One late fall afternoon a man and
a boy lingered under the shadow of tall trees and
pondered tall things. The boy was propped against
the trunk of an oak; his hat was pushed back from
his face; his black tumbling hair made his slim brown
face seem browner, his long eyes darker than they
were; his young intensities of fancy and feeling were
aroused, and manifest in the tremble of his lip, the
vibrancy of his voice, the shaking light of his glance.
The man lay flat on his back with a book spread out
over his stomach and his long white fingers interlaced
across the book fondly. Down at their feet the
Di flowed swiftly, with the eyrie shiver on her
bosom, making haste, like a frightened woman, past
the lonely Tigmores toward the livelier corn and cotton
lands. All around the horizon the sky so throbbed
that here and there it rent the sheer cloud-veil that
lay in delicate illusion over the blue. Through
the trees played frightened flashes of colour, the
whisk of a cardinal’s wing, the burnt-red plume
of a fox-squirrel’s tail. In the air there
was a palpitancy that was to the dream senses what
colour vibrations are to the eye.
The man took up the book and began
to read from it, and this was the burden of the reading:
“’Nobody can pretend to
explain in detail the whole enigma of first love.
But a general explanation is suggested by evolutional
philosophy, namely, that the attraction
depends upon an inherited individual susceptibility
to special qualities of feminine influence, and subjectively
represents a kind of superindividual recognition,’”
the man smiled gravely and repeated the last stave
with questioning care, “’and subjectively
represents a kind of superindividual recognition? a
sudden wakening of that inherited composite memory
which is more commonly called passional affinity.’ I
have a notion that that may mean something or other,
Piney?”
“Don’t ast me.”
The reader began again: “’Certainly
if first love be evolutionally explicable, it means
the perception by the lover of something differentiating
the beloved from all other women, something
corresponding to an inherited ideal within himself,
previously latent, but suddenly lighted and defined,’ an
inherited ideal something differentiating
the beloved from all other women,” murmured the
reader earnestly. He put the book back upon his
stomach, and there was a long silence in the woods,
broken by a distant reverberation, short, sharp, suggestive.
Piney jumped, like the highly strung, alert young animal
that he was.
“Whut wuz it, Mist’ Steerin’?”
“Uncle Bernique’s blasts,
Piney. He’s on the trail.” The
silence remained unbroken for another long period.
“Mist’ Steerin’,”
began Piney at last; he had a long spear of sere grass
in his mouth and he chewed at it argumentatively, “d’you
think, I couldn’t adzackly tell whut
that writin’ wuz a-aimin’ at, but simlike
f’m the way it goes on that ef the sort of thing
it makes août to happen happens onst, it oughtn’t
never to happen agin, hmh?” Piney’s long
drawn notes of rising inflection were musical.
“Simlike, ef a man onst finds the right woman
they oughtn’t never to be no more right women,
hmh?”
“There ought not to be, Piney, son.”
“Well, but they gen’ly
is, hmh?” Bruce straightened out one foot with
an impatient kick. Ever since they had fallen
into the habit of abstracted talks on this imponderable
subject, Piney had seemed able, with a sort of elfin
craft, to make Bruce remember Miss Elsie Gossamer’s
light, fleeting touch upon his life. He had never
mentioned Miss Gossamer to Piney in all their mutual
experience, yet the tramp-boy was constantly skirmishing
up from afar with a generalisation, like a high-held
transparency, that illuminated Miss Gossamer’s
memory for Bruce. Three hypotheses had presented
to Bruce in the way of explanation: one, that
he himself was possessed by a little embarrassed consciousness
that he should have had any past at all in view of
the present; another, that Miss Sally Madeira had
just possibly set Piney on to worry him about Miss
Gossamer; and the last, that Piney, divining that a
man could hardly reach Bruce’s age without some
pages of romance behind him, was forever, out of his
own perspicacity, trying to make Bruce re-read those
pages, so that this new page, that had been turned
under the hand of Sally Madeira, might not be written.
“Piney,” Bruce answered
at last regretfully, “it’s a pagan world.
Men make mistakes. I think it’s largely
because they want so much to love that they love somebody,
anybody, till the right person comes along.”
“Should think they ’ud wait,” demurred
Piney stubbornly.
“Well, n o, that’s
the notion of a man who has met the right person exactly
in the beginning; or it’s a woman’s notion;
but it isn’t the notion of a man who, with a
sense for beauty and sweetness, waits, like a harp
for its music, out in the open where beauty and sweetness
beat down upon him. Out in the open a man gets
blind. Lord!” went on Steering, remembering
Miss Gossamer again, and trying to explain her to
himself, “how can a man help loving prettiness!
That’s what a man loves often and always, Piney,
prettiness, grace, vivacity and then once
in his life he loves a woman Hah!”
cried Steering, as though he had at last got the best
of Miss Gossamer, “that’s it that
sounds good.”
