Where the ridge road dropped down
close to the pale river at a dip in the hills, Steering
overtook the tramp-boy, hallooed to him, and watched
him, as he turned his pony about and sat waitingly.
He was a youth of sixteen or seventeen, and from under
the peak of his felt hat, slouched and old, peered
out a slim young gypsy face, crowned by a thick mop
of black hair that tumbled about wide temples.
Motionless there, the tremble of his song still on
his lips and the gladness of youth and health on his
face, the tramp-boy made Steering think of the rosy
young shepherd Adonis, he was so glowing, so fine
and fresh.
“I have been right after you
all the way from the cross-roads,” explained
Steering, by way of a beginning, riding up to the lad’s
side, “I have just parted from a friend of yours, Mr.
Bernique, so you see we are almost friends
ourselves.”
“A’most.” The
boy smiled, showing white teeth. He seemed to
like Bruce’s method of dealing with him.
“Wuz Unc’ Bernique cross because I didn’t
go rat back like I said I’d do?” he queried
slily.
“No, I think not. And for
my part, I am glad you didn’t, for I am hoping
that if you are going toward Poetical you won’t
mind my company. You see, it’s pretty dog-on
lonely.” A very little of the ridge road
sufficed to make Bruce sick for comradeship, and his
voice showed it. The boy turned an impressionable,
sympathetic face.
“Come rat along,” he said.
He looked at Bruce a moment questioningly before adding,
“Reckin’s haow you aint usen to the quiet
yit. Taint so lonely, the woods an’ the
hills whend you know um.” He twisted
his head like a bird and looked out across the extensive
sweep of the land and the long slow curve of the river,
a deep inspiration swelling his chest. “Simlike
they up an’ talk to you, the woods an’
the hills an’ the quiet, whend you know um,”
he said.
All on the instant Steering knew that,
as in the case of Old Bernique, here again was character.
“Character” seemed distinctly the richest
and the pleasantest thing in Missouri. He rode
in a little closer to his companion, drawn to him
irresistibly, recognising in him the sweet, untutored
poetry of a wildwood nature, whose young timidity was
trembling and steadying into the placating, magnetic
assurance of a boy, fresh-hearted as a berry.
Steering had encountered the same sort of poetry in
other unspoiled boys, splendid child-men whom he had
known in other walks of life, and he had a quick affection
for it. It was always as though on its crystal
clearness a man might see the white sails of his own
youth set back toward him.
“Yes,” he answered, “I
think you are right about that. They do talk,
the hills and the woods and the quiet, only
a fellow grows dull, gets his ears full of electric
gongs and push-bells, and forgets to listen.”
The boy looked up with quick-witted
question. “Y’aint f’m this part
of the kentry, air you?” he asked.
“No. I am from well,
from Bessietown last. Where are you from?”
The boy laughed and glanced gaily
at his briar-torn clothes. “F’m the
woods,” he said.
“My name is Bruce Steering.”
“Mine’s Piney.”
They fell then to talking of many
things, as they rode toward Poetical, but inevitably
they spoke chiefly of the great State of Missouri.
On the subject of Missouri the boy talked, as old
Bernique had talked, with expansive naïveté.
In his roamings he had ridden the State up and down,
and had found much to love in it. “You’ll
like her, too, all righty,” he told Bruce confidently,
“whend you git broke to her.” On one
of youth’s candid impulses to speak up for the
life on the inside, the cherished desire, the gallant
ideal, the buoyant fancy, he made a supple, sudden
divergence in the conversation. “D’you
know,” he said, “they aint no place
whur I’d drur be than Mizzourah ceppen only one.”
“Where’s that?”
asked Bruce, and to his immense astonishment the boy
answered quickly:
“Italy.”
“Why, how does that happen, Piney? Ever
been there?”
“Nope. Hearn Unc’
Bernique tell abaout it, thass all. It ’ud
suit me, though. I know that.” His
eyes grew dreamy and he seemed to be looking far beyond
Missouri. One could almost see the fine, illusory
spell of the far Latin land upon him, the spiritual
bond, the pull of temperament that made the hill boy
at one with Italy, blest of poetry. “I d’n
know huccome I want to go so bad,” he went on
with a deep breath, “wouldn’ turn araoun’
th’ee times on my heels to go anywhur else, but
I shoo do want to go to Italy.”
