If John Westley had not deliberately
run away from his guide that August morning and lost
himself on Kettle Mountain, he would never have found
the Wishing-rock, nor the Witches’ Glade, nor
Miss Jerauld Travis.
Even a man whose hair has begun to
grow a little gray over his ears can have moments
of wildest rebellion against authority. John Westley
had had such; he had wakened very early that morning,
had watched the sun slant warmly across his very pleasant
room at the Wayside Hotel and had fiercely hated the
doctor, back in the city, who had printed on a slip
of office paper definite rules for him, John Westley,
aged thirty-five, to follow; hated the milk and eggs
that he knew awaited him in the dining-room and hated,
more than anything else, the smiling guide who had
been spending the evening before, just as he had spent
every evening, thinking out nice easy climbs that
wouldn’t tire a fellow who was recuperating
from a very long siege of typhoid fever!
It had been so easy that it was a
little disappointing to slip out of the door opening
from the big sun room at the back of the hotel while
the guide waited for him at the imposing front entrance.
There was a little path that ran across the hotel
golf links on around the lake, shining like a bright
gem in the morning sun, and off toward Kettle Mountain;
feeling very much like a truant schoolboy, John Westley
had followed this path. A sense of adventure
stimulated him, a pleasant little breeze whipping
his face urged him on. He stopped at a cottage
nestled in a grove of fir trees and persuaded the housewife
there to wrap him a lunch to take with him up the
trail. The good woman had packed many a lunch
for her husband, who was a guide (and a close friend
of the man who was cooling his heels at the hotel entrance),
and she knew just what a person wanted who was going
to climb Kettle Mountain. Three hours after,
John Westley, very tired from his climb but not in
the least repentant of his disobedience, enjoyed immensely
a long rest with Mother Tilly’s good things
spread out on a rock at his elbow.
At three o’clock John Westley
realized that the trail he had chosen was not taking
him back to the village; at four he admitted he was
lost. All his boyish exhilaration had quite left
him; he would have hugged his despised guide if he
could have met him around one of the many turns of
the trail; he ached in every bone and could not get
the thought out of his head that a man could die on
Kettle Mountain and no one would know it for months!
He chose the trails that went down
simply because his weary legs could not climb
one foot more! And he had gone down such steep
inclines that he was positive he had descended twice
the height of the mountain and must surely come into
some valley or other then suddenly his foot
slipped on the needles that cushioned the trail, he
fell, just as one does on the ice only
much more softly and slid on, down and down,
deftly steering himself around a bend, and came to
a stop against a dead log just in time to escape bumping
over a flight of rocky steps, neatly built by Nature
in the side of the mountain and which led to a grassy
terrace, open on one side to the wide sweep of valley
and surrounding mountains and closed in on the other
by leaning, whispering birches.
It was not the amazing view off over
the valley, nor the impact against the old log that
made his breath catch in his throat with a little
surprised sound it was the sudden apparition
of a slim creature standing very straight on a huge
rock! His first joyful thought was that it was
a boy a boy who could lead him back to the
Wayside Hotel, for the youth wore soft leather breeches
and a blouse, loosely belted at the waist, woolen
golf stockings and soft elkskin shoes, but when the
head turned, like a startled deer’s, toward
the unexpected sound, he saw, with more interest than
disappointment, that the boy was a girl!
“How do you do?” he said,
because her eyes told him very plainly that he was
intruding upon some pleasant occupation. “I’m
very glad to see you because, I must admit, I’m
lost.”
The girl jumped down from her rock.
She had an exceptionally pretty face that seemed to
smile all over.
“Won’t you come down?”
she said graciously, as though she was the mistress
of Kettle Mountain and all its glades.
Then John Westley did what in all
his thirty-five years he had never done before he
fainted. He made one little effort to rise and
walk down the rocky steps but instead he rolled in
an unconscious heap right to the girl’s feet.
He wakened, some moments later, to
a consciousness of cool water in his face and a pair
of anxious brown eyes close to his own. He felt
very much ashamed and really better for
having given way!
