For their first bridal camp he chose
an island. Long weeks beforehand he had thought
of this place, and set his heart upon it. Once
established in his mind, the thought became a picture
that he saw waking and sleeping. He had stopped
at the island many times alone, and in all seasons;
but at this special moment of the year he liked it
best. Often he had added several needless miles
to his journey that he might finish the day at this
point, might catch the trout for his supper beside
a certain rock upon its edge, and fall asleep hearing
the stream on either side of him.
Always for him the first signs that
he had gained the true world of the mountains began
at the island. The first pine trees stood upon
it; the first white columbine grew in their shade;
and it seemed to him that he always met here the first
of the true mountain air-the coolness and
the new fragrance. Below, there were only the
cottonwoods, and the knolls and steep foot-hills with
their sage-brush, and the great warm air of the plains;
here at this altitude came the definite change.
Out of the lower country and its air he would urge
his horse upward, talking to him aloud, and promising
fine pasture in a little while.
Then, when at length he had ridden
abreast of the island pines, he would ford to the
sheltered circle of his camp-ground, throw off the
saddle and blanket from the horse’s hot, wet
back, throw his own clothes off, and, shouting, spring
upon the horse bare, and with a rope for bridle, cross
with him to the promised pasture. Here there was
a pause in the mountain steepness, a level space of
open, green with thick grass. Riding his horse
to this, he would leap off him, and with the flat of
his hand give him a blow that cracked sharp in the
stillness and sent the horse galloping and gambolling
to his night’s freedom. And while the animal
rolled in the grass, often his master would roll also,
and stretch, and take the grass in his two hands,
and so draw his body along, limbering his muscles
after a long ride. Then he would slide into the
stream below his fishing place, where it was deep enough
for swimming, and cross back to his island, and dressing
again, fit his rod together and begin his casting.
After the darkness had set in, there would follow
the lying drowsily with his head upon his saddle, the
camp-fire sinking as he watched it, and sleep approaching
to the murmur of the water on either side of him.
So many visits to this island had
he made, and counted so many hours of revery spent
in its haunting sweetness, that the spot had come to
seem his own. It belonged to no man, for it was
deep in the unsurveyed and virgin wilderness; neither
had he ever made his camp here with any man, nor shared
with any the intimate delight which the place gave
him. Therefore for many weeks he had planned
to bring her here after their wedding, upon the day
itself, and show her and share with her his pines
and his fishing rock. He would bid her smell the
first true breath of the mountains, would watch with
her the sinking camp-fire, and with her listen to
the water as it flowed round the island.
Until this wedding plan, it had by
no means come home to him how deep a hold upon him
the island had taken. He knew that he liked to
go there, and go alone; but so little was it his way
to scan himself, his mind, or his feelings (unless
some action called for it), that he first learned
his love of the place through his love of her.
But he told her nothing of it. After the thought
of taking her there came to him, he kept his island
as something to let break upon her own eyes, lest by
looking forward she should look for more than the
reality.
Hence, as they rode along, when the
houses of the town were shrunk to dots behind them,
and they were nearing the gates of the foot-hills,
she asked him questions. She hoped they would
find a camp a long way from the town. She could
ride as many miles as necessary. She was not tired.
Should they not go on until they found a good place
far enough within the solitude? Had he fixed
upon any? And at the nod and the silence that
he gave her for reply, she knew that he had thoughts
and intentions which she must wait to learn.
They passed through the gates of the
foot-hills, following the stream up among them.
The outstretching fences and the widely trodden dust
were no more. Now and then they rose again into
view of the fields and houses down in the plain below.
But as the sum of the miles and hours grew, they were
glad to see the road less worn with travel, and the
traces of men passing from sight. The ploughed
and planted country, that quilt of many-colored harvests
which they had watched yesterday, lay in another world
from this where they rode now. No hand but nature’s
had sown these crops of yellow flowers, these willow
thickets and tall cottonwoods. Somewhere in a
passage of red rocks the last sign of wagon wheels
was lost, and after this the trail became a wild mountain
trail. But it was still the warm air of the plains,
bearing the sage-brush odor and not the pine, that
they breathed; nor did any forest yet cloak the shapes
of the tawny hills among which they were ascending.
Twice the steepness loosened the pack ropes, and he
jumped down to tighten them, lest the horses should
get sore backs. And twice the stream that they
followed went into deep canyons, so that for a while
they parted from it. When they came back to its
margin for the second time, he bade her notice how
its water had become at last wholly clear. To
her it had seemed clear enough all along, even in
the plain above the town. But now she saw that
it flowed lustrously with flashes; and she knew the
soil had changed to mountain soil. Lower down,
the water had carried the slightest cloud of alkali,
and this had dulled the keen edge of its transparence.