“Were your people Italians, Piney?”
“Nope. Kim f’m S’loois.
But still, I got that feelin’ abaout Italy.
Simlike I’d be oh, sorta at home tha’.
Had that same feelin’ ev’ since Unc’
Bernique begand to tell me abaout Italy. I’m
a-goin’ tha’, tew, some day, all righty,”
he concluded at last, waking up from his little dream
slowly. “Goin’ to be long over to
Poetical, Mist’ Steerin’?” he diverged
again, with his lively mental agility.
“No, son. From Poetical
I am going on to” Bruce stopped to
gather strength to project the word with the large
and cadenced inflection he had enjoyed in the hill
farm people, “going on to Canaan!”
“Gre’t gosh!” said
the boy, and something in the way he said it made
Bruce look at him quickly. Piney’s brows
were lifted and his lips were pulled back. He
seemed to try to be as much impressed as Bruce expected
him to be. To Steering this sort of comradeship
was growing golden.
“Well, now,” he said,
playing with the little joy of being understood, “haven’t
they the court-house at Canaan? And the railroad?
And haven’t they Miss Betsy, or Miss Miss ”
“Sally.”
“Ah, yes, Sally! Know Sally, son?”
“Ev’body in the Tigmores knows her.”
“I am beginning to want to know
Sally myself.” Bruce let his eyes go drowsing
toward the pale river up which the slow rain was beating,
and talked foolishness idly: “Red-cheeked
Sally! Freckled Sally! Roly-poly Sally!
What’s a Missouri girl like anyway, Piney?”
“Wy, people think she’s
purty,” protested the boy with a quick palpitant
shyness, “an’ most people l ,”
he stopped trying to talk, laughing brusquely and
flushing with a very young man’s self-consciousness.
“All of which goes to prove
me an ass,” cried Bruce, “for talking about
a lady whom I have never seen.” Looking
repentantly at Piney, he felt a sudden ache for him.
He was not very familiar with conditions in Canaan,
but it occurred to him suddenly that even in Canaan
there might be social gradations, and that the tramp-boy,
rare little chap though he seemed to be, was probably
miles away from the daughter of the promoter, Mr.
Crittenton Madeira. “I retract, Piney,”
he added gravely.
“Aw! not as I keer
whut you say abaout her, or whut anybody
says.” Piney slashed at some brilliant
sumach by the wayside and his mobile lips jerked and
quivered.
“I should have supposed that
she was older well, than you,” said
Bruce, trying to set himself right.
“May be in what she knows, aint
in what she feels, not as I keer ”
The boy was so deliciously new to his own emotions
that they flashed away beyond his control, minute
by minute. His eyes looked misty, with a little
spark of high light cutting bravely through. He
would not finish his sentence. “Did Unc’
Bernique say whend he’s comin’ back to
Canaan?” he asked moodily.
“No, he didn’t, though
I urged him to. That’s a fine old man, Piney.”
Piney’s eyes softened beautifully.
“Takes mighty good keer of me,” he said.
“Is he kin to you?”
“I d’n know abaout that.
He’s took my side always. Y’see, I
aint got no people an’ I just ride araoun’.
Y’see,” Piney quivered with
boyish fire, “I just got to
ride araoun’. I cayn’t stay on no
farm an’ in no haouse. Kills me. I
got to git to the woods an’ the hills. An’
Unc’ Bernique he stands by me, an’ keeps
me in his shack whend they’s any trouble abaout
it. Y’see, some people think I oughter oughter
work!” Piney laughed from the gay, melodious
depths of his vagabond heart and Bruce laughed with
him. “An’ Unc’ Bernique has
he’ped me abaout that,” explained the
tramp-boy. He let his dancing eyes dart off to
the west where the hills were shouldering into a thickening
drift of grey. “Hi, look yonder!”
he cried. “We got to cut and run to git
to Poetical before that rain.”
So they cut and ran, the boy setting
the pace and singing lustily, with that high melody
of voice, as of temperament, of his, as they dashed
down the road in the first cool scattering pelt of
the rain. “Want to go to the hotel,
don’t you?” he called over his shoulder,
and Bruce called yes. It was grey, rainy twilight
now, and through the gloom five or six houses sprawled
out across the little plateau toward which the road
twisted. Some geese flew up under the feet of
the horses, squawking wildly, some “razor-back”
hogs grunted from the dust-wallows, some cow-bells
tinkled, some small yellow spheres of light shone through
windows.
