying
out: “Come on, Dede! The Gloria!
The Gloria!”
And while the flames in the fireplace
that worked, the triumphant strains of the Twelfth
Mass rolled forth.