I sat in the saddle of El Mahdi on
the hill-top beyond the bridge, and watched the day
coming through the gateway of the world. It was
a work of huge enchantment, as when, for the pleasure
of some ancient caliph, or at the taunting of some
wanton queen, a withered magus turned the ugly world
into a kingdom of the fairy, and the lolling hangers-on
started up on their elbows to see a green field spreading
through the dirty city and great trees rising above
the vanished temples, and wild roses and the sweet
dew-drenched brier trailing where the camel’s
track had just faded out, and autumn leaves strewn
along pathways of a wood, and hills behind it all
where the sunlight flooded.
It was like the mornings that came
up from the sea by the Wood Wonderful, or those that
broke smiling when the world was newly minted, mornings
that trouble the blood of the old shipwreck sunning
by the door, and move the stay-at-home to sail out
for the Cloud Islands. Full of the joy of life
was this October land.
I could almost hear the sunlight running
with a shout as it plunged in among the hickory trees
and went tumbling to the thickets of the hollow.
The mist hanging over the low meadows was a golden
web, stretched by enchanted fingers across some exquisite
country into which a man might come only through his
dreams.
I waited while the drove went by,
counting the cattle to see that none had been overlooked
in the night. The Aberdeen-Angus still held his
place in the front, and the big muley bull marched
by like a king’s governor, keeping his space
of clear road at the peril of a Homeric struggle.
I knew every one of the six hundred,
and I could have hugged each great black fellow as
he trudged past.
Jud and the Cardinal went by in the
middle of the long line and passed out of sight behind
a turn of the hill below. The giant rode slowly,
lolling in his saddle and swinging his big legs free
of the stirrups.
Then the lagging rear of the drove
trailed up, and the hunchback followed on the Bay
Eagle. He was buttoned to the chin in Roy’s
blue coat and looked for all the world like some shrivelled
old marshal of the empire, a hundred days out of Paris,
covering the retreat of the imperial army.
El Mahdi stood on the high bank by
the roadside, in among the dead blackberry briers,
and I sat with the rein under my legs and my hands
in my pockets.
The hunchback stopped his horse in
the road below me, squared himself in his saddle,
and looked up with a great supercilious grin.
“Well,” he said, “I’ll be
damn!”
“What’s the trouble?” said I.
“Humph!” he snorted, “are them britches
I see on your legs?”
“That’s what they call them,” said
I.
“Well,” said he, “when
you git home, take ’em off, an’ hand ’em
over to old Liza, an’ ask her to bring your
kilts down out of the garret. For you’re
as innocent a little codger as ever sucked his hide
full of milk.”
“What are you driving at?” I asked.
Ump shook out his long arms and folded
them around the bosom of his blue coat. “Jud
told me,” he said; “an’ the pair
of you ought to be put in a cradle with a rock-a-by-baby.
Woodford was done when that axe fell in the river,
an’ he knowed it. He was ridin’ out
when he saw you an’ Jud, an’ he said to
himself, ’God’s good to you, Rufus, my
boy; here’s a pair of little babies a long way
from their ma, an’ it ought to count you one.’
Then he lit off an’ offered to wrastle you, heads
I win an’ tails you lose, for the cake in your
pocket, an’ then he chucked you under the chin,
an’ you promised not to tell.”
The hunchback set his two fingers
against his teeth and whistled like a hawk, a long,
shrill, hissing whistle that startled the little partridges
on the sloping hillside and sent them scurrying under
the dead grass, and brought the drumming pheasant
to his feathered legs.
Then he threw his chin into the air
and squinted. “Quiller,” he piped,
with the long echo still whining in his throat, “that
whistle fooled you an’ it fooled Jud, but it
wouldn’t fool a Bob White with the shell on
its back. When the old bird hears it, she don’t
wait to see the long shadow travellin’ on the
grass, but she hollers, ’Into the weeds, boys,
if you want to save your bacon.’ An’
you ought to see the little codgers scatter.
Let it be a lesson to you, Quiller, my laddiebuck;
when you hear that whistle, light out for the tall
timber. When you’re a fightin’ the
devil, half the winnin’ ’s in the runnin’.”
Then he opened his great cavernous
mouth and began to bellow,
“Ho! ho! for the carrion
crow,
But hark to the sqawk of the
carrion hawk,”
gathered up his reins and set out
after the drove in a hand gallop, all doubled over
in his blue coat.
I got El Mahdi into the road and we
went swinging down the hill. I had a light flashed
into the deeps of Woodford, and I saw dimly how able
and how dangerous a man he was. I began to comprehend
something of the long complex formula that goes to
make up a human identity, and it was a discovery as
startling as when a fellow perched on his grandfather’s
shoulder sees through the key-hole a tangle of wheels
all going behind the white face of the clock.
I had been deftly handled by this
Woodford, and yet I had not seemed to be. He
had striven to move me to his will with a sort of masked
edging, and, failing in that, left me with the bitterness
drawn out. More than that, shrewd
and far-sighted man, taken hot against him,
I was almost won over to his star.
Under the hammering of the hard-headed
Ump, I saw Woodford in another light. But I carried
no ill will. He had jousted hard and lost, and
youth holds no post-mortems. But the flock of
night birds had not flown out into the sun. Dislodged
from one quarter, they flapped across my heart to
another ridgepole.
Woodford had been holding the blue
hills with his men, and we knew what it meant to go
up against him. But down yonder in among the Lares
of our house, one worked against us with her nimble
fingers. My heart went hard against the woman.
If she drew back from our floorboard,
there was the tongue in her head to say it. No
obligation bound her. True, we had given her of
our love freely. But it was a thing no man could
set a price on, and no man could pay, save as he told
back the coin which he had borrowed. And failing
in that coin, it was a debt beyond him.