Full solitude was around them now, so that their words
grew scarce, and when they spoke it was with low voices.
They began to pass nooks and points favorable for
camping, with wood and water at hand, and pasture for
the horses. More than once as they reached such
places, she thought he must surely stop; but still
he rode on in advance of her (for the trail was narrow)
until, when she was not thinking of it, he drew rein
and pointed.
“What?” she asked timidly.
“The pines,” he answered.
She looked, and saw the island, and
the water folding it with ripples and with smooth
spaces The sun was throwing upon the pine boughs a
light of deepening red gold, and the shadow of the
fishing rock lay over a little bay of quiet water
and sandy shore. In this forerunning glow of
the sunset, the pasture spread like emerald; for the
dry touch of summer had not yet come near it.
He pointed upward to the high mountains which they
had approached, and showed her where the stream led
into their first unfoldings.
“To-morrow we shall be among them,” said
he.
“Then,” she murmured to him, “to-night
is here?”
He nodded for answer, and she gazed
at the island and understood why he had not stopped
before; nothing they had passed had been so lovely
as this place.
There was room in the trail for them
to go side by side; and side by side they rode to
the ford and crossed, driving the packhorses in front
of them, until they came to the sheltered circle, and
he helped her down where the soft pine needles lay.
They felt each other tremble, and for a moment she
stood hiding her head upon his breast. Then she
looked round at the trees, and the shores, and the
flowing stream, and he heard her whispering how beautiful
it was.
“I am glad,” he said,
still holding her. “This is how I have dreamed
it would happen. Only it is better than my dreams.”
And when she pressed him in silence, he finished,
“I have meant we should see our first sundown
here, and our first sunrise.”
She wished to help him take the packs
from their horses, to make the camp together with
him, to have for her share the building of the fire,
and the cooking. She bade him remember his promise
to her that he would teach her how to loop and draw
the pack-ropes, and the swing-ropes on the pack-saddles,
and how to pitch a tent. Why might not the first
lesson be now? But he told her that this should
be fulfilled later. This night he was to do all
himself. And he sent her away until he should
have camp ready for them. He bade her explore
the island, or take her horse and ride over to the
pasture, where she could see the surrounding hills
and the circle of seclusion that they made.
“The whole world is far from
here,” he said. And so she obeyed him, and
went away to wander about in their hiding-place; nor
was she to return, he told her, until he called her.
Then at once, as soon as she was gone,
he fell to. The packs and saddles came off the
horses, which he turned loose upon the pasture on the
main land. The tent was unfolded first.
He had long seen in his mind where it should go, and
how its white shape would look beneath the green of
the encircling pines. The ground was level in
the spot he had chosen, without stones or roots, and
matted with the fallen needles of the pines.
If there should come any wind, or storm of rain, the
branches were thick overhead, and around them on three
sides tall rocks and undergrowth made a barrier.
He cut the pegs for the tent, and the front pole,
stretching and tightening the rope, one end of it pegged
down and one round a pine tree. When the tightening
rope had lifted the canvas to the proper height from
the ground, he spread and pegged down the sides and
back, leaving the opening so that they could look out
upon the fire and a piece of the stream beyond.
He cut tufts of young pine and strewed them thickly
for a soft floor in the tent, and over them spread
the buffalo hide and the blankets. At the head
he placed the neat sack of her belongings. For
his own he made a shelter with crossed poles and a
sheet of canvas beyond the first pines. He built
the fire where its smoke would float outward from
the trees and the tent, and near it he stood the cooking
things and his provisions, and made this first supper
ready in the twilight. He had brought much with
him; but for ten minutes he fished, catching trout
enough. When at length she came riding over the
stream at his call, there was nothing for her to do
but sit and eat at the table he had laid. They
sat together, watching the last of the twilight and
the gentle oncoming of the dusk. The final after-glow
of day left the sky, and through the purple which
followed it came slowly the first stars, bright and
wide apart. They watched the spaces between them
fill with more stars, while near them the flames and
embers of their fire grew brighter. Then he sent
her to the tent while he cleaned the dishes and visited
the horses to see that they did not stray from the
pasture. Some while after the darkness was fully
come, he rejoined her. All had been as he had
seen it in his thoughts beforehand: the pines
with the setting sun upon them, the sinking camp-fire,
and now the sound of the water as it flowed murmuring
by the shores of the island.
