The autumn in the Hills is but the
afternoon of summer. The hour of the new guest
is not yet. Still the heat lies on the earth and
runs bubbling in the water. The little maid trots
barefoot and the urchin goes a-swimming in the elm-hole
by the corner of the meadow. Still the tender
grass grows at the roots of the dead crop, and the
little purple flowers dimple naked in the brown pasture.
Still that Pied Piper of Hamelin, the everlasting
Pan, flutes in the deep hollows, squatted down in the
broom-sedge. And still the world is a land of
unending summer, of unfading flowers, of undying youthfulness.
Only for an hour or so, far in the deep night does
the distant breath of the Frost King come to haunt
the land, and then when the sun flings away his white
samite coverlid it is summer again, with the earth
shining and the water warm.
It was hot mid-morning when the long
drove trailed down toward Horton’s Ferry.
The sweat was beginning to trickle in the hair of the
fat cattle. Here and there through the herd a
quarrelsome fellow was beginning to show the effect
of his fighting and the heat. His eyes were a
bit watery in his dusty face, and the tip of his tongue
was slipping at his lips. The warm sun was getting
into the backs of us all. I had stripped off my
coat and carried it thrown across the horn of the saddle.
Ump rode a mile away in the far front of the drove,
keeping a few steers moving in the lead, while Jud
shifted his horse up and down the long line. I
followed on El Mahdi, lolling in the big saddle.
Far away, I could hear Ump shout at some perverse
steer climbing up against the high road bank, or the
crack of Jud’s driving whip drifted back to me.
The lagging bullocks settled to the rear, and El Mahdi
held them to the mark like a good sergeant of raw
militiamen.
Ump and his leaders had reached the
open common by the ferry when the long line stopped,
and I saw Jud go to the front in a gallop. I waited
for the column to go on, but it did not, and I began
to drive the cattle in, bunching them up in the road.
Presently Jud came down into the turnpike
and shouted to me. Then he dismounted, tied the
reins around the horn of the saddle, and started the
Cardinal to the rear. The trained cattle-horse
knew very well what he was to do, and picked his way
through the steers until he reached me. Then
he turned in the road, and I left him to watch the
drove while I went to the front to see what the trouble
was.
Both the Cardinal and the Bay Eagle
were trained to this business and guarded the rear
of the drove like dogs. The rider might lounge
under a shade-tree, kicking up his heels to the sky.
For this work El Mahdi was a trifle too eccentric,
and we did not trust him.
Jud was gone when I reached the little
bank where the road turned into the common of the
ferry. I passed through the van of the cattle
as they stood idly on the sodded open swinging their
long tails with comfortable indifference. Then
I came out where I could see the bank of the river
and the blue smoke trailing up from the chimney of
the ferrymen.
Facing the north at the front door
of this house, Ump sat on the Bay Eagle, the reins
down on the mare’s neck and the hunchback’s
long hands crossed and resting on the horn of his
saddle.
The attitude of the man struck me
with a great fear. About him lurked the atmosphere
of overwhelming defeat. The shadow of some mighty
disaster loomed over against the almost tragic figure
of the motionless hunchback sitting a horse of stone.
In such moments of strain the human
mind has a mysterious capacity for trifles. I
noticed a wisp of dry sedge bloom clinging to the man’s
shoulder, a flimsy detail of the great picture.
The hunchback made no sign when I
rode by him. What he had seen was still there
beyond him in the sun. I had eyes; I could see.
On a stone by the landing sat one
of the ferrymen, Danel, his hands in the pockets of
his brown homespun coat. Neither Jud nor the other
brother was anywhere in sight. I looked up at
the steel cable above the man’s head. It
ended twenty feet away in the water.
I arose in the stirrups and searched
the bank for the boat. It was gone. The
Valley River ran full, a quarter of a mile of glistening
yellow water, and no way across it but the way of
the bass or the way of the heron.
The human mind has caves into which
it can crawl, pits where it hides itself when it wishes
to escape; dark holes leading back under the crags
of the abyss. This explains the dazed appearance
of one who is told suddenly of a disaster. The
mind has crawled up into these fastnesses. For
the time the distance is great between it and the body
of the man through which it manifests itself.
An enemy has threatened, and the master has gone to
hide himself. The mind is a coward, afraid always
of the not-mind. Like the frightened child, it
must be given time to creep back to its abandoned
plaything.
The full magnitude of this disaster
to the ferry came slowly, as when one smooths out
a crumpled map. In the great stillness I heard
a wren twittering in the reeds along the bank, and
I noted a green grasshopper, caught in the current,
swimming for his life.
Then I saw it all to the very end,
and I sickened. I felt as though some painless
accident had removed all the portion of my body below
the diaphragm. It was physical sickness.