“Are you all right now?”
“Yes or I will be in a moment.
Just give me a hand.”
He marveled at the dexterity with
which she lifted him against her slim shoulder.
“Little-Dad’s gone over
to Rocky Point, but I knew what to do,” she said
proudly. “I s’pose you’re from
Wayside?”
He looked around. “Where is Wayside?”
She laughed, showing two rows of strong,
white teeth. “Well, the way Little-Dad
travels it’s hours away so that Silverheels has
to rest between going and coming, and Mr. Toby Chubb
gets there in an hour with his new automobile when
it’ll go, but if you follow the Sunrise
trail and then turn by the Indian Head and turn again
at the Kettle’s Handle you’ll come into
the Sleepy Hollow and the Devil’s Pass and
John Westley clapped his hands to his head.
“Good gracious, no wonder I got lost! And
just where am I now?”
“You’re right on the other
side of the mountain. Little-Dad says that if
a person could just bore right through Kettle you’d
come out on the sixth hole of the Wayside Golf course only
it’d be an awfully long bore.”
John Westley laughed hilariously.
He had suddenly thought how carefully his guide always
planned easy hikes for him.
The girl went on. “But
it’s just a little way down this trail to Sunnyside that’s
where I live. Little-Dad’s my father,”
she explained.
“I’d rather believe that
you’re a woodland nymph and live in yonder birch
grove, but I suppose your garments look
so very man-made that you have a regular
given-to-you-in-baptism name?”
“I should say I had!”
the girl cried in undisguised disgust. “Jerauld
Clay Travis. I hate it. Nearly every
girl I know is named something nice Rose
and Lily and Clementina. It was cruel to name
any child J-e-r-a-u-l-d.”
“I think it’s nice!
It’s so different.” John
Westley wanted to add that it suited her because she
was different, but he hesitated; little Miss Jerauld
might misunderstand him. He thought, as he watched
from the corner of his eye, every movement of the
slim, strong, boyish form, that she was unlike any
girl he had ever known, and, because he had three
nieces and they had ever so many friends, he really
knew quite a bit about girls.
“Yes, it’s different,”
she sighed, unconscious of the thoughts that were
running through the man’s head. Then she
brightened, for even the discomfiture of having to
bear the name Jerauld could not long shadow her spirit,
“only no one ever calls me Jerauld I’m
always just Jerry.”
“Well, Miss Jerry, you can’t
ever know how glad I am that I met you! If I
hadn’t, well, I guess I’d have perished
on the face of Kettle Mountain. I am plain John
Westley, stopping over at Wayside, and I can swear
I never before did anything so silly as to faint, only
I’ve just had a rather tough siege of typhoid.”
“Oh, you shouldn’t have
tried to climb so far,” she cried.
“As soon as you’re rested you must go
home with me. And you’ll have to stay all
night ’cause Mr. Chubb’s not back yet from
Deertown and he won’t drive after dark.”
If John Westley had not been so utterly
fascinated by his surroundings and his companion,
he might have tried immediately to pull himself together
enough to go on to Sunnyside; he was quite content,
however, to lean against a huge rock and “rest.”
“I’m trying to guess how
old you are. And I thought you were a boy, too.
I’m glad you’re not.”
“I’m ’most fourteen.”
Miss Jerry squared her shoulders proudly. “I
guess I do look like a boy. I wear this sort
of clothes most of the time, ’cept when I dress
up or go to school. You see I’ve always
gone with Little-Dad on Silverheels when he went to
see sick people until I grew too heavy and and
Silverheels got too old.” She said it with
deep regret. “But I live like
this!”
“And do you wander alone all over the mountain?”
“Oh, no just on this
side of Kettle. Once a guide and a man from the
Wayside disappeared there beyond Sleepy Hollow and
that’s why they call it Devil’s Hole.
Little-Dad made me promise never to go beyond the turn
from Sunrise trail. I’d like to, too.
But there are lots of jolly tramps this side.