The tent opened to the east, and from
it they watched together their first sunrise.
In his thoughts he had seen this morning beforehand
also: the waking, the gentle sound of the water
murmuring ceaselessly, the growing day, the vision
of the stream, the sense that the world was shut away
far from them. So did it all happen, except that
he whispered to her again:- “Better
than my dreams.”
They saw the sunlight begin upon a
hilltop; and presently came the sun itself, and lakes
of warmth flowed into the air, slowly filling the
green solitude. Along the island shores the ripples
caught flashes from the sun.
“I am going into the stream,”
he said to her; and rising, he left her in the tent.
This was his side of the island, he had told her last
night; the other was hers, where he had made a place
for her to bathe. When he was gone, she found
it, walking through the trees and rocks to the water’s
edge. And so, with the island between them, the
two bathed in the cold stream. When he came back,
he found her already busy at their camp. The
blue smoke of the fire was floating out from the trees,
loitering undispersed in the quiet air, and she was
getting their breakfast. She had been able to
forestall him because he had delayed long at his dressing,
not willing to return to her unshaven. She looked
at his eyes that were clear as the water he had leaped
into, and at his soft silk neckerchief, knotted with
care.
“Do not let us ever go away
from here!” she cried, and ran to him as he
came. They sat long together at breakfast, breathing
the morning breath of the earth that was fragrant
with woodland moisture and with the pines. After
the meal he could not prevent her helping him make
everything clean. Then, by all customs of mountain
journeys, it was time they should break camp and be
moving before the heat of the day. But first,
they delayed for no reason, save that in these hours
they so loved to do nothing. And next, when with
some energy he got upon his feet and declared he must
go and drive the horses in, she asked, Why? Would
it not be well for him to fish here, that they might
be sure of trout at their nooning? And though
he knew that where they should stop for noon, trout
would be as sure as here, he took this chance for more
delay.
She went with him to his fishing rock,
and sat watching him. The rock was tall, higher
than his head when he stood. It jutted out halfway
across the stream, and the water flowed round it in
quick foam, and fell into a pool. He caught several
fish; but the sun was getting high, and after a time
it was plain the fish had ceased to rise.
Yet still he stood casting in silence,
while she sat by and watched him. Across the
stream, the horses wandered or lay down in their pasture.
At length he said with half a sigh that perhaps they
ought to go.
“Ought?” she repeated softly.
“If we are to get anywhere to-day,” he
answered.
“Need we get anywhere?” she asked.
Her question sent delight through
him like a flood. “Then you do not want
to move camp to-day?” said he.
She shook her head.
At this he laid down his rod and came
and sat by her. “I am very glad we shall
not go till to-morrow,” he murmured.
“Not to-morrow,” she said.
“Nor next day. Nor any day until we must.”
And she stretched her hands out to the island and the
stream exclaiming, “Nothing can surpass this!”
He took her in his arms. “You
feel about it the way I do,” he almost whispered.
“I could not have hoped there’d be two
of us to care so much.”
Presently, while they remained without
speaking by the pool, came a little wild animal swimming
round the rock from above. It had not seen them,
nor suspected their presence. They held themselves
still, watching its alert head cross through the waves
quickly and come down through the pool, and so swim
to the other side. There it came out on a small
stretch of sand, turned its gray head and its pointed
black nose this way and that, never seeing them, and
then rolled upon its back in the warm dry sand.
After a minute of rolling, it got on its feet again,
shook its fur, and trotted away.
Then the bridegroom husband opened
his shy heart deep down.
“I am like that fellow,”
he said dreamily. “I have often done the
same.” And stretching slowly his arms and
legs, he lay full length upon his back, letting his
head rest upon her. “If I could talk his
animal language, I could talk to him,” he pursued.
“And he would say to me: ’Come and
roll on the sands. Where’s the use of fretting?
What’s the gain in being a man? Come roll
on the sands with me.’ That’s what
he would say.” The Virginian paused.
“But,” he continued, “the trouble
is, I am responsible. If that could only be forgot
forever by you and me!” Again he paused and
went on, always dreamily. “Often when I
have camped here, it has made me want to become the
ground, become the water, become the trees, mix with
the whole thing. Not know myself from it.
Never unmix again. Why is that?” he demanded,
looking at her. “What is it? You don’t
know, nor I don’t. I wonder would everybody
feel that way here?”