I doubled over and linked my fingers across my stomach,
my head down almost to the saddle. Marks and
his crew had done the work for us. The cable had
been cut, and the boat had drifted away or been stolen.
We were on the south side of the Valley River twirling
our thumbs, while they rode back to their master with
the answer, “It is done.”
Then, suddenly, I recalled the singing
which I had heard in the night. It was no dream,
that singing. Peppers had stolen the boat and
floated it away with the current. I could see
Cynthia laughing with Hawk Rufe. Then I saw Ward,
and the sickness left me, and the tears came streaming
through my eyes. I put my arms down on the horn
of the saddle and sobbed.
Remember, I was only a boy. Men
old in the business of life become accustomed to loss;
accustomed to fingers snatching away the gain which
they have almost reached up to; accustomed to the staggering
blow delivered by the Unforeseen. Like gamblers,
they learn finally to look with indifference on the
mask that may disguise the angel, or the death; on
the curtain of to-morrow that may cover an Eldorado
or a tomb. They come to see that the eternal
forces are unknowable, following laws unknowable,
from the seed sprouting in a handful of earth to the
answer of a woman, “I do not love you.”
But the child does not know the truth.
He has been lied to from the cradle; taught a set
of catchwords, a set of wise saws, a set of moral
rules, logarithms by which the equation of life could
be worked out, all arbitrary, and many grossly erroneous.
He is led to believe that his father or the schoolmaster
has grasped the scheme of human life and can explain
it to him.
The nurse says it will come out all
right, as though the Unforeseen could be determined
by a secret in her possession. He is satisfied
that these wise ones know. Then he meets the
eternal forces, an event threatens, he marshals his
catchwords, his wise saws, his moral rules, and they
fail him. He retires, beaten, as the magicians
of Egypt retired before God.
His father or the nurse or the schoolmaster
explains with some outlandish fairy story, shifts
the catchword or the saw or the rule, as a physician
shifts the prescription of a consumptive, and returns
him to the tremendous Reality. Again he spreads
his hands and cries the sacred formula, the eternal
forces advance, he stands fast and is flung bleeding
to the wall, or he flees. Afraid, hidden in some
cranny of the rocks, nursing his hurt, the child begins
to see the truth. This passing from the world
as it should be to the world as it is nearly kills
him. It is like the riving of timber.
Presently I heard Jud speak to me
from behind El Mahdi. The full strong voice of
the man was like a dash of cold water in the face.
I sat up; he bade me join Ump and himself to discuss
what should be done, then turned around and went back
to the house.
I slipped down from El Mahdi, washed
my face in the river, and wiped it dry on my sleeve.
Then I climbed into the saddle and rode back to where
the little group stood before the door.
There were Ump and Jud, the two ferrymen,
and their ancient mother. Danel was describing
the catastrophe in a low voice, as one might describe
the last illness of a man whose corpse was waiting
in his house for burial.
“We set Twiggs over pretty late.
Then there wasn’t anybody else. So we tied
up the boat an’ went to bed. Mother sleeps
by the fire. Mother has rheumatiz so she don’t
sleep very sound. About midnight she called me.
She was sitting up in the bed with a shawl around her.
‘Danel,’ she said, ’there’s
something lumbering around the boat. Hadn’t
you better slip down an’ see about it?’
I told mother I reckoned it was a swimmin’ tree.
Sometimes they hit against the boat when they go down.
Then I waked Mart up an’ told him mother heard
somethin’ bumpin’ against the boat, an’
I reckoned it was a swimmin’ tree. Mart
was sleepy an’ he said he reckoned it was.
Then I turned over an’ went to sleep again.
When we got out this mornin’, the cable was
broke loose an’ the boat swum off. We s’pose,”
here he paused and looked gravely at his brother, who
as gravely nodded his head, “we s’pose
the cable pulled loose somehow.”
“It was cut in two,” said I.
The ferryman screwed his head around
on his neck as though he had not heard correctly.
“Did you say ’cut in two’?”
he repeated.
“Yes,” said I, “cut in two.
That cable was cut in two.”
The man began to rub his chin with
his hand. “I reckon not, Quiller,”
he said. “I reckon there ain’t no
person ornery enough to do that.”
“It might be,” piped the
old woman, thrusting in. “There’s
been sich. Oncet, a long time ago, when
your pap was a boy, goin’ girlin’ some,
about when he begun a settin’ up to me, a feller
stole the ferryboat, but he was a terrible gallus
feller.”
“Granny,” said Ump, “the
devil ain’t dead by a long shot. There is
rapscallions lickin’ plates over the Valley that’s
meaner than gar-broth. They could show the Old
Scratch tricks that would make his eyes stick out
so you could knock ’em off with a clapboard.”
Danel protested. He pointed out
that neither he nor his brother had ever done any
man a wrong, and therefore no man would wrong them.
