I dimly guess from blessings known
Of greater out of sight,
And, with the chastened Psalmist, own
His judgments, too,
are right.
I know not what the future hath
Of marvel or surprise,
Assured alone that life and death
His mercy underlies_.
WHITTIER
IT was early spring before Dr. Fenneben
returned to Lagonda Ledge. Everybody thought
the new line on his face was put there by the death
of his brother. To those who loved him most that
is, to all Lagonda Ledge he was growing
handsomer every year, and even with this new expression
his countenance wore a more kindly grace than ever
before.
“Norrie, your uncle was a strange
man,” Fenneben declared, as he and Elinor sat
in the library on the evening of his return. “Naturally,
I am unlike my stepbrothers, but I have not even understood
them. There were many things I learned at Joshua’s
bedside that I never knew of the family before.
There were some things for you to know, but not now.”
“I can trust you, Uncle Lloyd,
to do just the right thing,” Norrie declared.
The new line of sadness deepened in
Lloyd Fenneben’s face.
“That is a hard thing to do
sometimes. Your trust will help me wonderfully,
however,” he replied. “My brother
in his last hours made urgent requests of me and pled
with me until I pledged my word to carry out his wishes.
Here’s where I need your trust most.”
Elinor bent over her uncle and softly
stroked the heavy black hair from his forehead.
“Here’s where I help you most, then,”
she said, gently.
“I have some funds, Elinor,
to be yours at your graduation not before.
Believe me, dear girl, I begged of Joshua to let me
turn them over to you now, but he staid obstinate
to the last.”
“And I don’t want a thing
different till I get my diploma. Not even till
I get my Master’s Degree for that matter,”
Elinor said, playfully.
“And meantime, Norrie, will
you just be a college girl and drop all thought of
this marrying business until you are through school?”
Fenneben was hesitating a little now. “A
year hence will be time enough for that.”
“Most gladly,” Elinor assured him.
“Then that’s all for my
brother’s sake. Now for mine, Norrie, or
for yours, rather, if my little girl has her mind
all set about things after school days, I hope she
will not be a flirt. Sometimes the words and
acts cut deeper into other lives than we ever dream.
Norrie, I know this out of the years of my own lonely
life.”
Elinor’s eyes were dewy with
tears and she bent her head until her hair touched
his cheek.
“I’ll try to be good ‘fornever,’
as Bug Buler says,” she murmured.
Over in the Saxon House on this same
evening Vincent Burgess had come in to see Dennie
about some books.
“I took your advice, Dennie,”
he said. “I have been a man to the extent
of making myself square with Victor Burleigh, and I’ve
felt like a free man ever since.”
The look of joy and pride in Dennie’s
eyes thrilled him with a keen pleasure. Her eyes
were of such a soft gray and her pretty wavy hair was
so lustrous tonight.
“Dennie, I am going to be even
more of a man than you asked me to be.”
Dennie did not look up. The pink
of her cheek, her long lashes over her downcast eyes,
the sunny curls above her forehead, all were fair to
Vincent Burgess. As he looked at her he began
to understand, blind bat that he had been all this
time, he, Professor Vincent Burgess, A.B., Instructor
in Greek from Harvard University.
“I must be going now. Good-night, Dennie.”
He shook hands and hurried away, but
to the girl who was earning her college education
there was something in his handclasp, denied before.
The next day there was a settling
of affairs at Sunrise, and the character-building
put into Lloyd Fenneben’s hand, as clay for the
potter’s wheel, seemed to him to be shaping somewhat
to its destined uses.
Again, Vincent Burgess sat in the
chair by the west study window, acting-dean, now seeking
neither types, nor geographical breadth, nor seclusion
amid barren prairie lands for profound research in
preparing for a Master’s Degree.
With no effort to conceal matters,
except the fact that the trust funds had first belonged
to his own sister and brother-in-law, he explained
to Fenneben the line of events connecting him with
Victor Burleigh.
“And, Dr. Fenneben, I must speak
of a matter I have never touched upon with you before.
It was agreed between Dr. Wream and myself that I
should become his nephew by marriage. I want to
go to Miss Elinor and ask her to release me.
You will pardon my frankness, for I cannot honorably
continue in this relationship since I have restored
the property to Victor Burleigh.”