“I think not everybody,” she answered.
“No; none except the ones who
understand things they can’t put words to.
But you did!” He put up a hand and touched her
softly. “You understood about this place.
And that’s what makes it-makes you
and me as we are now-better than my dreams.
And my dreams were pretty good.”
He sighed with supreme quiet and happiness,
and seemed to stretch his length closer to the earth.
And so he lay, and talked to her as he had never talked
to any one, not even to himself. Thus she learned
secrets of his heart new to her: his visits here,
what they were to him, and why he had chosen it for
their bridal camp. “What I did not know
at all,” he said, “was the way a man can
be pining for-for this-and never
guess what is the matter with him.”
When he had finished talking, still
he lay extended and serene; and she looked down at
him and the wonderful change that had come over him,
like a sunrise. Was this dreamy boy the man of
two days ago? It seemed a distance immeasurable;
yet it was two days only since that wedding eve when
she had shrunk from him as he stood fierce and implacable.
She could look back at that dark hour now, although
she could not speak of it. She had seen destruction
like sharp steel glittering in his eyes. Were
these the same eyes? Was this youth with his black
head of hair in her lap the creature with whom men
did not trifle, whose hand knew how to deal death?
Where had the man melted away to in this boy?
For as she looked at him, he might have been no older
than nineteen to-day. Not even at their first
meeting-that night when his freakish spirit
was uppermost-had he looked so young.
This change their hours upon the island had wrought,
filling his face with innocence.
By and by they made their nooning.
In the afternoon she would have explored the nearer
woods with him, or walked up the stream. But since
this was to be their camp during several days, he made
it more complete. He fashioned a rough bench
and a table; around their tent he built a tall wind-break
for better shelter in case of storm; and for the fire
he gathered and cut much wood, and piled it up.
So they were provided for, and so for six days and
nights they stayed, finding no day or night long enough.
Once his hedge of boughs did them
good service, for they had an afternoon of furious
storm. The wind rocked the pines and ransacked
the island, the sun went out, the black clouds rattled,
and white bolts of lightning fell close by. The
shower broke through the pine branches and poured
upon the tent. But he had removed everything inside
from where it could touch the canvas and so lead the
water through, and the rain ran off into the ditch
he had dug round the tent. While they sat within,
looking out upon the bounding floods and the white
lightning, she saw him glance at her apprehensively,
and at once she answered his glance.
“I am not afraid,” she
said. “If a flame should consume us together
now, what would it matter?”
And so they sat watching the storm
till it was over, he with his face changed by her
to a boy’s, and she leavened with him.
When at last they were compelled to
leave the island, or see no more of the mountains,
it was not a final parting. They would come back
for the last night before their journey ended.
Furthermore, they promised each other like two children
to come here every year upon their wedding day, and
like two children they believed that this would be
possible. But in after years they did come, more
than once, to keep their wedding day upon the island,
and upon each new visit were able to say to each other,
“Better than our dreams.”
For thirty days by the light of the
sun and the camp-fire light they saw no faces except
their own; and when they were silent it was all stillness,
unless the wind passed among the pines, or some flowing
water was near them. Sometimes at evening they
came upon elk, or black-tailed deer, feeding out in
the high parks of the mountains; and once from the
edge of some concealing timber he showed her a bear,
sitting with an old log lifted in its paws. She
forbade him to kill the bear, or any creature that
they did not require. He took her upward by trail
and canyon, through the unfooted woods and along dwindling
streams to their headwaters, lakes lying near the
summit of the range, full of trout, with meadows of
long grass and a thousand flowers, and above these
the pinnacles of rock and snow.
They made their camps in many places,
delaying several days here, and one night there, exploring
the high solitudes together, and sinking deep in their
romance. Sometimes when he was at work with their
horses, or intent on casting his brown hackle for
a fish, she would watch him with eyes that were fuller
of love than of understanding. Perhaps she never
came wholly to understand him; but in her complete
love for him she found enough. He loved her with
his whole man’s power. She had listened
to him tell her in words of transport, “I could
enjoy dying”; yet she loved him more than that.
He had come to her from a smoking pistol, able to
bid her farewell-and she could not let him
go. At the last white-hot edge of ordeal, it
was she who renounced, and he who had his way.
Nevertheless she found much more than enough, in spite
of the sigh that now and again breathed through her
happiness when she would watch him with eyes fuller
of love than of understanding.