“Well, d’you think,”
went on Piney, jerking his spear of grass viciously,
“d’you think that a man cand fall in love
with a lady rat off, just knowin’ her a few
weeks?” This was one of Piney’s ways of
manifesting the jealousy that disquieted him, slurring
covertly, and with his lips flickering peculiarly,
at Steering’s brief acquaintance with Miss Madeira.
He was always showing in innumerable ways the hold
that Bruce had taken upon his young affections, but
he could not help showing, too, the sore spot of his
valuation of Steering’s regard for Miss Madeira.
Though they mentioned Miss Madeira between them only
casually, Bruce knew for himself that Piney, in his
crude but vehement way, was living through a boy’s
own high tragedy of love for a woman older than he
and beyond his reach, and Piney knew for himself that
Steering, in the most perfect flower of his capacity,
had attained his destiny as a perfect lover, under
circumstances most unpropitious. The fact that
the woman who was the object of the boy’s enraptured
fancy had levied royal tribute upon the man’s
love in the same purple-mannered fashion brought boy
and man close. Tacitly they recognised that the
bond between them was strong enough to bear the weight
of Piney’s jealousy, and, both watching, they
allowed the boy to depend from it, swing on it and
strain it just enough to make both conscious that the
bond was there.
“You know what I think, Piney,”
said Steering after a long wait, in which he had been
busy remembering the fulness of one moment in the Bank
of Canaan. “I think that if she is the right
woman a man can fall in love in one minute. And
I think that if she is the right woman all eternity
will not give him time to fall out of love with her
and no sort of hell of bad situations will ever be
wide enough to keep his thoughts away from her.”
Steering spoke with a well-ordered restraint, but a
sense of the combination of situations that he himself
had come into lent a ringing, protesting resonance
to his voice, and Piney forgot to be jealous and flashed
him a long, keen look of delight. Steering realised
that he sometimes put into words the things that Piney
yearned toward and dreamed, but could not express;
and he also realised, from the added satisfaction
that he got out of his words because of Piney’s
satisfaction in them, that Piney sometimes enlivened
and enriched his own emotions for him. Their
romancing made boy and man delicately complementary
to each other. Steering had taken Piney’s
love for the girl who was beyond him as a fine and
simple thing, and, taken in that way, it played up
to Bruce’s love with the rich imageries
and colours of youth, and made Bruce younger, quicker
for it. Piney, on his side, had a keen, shy consciousness
of immaturity and inexperience that made him attend
upon Bruce’s outbursts of passion as upon an
illumination of what this thing of man’s love
could be and should be at its biggest and best.
“That’s just exactly the
truth,” maintained Steering earnestly. It
was remarkable how earnest he could be on this line
of opinion. Miss Elsie Gossamer would have marvelled
to hear him. Time was when he had agreed with
Miss Gossamer that only people who had known each other
a long time, as he and she had, could depend upon
their attitude toward each other. The attitude
between Miss Gossamer and him had seemed very reliable
in those prehistoric days when congeniality of taste,
a flower face and the probability of getting through
life without much worry on your mind and a good cigar
in your mouth had seemed sufficient to him. Things
like that seemed pitifully insufficient now. He
wheeled about restlessly and considered.
From where he and Piney were they
could hear the sound of a steam-drill, thud-thud-thudding
into the heart of a distant knob of the Canaan Tigmores.
That notion of Carington’s and his about getting
into the hills had undeniably balled up into the veriest
nonsense under the pressure of Crittenton Madeira’s
control of the Tigmores. Steering pounded on
the ground with one fist and clenched his hands tightly
about his knees. That was not the worst, and
he might as well face the worst. There was also
by now the bitterest sort of animosity toward him on
Madeira’s part. Old Bernique, who was very
fond of Miss Madeira and loathed her father, had commented
to Steering upon that being Madeira’s way with
everyone who promised to be too much for him to handle bah!
it made Steering angry to consider that Madeira should
ever have tried to “handle” him.
He loosed the clench of his hands about his knees and
jumped to his feet. That was not the worst, and
he might as well face the worst. Naturally enough
the daughter had had to go with the father. That
ride across the sunset glory of the Tigmores had been
good-bye after all. It had been two weeks since
he had stood with her on the spur above Salome Park,
and he had seen her twice since; once at the post-office,
where she had said, “Good-morning, Mr. Steering”;
once on Main Street in front of her father’s
bank, where she had said, “Good-evening, Mr.
Steering.”
But for all these things, he was not
done with Missouri yet. Even now he was waiting
for old Bernique. When Bernique should come they
would be off again on a long prospect. Bernique
and he had been in the hills for two weeks, skirting
the Grierson entail, picking, digging, sniffing for
ore by day, sleeping long sleeps on forest leaves,
heaped and aromatic, by night. He had that day
ridden into Canaan for some clean clothes, and was
beating back toward Old Bernique now, having picked
up Piney down the river road.