“He thinks she will not care
for him now,” Fenneben said to himself.
Aloud he said:
“Have you ever spoken directly to Elinor on
this matter?”
“N-no. It was an understanding
between her and her uncle and between him and me,”
Burgess replied.
“Well, I don’t pretend
to know girls very well, being a confirmed bachelor” the
Dean’s eyes were smiling “but
my advice at this distance is not to ask Norrie to
release you from what she herself has never yet bound
you. I’ll vouch for her peace of mind; and
your sense of honor is fully vindicated now.
To be equally frank with you, Burgess, now that Norrie
is entirely in my charge, I have put this sort of thing
for her absolutely into the after-commencement years.
The best wife is not always the girl who wears a diamond
ring through three or four years of her college life.
I want my niece to be a girl now, not a bride-in-waiting.”
As Burgess rose to go his eye caught
sight of the pigeons above the bend in the river.
“By the way, Doctor, have you
ever found out anything about the woman who used to
live in that deserted place up north?”
“Nothing yet,” Fenneben
replied. “But, remember, I have not spent
a week that is, a sane week in
Lagonda Ledge since the night you, and she, and Saxon,
and the dog saved my life. I shall take up her
case soon.”
“She is gone away and nobody
knows where, Saxon tells me,” Burgess said.
“For many reasons I wish we could find her, but
she has dropped out of sight.”
Lloyd Fenneben wondered at the sorrowful
expression on the younger man’s face when he
said this.
As he left the study Victor Burleigh came in.
“Sit down, Burleigh. What can I do for
you?” Fenneben asked.
Something like his own magnetism of
presence was in the young man before him.
“I want to tell you something,” Vic responded.
“Let me tell you something.
I knew you had good blood in your veins even when
I saw you kill that bull snake. Burgess has just
been in. He has told me his side of your story.
Noble fellow he is to free himself of a life-long
slavery to somebody else’s dollars. However
much a man may try to hide the fetters of unlawful
gains, they clank in his own ears till he hates himself.
Now Burgess is a freeman.”
“I am glad to hear you say so,
Dr. Fenneben. It makes my own freedom sweeter,”
Vic declared.
“Yes,” Fenneben replied.
“Your added means will bring you life’s
best gift opportunity.”
“I have no added means, Doctor.
I have funds in trust for Bug Buler, and I come to
ask you to take his legal guardianship for me.”
And then he told his own life story.
“So the heroism shifts to you
as well. I can picture the cost to a man like
yourself,” the Dean said. “Have you
no record of Bug’s father and mother?”
“None but the record given by
Dr. Wream. They are dead,” Burleigh replied.
“His father may have met the same fate that my
father did.”
“Why don’t you take the
guardianship yourself, Burleigh? The boy is yours
in love and blood. He ought to be in law.”
Victor Burleigh stood up to his full
height, a magnificent product of Nature’s handiwork.
But the mind and soul “Dean Funnybone”
had helped to shape.
“I will be honest with you,
Dr. Fenneben,” Burleigh said, and his voice
was deep and sweetly resonant. “If I keep
the money in charge I may not be proof against the
temptation to use it for myself. As strong as
my strong arms are my hates and loves, and for some
reasons I would do almost anything to gain riches.
I might not resist the tempter.”
Lloyd Fenneben’s black eyes blazed at the words.
“I understand perfectly what
you mean, but no woman who exacts this price is worth
the cost.” Then, in a gentler tone, he continued:
“Burleigh, will you take my advice? I have
always had your welfare on my heart. Finish your
college work first. Get the best of the classroom,
the library, the athletic field, and the ‘picnic
spread.’ Is that the right term? But
fit yourself for manhood before you undertake a man’s
duties. Meantime, He who has given you the mastery
in the years behind you is leading you toward the
larger places before you, teaching you all the meanings
of Strife, and Sacrifice, and Service symbolized above
our doorway in our proud College initial letter.
The Supremacy is yet to come. Will you follow
my counsel? I’ll take care of Bug, and we
will keep Burgess out of this for a while.”
Burleigh thought he understood, and
the silent hand clasp pledged the faith of the country
boy to the teacher’s wishes.
It is only in story books that events
leap out as pages are turned, events that take days
on days of real life to compass. In the swing
of one brief year Lagonda Ledge knew little change.