They could not speak of that grim
wedding eve for a long while after; but the mountains
brought them together upon all else in the world and
their own lives. At the end they loved each other
doubly more than at the beginning, because of these
added confidences which they exchanged and shared.
It was a new bliss to her to know a man’s talk
and thoughts, to be given so much of him; and to him
it was a bliss still greater to melt from that reserve
his lonely life had bred in him. He never would
have guessed so much had been stored away in him, unexpressed
till now. They did not want to go to Vermont
and leave these mountains, but the day came when they
had to turn their backs upon their dream. So
they came out into the plains once more, well established
in their familiarity, with only the journey still
lying between themselves and Bennington.
“If you could,” she said,
laughing. “If only you could ride home like
this.”
“With Monte and my six-shooter?”
he asked. “To your mother?”
“I don’t think mother
could resist the way you look on a horse.”
But he said “It this way she’s fearing
I will come.”
“I have made one discovery,”
she said. “You are fonder of good clothes
than I am.”
He grinned. “I cert’nly
like ’em. But don’t tell my friends.
They would say it was marriage. When you see
what I have got for Bennington’s special benefit,
you-why, you’ll just trust your husband
more than ever.”
She undoubtedly did. After he
had put on one particular suit, she arose and kissed
him where he stood in it.
“Bennington will be sorrowful,”
he said. “No wild-west show, after all.
And no ready-made guy, either.” And he looked
at himself in the glass with unbidden pleasure.
“How did you choose that?”
she asked. “How did you know that homespun
was exactly the thing for you?”
“Why, I have been noticing.
I used to despise an Eastern man because his clothes
were not Western. I was very young then, or maybe
not so very young, as very-as what you
saw I was when you first came to Bear Creek.
A Western man is a good thing. And he generally
knows that. But he has a heap to learn.
And he generally don’t know that. So I took
to watching the Judge’s Eastern visitors.
There was that Mr. Ogden especially, from New Yawk-the
gentleman that was there the time when I had to sit
up all night with the missionary, yu’ know.
His clothes pleased me best of all. Fit him so
well, and nothing flash. I got my ideas, and when
I knew I was going to marry you, I sent my measure
East-and I and the tailor are old enemies
now.”
Bennington probably was disappointed.
To see get out of the train merely a tall man with
a usual straw hat, and Scotch homespun suit of a rather
better cut than most in Bennington-this
was dull. And his conversation-when
he indulged in any-seemed fit to come inside
the house.
Mrs. Flynt took her revenge by sowing
broadcast her thankfulness that poor Sam Bannett had
been Molly’s rejected suitor. He had done
so much better for himself. Sam had married a
rich Miss Van Scootzer, of the second families of
Troy; and with their combined riches this happy couple
still inhabit the most expensive residence in Hoosic
Falls.
But most of Bennington soon began
to say that Molly s cow-boy could be invited anywhere
and hold his own. The time came when they ceased
to speak of him as a cow-boy, and declared that she
had shown remarkable sense. But this was not
quite yet.
Did this bride and groom enjoy their
visit to her family? Well-well, they
did their best. Everybody did their best, even
Sarah Bell. She said that she found nothing to
object to in the Virginian; she told Molly so.
Her husband Sam did better than that. He told
Molly he considered that she was in luck. And
poor Mrs. Wood, sitting on the sofa, conversed scrupulously
and timidly with her novel son-in-law, and said to
Molly that she was astonished to find him so gentle.
And he was undoubtedly fine-looking; yes, very handsome.
She believed that she would grow to like the Southern
accent. Oh, yes! Everybody did their best;
and, dear reader, if ever it has been your earthly
portion to live with a number of people who were all
doing their best, you do not need me to tell you what
a heavenly atmosphere this creates.
And then the bride and groom went
to see the old great-aunt over at Dunbarton.
Their first arrival, the one at Bennington,
had been thus: Sam Bell had met them at the train,
and Mrs. Wood, waiting in her parlor, had embraced
her daughter and received her son-in-law. Among
them they had managed to make the occasion as completely
mournful as any family party can be, with the window
blinds up. “And with you present, my dear,”
said Sam Bell to Sarah, “the absence of a coffin
was not felt.”
But at Dunbarton the affair went off
differently. The heart of the ancient lady had
taught her better things. From Bennington to Dunbarton
is the good part of a day’s journey, and they
drove up to the gate in the afternoon. The great-aunt
was in her garden, picking some August flowers, and
she called as the carriage stopped, “Bring my
nephew here, my dear, before you go into the house.”
At this, Molly, stepping out of the
carriage, squeezed her husband’s hand.