“How far from Poetical, Piney?” shouted
Steering.
“’Baout a foot,”
answered Piney. He made his lightning-like pony
go more slowly so that Bruce’s horse might come
alongside, and he shook his head, his ready sympathy
again on his face. “Say, it’s goin’
to be kinder tough on you to stay here to-night, aint
it? This is ev’ spittin’ bit there
is tew Poetical. Here’s the hotel.”
They drew rein before a rickety two-story
frame building and Bruce lifted his shoulders shudderingly.
A man came out on the hotel porch, said “Howdy,”
and waited.
“Say,” Piney
in a lower tone, voiced a notion that evidently drifted
in to him on the high tide of his sympathy, “why
don’t you ride over to Mist’ Crit Madeira’s?
Taint so far. I’ll show you the way.
They cand take care of you over tha’. They’d
be glad to have you. You cand caount on that.
It’s that-a-way in Mizzourah.” The
boy’s conscientious earnestness was sweet.
He was in good spirits again and he whisked one roughly-booted
foot out of its stirrup and laid it across his saddle-horn,
while he regarded Bruce. “You cand git ter
see Miss Sally ef you do that,” he added, pursing
up his lips, a subtle sense of humour on his face.
“You cand see what Mizzourah girls are like.”
“Now come, Piney, you know I’ve
been thinking everything beautiful about Miss Sally
since I found out something ”
“Aw! Tisn’t no such
thing. She jes likes to hear me sing. You’re
crazy!” The tramp-boy’s young voice
had its fashion of breaking and shrilling into a high
soprano, like a girl’s, for emphasis; he was
as red as a beet, and he put his foot back in the
stirrup, thrust out his under jaw and looked at the
stirrup as though he had to determine how much wood
had gone into its making. Again Bruce was conscious
of a little ache for the boy. “But you
go on over tha’,” insisted Piney.
“No! Thank you for trying
to look out for me, son, but I shouldn’t like
to do that. Oh, I can stand this all right,”
cried Bruce, with a flare of big bravery and, turning
to face the hotel, was seized by his loneliness so
violently that he shuddered again. “Here
Piney!” he cried on a sudden inspiration, “why
won’t you come in and stay with me? Huh?
How would that suit you? We can talk and smoke.”
“Naw,” Piney extended
his hand and shook his head, as though to push the
hotel out of the range of possibilities for him, “I
couldn’t. Much oblige’. But
I cayn’t sleep in haouses. Got to git back
to the shack in the woods. Wisht you’d
go on over to Madeira’s.”
“No. I’ll buck it
out here alone,” lamented Bruce. He hated
to lose Piney and take up the gloomy, rainy evening
alone on this little, high, remote place in the Missouri
hills.
“See you again some day, then,”
Piney promised in final farewell. “I’m
up an’ daown the Ridge rat frequent, I’ll
run ’crosst you.”
“Well now, I should hope so,”
cried Bruce cordially. “Don’t you
ever come to Canaan?”
“Nope. Hate a taown!
But me an’ Unc’ Bernique will strike you
sometime, somewheres along the trail. S’long!”
“So long, Piney, so long!”
The boy turned his pony to the hills.
The man on the porch came on out to take charge of
Bruce and Bruce’s horse. Black night settled
down. Through the darkness cut the sound of the
squawking geese, the tinkling cow-bells, the grunting
hogs. Lonely, lonely Missouri! Bruce went
inside, to sit in a little room upstairs, with his
chin in his hand, his eyes staring through the window,
his thoughts roaming after Carington, the office on
Nassau Street, a girl who was a dainty fluff of lace
and silk. In his ears rang the sound of Carington’s
voice: “Why don’t you try Missouri, Miss
Gossamer sails, Why don’t you try
Missouri, Miss Gossamer sails ”
a faint, recedent measure, and intermingling with it
the sound of a boy’s voice singing gaily on the
misty hills:
“A tater’s good ’ith ’lasses.”
Steering leaned far out of the window,
eager for the lad’s music. It was so sweet.