New cement walks were built south almost to the Kickapoo
Corral. A new manufacturing concern had bonds
voted for it at an exciting election, and a squabble
for a suitable site was in process. Vincent Burgess
and Victor Burleigh, two strong men, were growing
actually chummy, and Trench declared he was glad they
had decided to quit playing marbles for keeps and hiding
each other’s caps.
And now the springtime of the year
was on the beautiful Walnut Valley. Elinor and
Dennie, Trench, “Limpy,” the crippled student,
and Victor Burleigh were all on the home-stretch of
their senior year. One more June Commencement
day and Sunrise would know them no more. Beyond
all this there was nothing new at Lagonda Ledge until
suddenly the white-haired woman was up at Pigeon Place,
again, a fact known only to old Bond Saxon and little
Bug, who saw her leave the train. The little
blue smoke-twist was again rising lazily in the warm
May air, and somebody was systematically robbing houses
in town, and Bond Saxon was often drunk and hiding
away from sight. A May storm sent the Walnut
booming down the valley, bank full, cutting off traffic
at the town bridge, but the days that followed were
a joy. A tenderly green world it was now, all
blossom-decked, and blown across by the gentle May
zéphyrs, with nothing harsh nor cruel in it,
unless the rushing river down below the shallows might
seem so. The Kickapoo Corral, luxuriant with flowers,
and springing grass, and May green foliage, told nothing
of the old-time siege and sorrow of Swift Elk and
the Fawn of the Morning Light.
On the night after the storm Professor
Burgess stopped at the Saxon House.
“Where is your father, Dennie?” he asked.
“He went up north to help somebody
out of the mud and water, I suppose,” Dennie
replied. “He is the kindest neighbor, and
he has been trying to to keep straight.
He told me when he left that this night’s work
was to be a work of redemption for him. He may
get stronger some time.”
In his heart Burgess knew better.
He had no faith in the old man’s will power,
and the burden of a hidden crime he knew would but
increase its weight with time, and drag Bond down
at last. But Dennie need not suffer now.
“Will you go with me down to
the old Corral tomorrow afternoon, Dennie? I
want some plants that grow there. I’m studying
nature along with Greek,” he said, smiling.
“Of course, if it is fair,”
Dennie replied, the pretty color blooming deeper in
her cheeks.
“Oh, we go fair or foul.
You remember we fought it out coming home from there
once.”
Meanwhile Bond Saxon was hurrying
north on his work of redemption. At the bend
in the river he found Tom Gresh sitting on the flat
stone slab. The light was gleaming through the
shrubbery of the little cottage, and the homey sounds
of evening and the twitter of late-coming birds were
in the air.
“What are you here for, Gresh?”
Bond asked, hoarsely. “I thought you had
left for good.”
The villainous-looking outlaw drew
a flask from his pocket.
“Have a drink, Saxon. Take
the whole bottle,” and he thrust it into the
old man’s hands.
Bond wavered a moment, then flung
it far into the foamy floods of the Walnut.
“Not any more. You shall
not get me drunk again while you rob and kill.”
“You did the killing for me
once. Won’t you do it again?” Gresh
snarled.
Bond clinched his fists but did not strike.
“What are you after now?”
he asked. “You are through with the Burleighs;
Vic settled you and you know it.”
Even with the words the clutch of
Vic’s fingers on the outlaw’s throat
seemed to choke him now.
“If my last Burleigh is gone,”
he growled with an oath, “I’m not done
yet. There’s Elinor Wream. Don’t
forget that her mother was my adopted sister.
Don’t forget that my old foster father cut me
off without a cent and gave her all his money.
That’s why Nathan Wream married her. He
wanted her money for colleges.” The sneer
on the man’s face was diabolical. “I
can hit the old man through Elinor, and I’ll
do it some time, and that’s not the only blow
that I can strike here, and I am going to finish this
thing now.” He pointed toward the cottage
where the unprotected woman sat alone. “Twice
I’ve nerved myself to do it and been fooled
each time. One October day you were here drunk.
I could have laid it on you easy, and maybe fixed
Fenneben too, if a little child’s voice hadn’t
scared me stiff. And the day of the big football
game you wouldn’t get drunk and she must go
down to that game just to look once at Lloyd Fenneben.