“I knew that she would be lovely,” she
whispered to him. And then she ran to her aunt’s
arms, and let him follow. He came slowly, hat
in hand.
The old lady advanced to meet him,
trembling a little, and holding out her hand to him.
“Welcome, nephew,” she said. “What
a tall fellow you are, to be sure. Stand off,
sir, and let me look at you.”
The Virginian obeyed, blushing from
his black hair to his collar.
Then his new relative turned to her
niece, and gave her a flower. “Put this
in his coat, my dear,” she said. “And
I think I understand why you wanted to marry him.”
After this the maid came and showed
them to their rooms. Left alone in her garden,
the great-aunt sank on a bench and sat there for some
time; for emotion had made her very weak.
Upstairs, Molly, sitting on the Virginian’s
knee, put the flower in his coat, and then laid her
head upon his shoulder.
“I didn’t know old ladies
could be that way,” he said. “D’
yu’ reckon there are many?”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said the girl.
“I’m so happy!”
Now at tea, and during the evening,
the great-aunt carried out her plans still further.
At first she did the chief part of the talking herself.
Nor did she ask questions about Wyoming too soon.
She reached that in her own way, and found out the
one thing that she desired to know. It was through
General Stark that she led up to it.
“There he is,” she said,
showing the family portrait. “And a rough
time he must have had of it now and then. New
Hampshire was full of fine young men in those days.
But nowadays most of them have gone away to seek their
fortunes in the West. Do they find them, I wonder?”
“Yes, ma’am. All the good ones do.”
“But you cannot all be-what is the
name?-Cattle Kings.”
“That’s having its day,
ma’am, right now. And we are getting ready
for the change-some of us are.”
“And what may be the change, and when is it
to come?”
“When the natural pasture is
eaten off,” he explained. “I have
seen that coming a long while. And if the thieves
are going to make us drive our stock away, we’ll
drive it. If they don’t, we’ll have
big pastures fenced, and hay and shelter ready for
winter. What we’ll spend in improvements,
we’ll more than save in wages. I am well
fixed for the new conditions. And then, when
I took up my land, I chose a place where there is
coal. It will not be long before the new railroad
needs that.”
Thus the old lady learned more of
her niece’s husband in one evening than the
Bennington family had ascertained during his whole
sojourn with them. For by touching upon Wyoming
and its future, she roused him to talk. He found
her mind alive to Western questions: irrigation,
the Indians, the forests; and so he expanded, revealing
to her his wide observation and his shrewd intelligence.
He forgot entirely to be shy. She sent Molly
to bed, and kept him talking for an hour. Then
she showed him old things that she was proud of, “because,”
she said, “we, too, had something to do with
making our country. And now go to Molly, or you’ll
both think me a tiresome old lady.”
“I think-”
he began, but was not quite equal to expressing what
he thought, and suddenly his shyness flooded him again.
“In that case, nephew,”
said she, “I’m afraid you’ll have
to kiss me good night.”
And so she dismissed him to his wife,
and to happiness greater than either of them had known
since they had left the mountains and come to the
East. “He’ll do,” she said to
herself, nodding.
Their visit to Dunbarton was all happiness
and reparation for the doleful days at Bennington
The old lady gave much comfort and advice to her niece
in private, and when they came to leave, she stood
at the front door holding both their hands a moment.
“God bless you, my dears,”
she told them. “And when you come next time,
I’ll have the nursery ready.”
And so it happened that before she
left this world, the great-aunt was able to hold in
her arms the first of their many children.
Judge Henry at Sunk Creek had his
wedding present ready. His growing affairs in
Wyoming needed his presence in many places distant
from his ranch, and he made the Virginian his partner.
When the thieves prevailed at length, as they did,
forcing cattle owners to leave the country or be ruined,
the Virginian had forestalled this crash. The
herds were driven away to Montana. Then, in 1889,
came the cattle war, when, after putting their men
in office, and coming to own some of the newspapers,
the thieves brought ruin on themselves as well.
For in a broken country there is nothing left to steal.
But the railroad came, and built a
branch to that land of the Virginian’s where
the coal was. By that time he was an important
man, with a strong grip on many various enterprises,
and able to give his wife all and more than she asked
or desired.
Sometimes she missed the Bear Creek
days, when she and he had ridden together, and sometimes
she declared that his work would kill him. But
it does not seem to have done so. Their eldest
boy rides the horse Monte; and, strictly between ourselves,
I think his father is going to live a long while.