The door to our house stood pulled
back on its hinges. Nothing barred it but the
sun. If the god Whim was piping, she could follow
to the world’s end. One might as well bow
out the woman when her blood is cooling. Against
the human heart the king’s writs have never run.
I slapped my pocket above the letter.
The current had turned and was running landward.
The evil thing cast out upon its flood was riding
back. I hoped it might sting cruelly the hand
that flung it.
I rose in my stirrups and shook my
youthful fists at the hills beyond the Gauley.
I could see the smile dying on her red mouth when one
came to say that her plans were ship-wrecked.
Then I thought of Ward, and something
fluttered in my throat. He was under the spell
of this slim, brown-haired witch. She was in his
blood, running to his finger-tips. She was on
him like the sun. Why could not the woman see
what the good God was handing down to her? It
was the treasure worth a kingdom. Did she think
to find this thing at any crossroads? Oh, she
would see. She would see. This thing was
found rarely by the luckiest, so rarely that many
an old wise man held that there was no such treasure
under the sun, and the quest of it was but a fool’s
errand.
I was a mile behind the drove, and
when I came up it had reached the borders of Woodford’s
land. Jud had thrown down the high fence, staked-and-ridered
with long chestnut rails, and the stream of cattle
was pouring through and spreading out over the great
pasture. I watched the little groups of muleys
strike out through the deep broom-sedge hollows and
the narrow bulrush marshes and the low gaps of the
good sodded hills, spying this new country, finding
where the grass was sweetest and where the water bubbled
in the old poplar trough, and what wind-sheltered
cove would be warmest to a fellow’s belly when
he lay sleeping in the sun.
Then we rode north through the Hills,
over the Gauley where the oak leaves carpeted the
ford, and the little trout darted like a beam of light,
and the old fish-hawk sat on the hanging limb of the
dead beech-tree with his shoulders to his ears and
his beak drooping, like some worn-out voluptuary brooding
on his sins.
On we went through the deep wooded
lanes where the redbird stepped about in his long
crimson coat, jerring at the wren, who worked in the
deep thicket as though the Master Builder had gone
away to kingdom come and left her behind to finish
the world.
We came to many a familiar landmark
of my golden babyhood, the enchanted grove on the
Seely Hill where I had hunted fabled monsters and gone
whooping down among the cattle, the Greathouse meadow
where Red Mike pitched me out of the saddle when he
grew tired of having his bit jerked, and I sat up
in my little petticoats and solemnly demanded that
Jourdan should cut his head off, a thing the old man
promised on his sacred honour when he could borrow
the ax of the man in the moon; the high gate-post
by the cattle-scales where I perched bareheaded in
a calico dress and watched old Bedford make his last
fight against human government, Bedford, a bull of
mysterious notions, that would kill you if he found
you walking in his field, and lick your stirrup if
you came riding on a horse.
It was now a country of rich meadow-land,
and blue-grass hills rising to long, flat ridges that
the hickories skirted; but in that other time it was
a land of wonders, where in any summer morning, if
a fellow set out on his chubby legs, he might come
to enchanted forests, lost rivers, halcyon kingdoms
guarded by some spell where the roving fairies hunted
the great bumblebee to the doorway of his house, and
slew him on its sill and carried off his treasure.
Through the fringe of locust bushes
along the roadside we caught the first glimpse of
home, and the three horses pricked up their ears and
swung out in a longer trot. We clattered down
the wide lane and tumbled out of the saddles at the
gate, leaving the Bay Eagle standing proudly like
some victorious general, and the Cardinal like a tired
giant who has done his work, and El Mahdi with his
grey head high above the gate looking away as of old
to the far-off mountains as though he wondered vaguely
if the friend or the message or the enemy would never
come.
We marched over the flagstone walk
and into the house and up the stairway. Old Liza
flung us some warning through a window to the garden,
which we failed to catch and bellowed back a welcome.
Then we gained the door to the library, threw it open
and went crowding in.
A step beyond that door we halted
with a jerk. Ward was lounging in a big chair
with a pillow behind his shoulder, and over by the
open window where the sun danced along the casement
was Cynthia Carper setting a sheaf of roses in a jar.
Ward looked us down to the floor,
and then he laughed until the great chair tottered
on its legs. “Cynthia,” he cried,
“will you drop a courtesy to the gallant troopers?”
She spun around with a fear kindling in her eyes.
“The cattle!” she said. “Did
you get them over?”
I had the situation in my fingers,
and I felt myself grow taller with it. “Yes,”
I said harshly. Then I put my hand into my pocket,
drew out the letter and handed it to her with a mocking
bow. “I was asked to carry this letter
back to you, and say that my brother’s word is
good enough for Nicholas Marsh.”
She took the envelope and stood twisting
it in her slim fingers, while a light came up slowly
in the land beyond her eyelids.
Ward held out his hand for the letter.
And then I looked to see her flutter like a pinned
fly. She grew neither red nor white, but crossed
to his chair and put the letter in his hand.
He tore off the envelope and ran his
eyes down the written page. “Your order
for the money!” he cried; “this was not
mentioned in our plan. What is this?”
“That,” said the straight
young woman, “is a field order of the commanding
general issued without the knowledge of the war department.”
Then I saw the whole underpinning
of the scheme, and my heart stumbled and went groping
about the four walls of its house. I tramped out
of the room and down the stairway to the big window
at the first landing. I stopped and leaned out
over the walnut casement. El Mahdi stood as I
had left him, staring at the far-off wall of the Hills;
and below me in the garden old Liza stooped over her
vines, not a day older, it seemed to me, than when
I galloped at her long apron-strings on Alhambra the
Son of the Wind.