I meant to finish her that day. This is the third
and last time now. There is not even a dog to
protect her.”
Bond Saxon had been a huge fellow
in his best days, and now he summoned all the powers
nature had left to him.
“Tom Gresh,” he cried,
“in my infernal weakness you made me a drunken
beast, who took the life of an innocent man you wanted
out of your way. You thought, you fool, that
she might care for you then. I’ve carried
the curse of that deed on my soul night and day.
I’ll wipe it partly away now by saving her life
from you. So surely as tonight, tomorrow, or
ever you try to harm her, I’ll not show you the
mercy Vic Burleigh showed you once.”
Strange forms the guardian angel takes!
Hence we entertain it unawares.
Of all Lagonda Ledge, old Bond Saxon,
standing between a woman and the peril of her life,
looked least angelic. Gresh understood him and
turned first in fawning and tempting trickery to his
adversary. But Saxon stood his ground. Then
the outlaw raged in fury, not daring to strike now,
because he knew Bond’s strength. And still
the old man was unmoved. A life saved for the
life he had taken was steeling his soul to courage.
At last in the dim light, Gresh stood
motionless a minute, then he struck his parting blow.
“All right, Bond Saxon, play
protector all you want to, but it’s a short
game for you. The sheriff is out of town tonight,
but tomorrow afternoon he will get back to Lagonda
Ledge. Tomorrow afternoon I go with all my proofs Oh,
I’ve got ’em. And you, Bond Saxon,
will be behind the bars for your crime, done not so
many years ago, and your honorable daughter, disgraced
forever by you, can shift for herself. I’ve
nothing to lose; why should I protect you?”
He leaped down the bank into the swiftly
flowing river, and, swimming easily to the farther
side, he disappeared in the underbrush.
The next afternoon, somebody remembered
that Bond Saxon had crossed the bridge and plunged
into the overflow of the river around the west end.
But Bond had been drunk much of late and nobody approached
him when he was drunk. How could Lagonda Ledge
know the agony of the old man’s soul as he splashed
across the Walnut waters and floundered up the narrow
glen to the cave? Or how, for Dennie’s sake,
he had begged on his knees for mercy that should save
his daughter’s name? Or how harder than
the stone of the ledges, that the trickling water
through slow-dragging centuries has worn away, was
the stony heart of the creature who denied him?
And only Victor Burleigh had power to picture the struggle
that must have followed in that cavern, and beyond
the wall into the blind black passages leading at
last to the bluff above the river, where, clinched
in deadly combat, the two men, fighting still, fell
headlong into the Walnut floods.
Down at the shallows Professor Burgess
and Dennie had found the waters too deep to reach
the Kickapoo Corral, so they strolled along the bluff
watching the river rippling merrily in the fall of
the afternoon sunshine. And brightly, too, the
sunshine fell on Dennie Saxon’s rippling hair,
recalling to Vincent Burgess’ memory the woodland
camp fire and the old legend told in the October twilight
and the flickering flames lighting Dennie’s
face and the wavy folds of her sunny hair.
But even as he remembered, a cry up
stream came faintly, once and no more, while, grappling
still, two forms were borne down by the swift current
to the bend above the whirlpool. Dennie and Vincent
sprang to the very edge of the bluff, powerless to
save, as Tom Gresh and Bond Saxon were swept around
the curve below the Corral. Across the shallows
they struggled for a footing, but the undertow carried
them on toward the fatal pool.
A shriek from the bank came to Bond
Saxon’s ears, and he looked up and saw the two
reaching out vain hands to him.
“Your oath, Vincent; your oath!”
he cried in agonizing tones.
Then Vincent Burgess put one arm about
Dennie Saxon and drew her close to him and lifted
up his right hand high above him in token to the drowning
man of his promise, under heaven, to keep that oath
forever.
A look of joy swept over the old face
in the water, his struggling ceased, and once more
tribute was paid to the grim Chieftain of Lagonda’s
Pool.
They said about town the next day
that it was the peacefulest face ever seen below a
coffin lid. And, remembering only his many acts
of neighborly kindness, they forgave and forgot his
weaknesses, while to the few who knew his life-tragedy
came the assuring hope that the forgiving mercy of
man is but a type of the boundless mercy of a forgiving
God.