This” waving her hand “is
the Witches’ Glade and that” nodding
at the rock against which the man leaned “is
the Wishing-rock.”
John Westley, who back home manufactured
cement-mixers, suddenly felt that he had wakened into
a world of make-believe.
He turned and looked at the rock it
was very much like a great many other rocks all over
the mountainside and yet there was
something different!
Jerry giggled and clasped her very
brown hands around her leather-clad knees.
“I name everything on this side no
one from Wayside ever comes this way, you see.
I’ve played here since I was ever so little.
I’ve always pretended that fairies lived in
the mountains.” She leveled serious eyes
upon him. “They must! You know
it’s magic the way things are here!”
John Westley nodded. “I
understand you climb and you think you’re
on top and then there’s lots higher up and you
slide down and you think you’re in the valley
and you come out on a spot like this with
all the world below you still.”
“Mustn’t it have been
fun to make it all?” Jerry’s eyes
gleamed. “And such beautiful things grow
everywhere and the colors are so different!
And the woodsy glens and ravines they’re
so mysterious. I’ve heard the trees talk!
And the brooks why, they can’t
be just nothing but brooks, they’re so so alive!”
“Oh, yes,” John Westley
was plainly convinced. “Fairies must
live in the mountains!”
“Of course I know now I’m
fourteen that there are no such things as
fairies but it’s fun to pretend. But I still
call this my Wishing-rock and I come here and stand
on it and wish only there aren’t so
awfully many things to wish for that you don’t
just ask Little-Dad for big things, you
know.”
“Miss Jerry, you were wishing when I arrived!”
She colored. “I was.
Little-Dad says I ought to be a very happy girl and
I am, but I guess everybody always has something real
big that they think they want more than anything
else.”
John Westley inclined his head gravely.
“I guess everybody does, Jerry. I think
that’s what keeps us going on in the race.
Does it spoil your wish to tell about it?”
“Oh, my, yes!” Then she
laughed. “Only I suppose it couldn’t
because there aren’t really fairies.”
“What were you wishing?”
He asked it coaxingly, in his eyes a deep interest.
She hesitated, her dark eyes dreaming.
“That I could just go on along that shining
white road down there around
and around to the other side of the mountain!”
She rose up on her knees and stretched a bare arm
down toward the valley. “I’ve always
wished it since the days when Little-Dad used to ride
that way and leave me home because it was too far.
I know that everything that’s the other side
of the mountain is oh, lots different
from Miller’s Notch and school and Sunnyside and
Kettle.” Her voice was plaintively wistful,
her eyes shining. “I know it’s
different. From up here I can watch the automobiles
come along and they always turn off and go around
the mountain and never come to Miller’s Notch
unless they get lost. And the trains all go that
way and and it must be different!
It’s like the books I read. It’s
the world ” She sank
back on her knees. “Once I tried to walk
and once I rode Silverheels, but I never seemed to
get to the real turn, it was so far and I was afraid.
At sunset I look at the colors and the little clouds
in the sky and they look like castles and I think
it’s the reflection of what’s on the other
side. That’s what I was wishing.”
She turned serious eyes toward Westley. “Is
it dreadfully wicked? Little-Dad said I was discontented
and Sweetheart that’s mother cried
and hugged me as though she was frightened. But
some day I’ve just got to go along that
road.”
For some reason that was beyond even
the analytical power of his trained mind, John Westley
was deeply stirred. Little Jerry, child of the
woods he felt as her mother must have felt!
There was a mystery about the girl that held his curiosity;
she could be no child of simple mountain people.
He rose from his position against the rock with surprising
agility.
“If you’ll give me a hand
I’ll stand on your rock and wish that your wish
may come true, if you want it so very much! But,
maybe, child, you’ll find that what you have
right here is far better than anything on the other
side of the mountain. Now, suppose you lead the
way to Sunnyside.”
Jerry sprang ahead eagerly. “And
then you’ll meet Sweetheart and Little-Dad and
Bigboy and Pepperpot!”