It was one of those rules which children discover
are strangely not true. He said the ferry was
for the good of all, and therefore all would preserve
rather than injure that good. Another wise saw,
verbally sound, but going to pieces under the pitiless
logic of fact.
This man, who had spent his life as
one might spend it grinding at a mill, now, when he
came to reckon with the natures of men, did it like
a child. Ump cut him short. “Danel,”
he said, “you talk like a meetin’-house.
Old Christian cut that cable with a cold chisel, an’
Black Malan or Peppers stole your boat. They have
nothing against you. They wanted to stop us from
crossin’ with these cattle, an’ I guess
they’ve done it.”
Then he turned to me. The vapourings
of the ferryman were of no importance. “Quiller,”
he said, “we’re in the devil’s own
mess. What do you think about it?”
“I don’t know,” I answered; “what
does Jud think?”
The face of the giant was covered
with perspiration standing in beads. He clenched
his hands and clamped his wet fists against the legs
of his breeches. “God damn ’em!”
he said. It was the most terrible oath that I
have ever heard. Then he closed his mouth.
Ump looked at the man, then rode his horse over to
me.
“Quiller,” he said slowly,
“we’re gone up unless we can swim the drove
across, an’ it’s a hell of a risky job.
Do you see that big eddy?” and he pointed his
finger to the middle of the Valley River where the
yellow water swung around in a great circle.
“If the steers bunched up in that hole, they’d
drown like rats.”
I looked at the wide water and it
scared me. “Ump,” I said, “how
long could they stay in there without giving out?”
“They wouldn’t give out,”
replied the hunchback, “if we could keep ’em
above the eddy. A steer can swim as long as a
horse if he ain’t crowded. If we could
keep ’em goin’ in a long loop, we could
cross ’em. If they bunched up, it would
be good-bye, pap.”
“Do you think they would grind
in there if they happened to bunch?” said I.
“To kindlin’,” responded
Ump, “if they ever got at it good.”
“Ump,” I said, looking
him squarely in the face, “I’m afraid of
it.”
The man chewed his thin upper lip.
“So am I, Quiller,” he answered. “But
there ain’t much choosin’; we either swim
’em or we go up the spout.”
“Well,” said I, “do we do it, or
not do it?”
The hunchback studied the river.
“Quiller,” he said finally, “if we
knowed about that current ”
I cut him short. “I’ll
find out about the current,” I said. Then
I threw away my hat, pitched my coat down on the sod
and gathered up my bridle reins.
“Wait!” cried the hunchback.
Then he turned to Jud. “Wash your face in
the tub by the spout yonder, an’ bring up your
horse. Take Danel with you. Open Tolbert’s
fence an’ put the cattle in the grove. Then
come back here. Quiller’s the lightest;
he’s goin’ to try the current.”
Then he swung around and clucked to
the mare. I spoke to El Mahdi and we rode down
toward the river. On the bank Ump stopped and
looked out across the water, deep, wide, muddy.
Then he turned to me.
“Hadn’t you better ride
the Bay Eagle?” he said. “She knows
more in a minute than any horse that was ever born.”
“What’s wrong with El Mahdi?” I
said, piqued a little.
“He ain’t steady,”
responded the hunchback; “an’ he knows
more tricks than a meetin’-house rat. Sometimes
he swims an’ sometimes he don’t swim,
an’ you can’t tell till you git in.”
“This,” said I, “is
a case of ‘have to.’ If he don’t
like the top, there’s ground at the bottom.”
Then I kicked the false prophet in the flanks with
my heels. The horse was standing on the edge of
the sodded bank. When my heels struck him, he
jumped as far as he could out into the river.
There was a great splash. The
horse dropped like a stone, his legs stiff as ramrods,
his neck doubled under and his back bowed. It
was a bucking jump and meant going to the bottom.
I felt the water rush up and close over my head.
I clamped my legs to the horse, held
my breath, and went down in the saddle. I thought
we should never reach the bottom of that river.
The current tugged, trying to pull me loose and whirl
me away. The horse under me felt like a millstone.
The weight of water pressed like some tremendous thumb.
Then we struck the rock bottom and began to come up.
The sensation changed. I seemed now to be thrust
violently from below against a weight pressing on
my head, as though I were being used by some force
under me to drive the containing cork out of the bottle
in which we were enclosed. I began to be troubled
for breath, my head rang. The distance seemed
interminable. Then we popped up on the top of
the river, and I filled with the blessed air to the
very tips of my fingers.
The horse blew the water out of his
nostrils and doubled his long legs. I thought
he was going down again, and, seizing the top of the
saddle horn, I loosed my feet in the stirrups.
If El Mahdi returned to the deeps of that river, he
would go by himself.
He stretched out his grey neck, sank
until the water came running over the saddle, and
then began to swim with long, graceful strokes of his
iron legs as though it were the easiest thing in the
world.