“Well, Piney, son,” Steering
invaded the rush of his own thoughts ruthlessly, “I
expect I ought to be toddling. Going to ride part
of the way with me? I think we shall fall in
with Uncle Bernique up-stream a mile or so.”
“Why, yes,” assented Piney,
rising; he made a keen calculation of the time by
the sun, as he got to his feet; “I’ll go
a-ways with you. I’d like to see Unc’
Bernique aint seen him simlike fer
a long time.”
Their horses were tethered in a little
glade below them and they went into the glade as they
talked. “We like Uncle Bernique, don’t
we, Piney?” suggested Steering, relishing Piney’s
reference to the old Frenchman.
“Best old man in the world,”
answered Piney, with the soft, sweet shyness, like
a girl’s, that was always in his voice when he
let his affections find expression.
Before this Steering had heard, from
old Bernique himself, the short story that had connected
the affections of the tramp-boy and the wandering
prospector. Piney, Old Bernique had said, was
the child of a woman whom he had known in St. Louis
in the old days. Old Bernique, who was only middle-aged
Bernique then, had lived as a neighbour to the woman,
whom he had loved very much. But the woman had
married another man, and had gone away to the Southwest.
And, later on, Old Bernique had followed. And
in these later days, since the woman’s death,
it had been given him to keep watch and ward over
her child, Piney. Piney’s parents had not
been Italians at all, so Old Bernique told Steering,
just plain, everyday Americans, from up “at
that St. Louis,” quite poor and always on the
move. The father had been known throughout the
country-side as a “blame’ good fiddler”
and the mother had been, oh a vair’ wonderful
woman, if one could believe Old Bernique. But
there was no Italian blood in Piney. His feeling
for Italy had to be explained in another way.
It was the great sweet note of poetry, music and beauty,
of that far country, vibrating across the years and
the miles, taken up as a memory in the Missouri hills
by Old Bernique and, through him, reaching a Missouri
boy’s heart, all tuned and pitched for it.
That was all there was to Piney’s story.
It was only a fragment.
Reaching their horses in the glade,
Steering and Piney mounted and started up the river
road. “Can’t you come with us for
the rest of the week, son?” asked Bruce, as
they journeyed.
“Nope. Goin’ trampin’
by myse’f.” It was Piney’s habit
to disappear for days, gipsy that he was. Perhaps
the habit was growing upon him a little of late.
He had no abiding place; sometimes he referred to one
hill shanty, sometimes to another, as home; but the
home-feeling with him was at its fullest and strongest
when he was “trampin’.” Ostensibly
his vocation was that of a travelling farm-hand, but
it was all ostentation. Piney would not work.
Not while the pony could carry him from hospitable
farm-house to hospitable farm-house. He was a
knight of the saddle, the uncrowned king of the woods,
and Bruce, riding along beside him now, regarding
him, enjoying him, would not have exchanged comradeship
with the boy’s simple, high-tuned relish of
life for comradeship with kings.
“Miss Madeira is going to Europe,
I hear, Piney,” adventured Steering.
“Yass.” Piney said
nothing more for some time. He looked very thoughtful.
“Y’see,” he went on after a bit,
“I’m a-thinkin’ abaout ridin’
off some’ere over the Ridge, bein’
gone fer a long time.”
“Oh, Lord!” groaned Steering.
He very well knew what was taking Piney away.
It was hard on him that the boy’s plan for absence
should pile up on Sally Madeira’s plan, but
he could understand that it would be harder on the
boy to stay in the Tigmores with the inspiration of
the Tigmores hushed and gone.
“Not thinking of going to Italy
yet, Piney?” It had come to be an accepted joke
with them, that penchant of Piney’s for Italy.
The boy was willing to laugh about it, but his eyes
always sobered dreamily in the end, and invariably
he wound up with, “but I’m a-goin’,
all righty, an’ don’t you fergit it.”
He did now. “But y’see, whilst I’m
a-waitin’ I git kinda tired the hills, Mist’
Steerin’,” he complained, trying to explain
how it was with him without telling anything.
“Lots er times I go off an’ don’t
come back fer a long time.” Not till
Miss Madeira comes home, Bruce added out of his own
intuition. “Git sorta tired the hills,”
repeated Piney stubbornly.
“Do they stop talking to you,
the hills and the woods and the quiet?”
“Yass, they do, sometimes, when
I’m pestered not as I pester much,”
he laughed and broke off suddenly in his laughter,
with a little sobbing shake in his breath, and passed
on ahead of Steering, who looked away from him up
the bridle road that cut into the Canaan Tigmores.
“There comes Uncle Bernique!”
cried Steering then, glad of a chance to divert Piney.
Gazing toward Bernique welcomingly, he was diverted
himself. The old man made no answer to the shouts
that Piney and Steering sent out to him. He peered
straight toward them, through them, his eyes dry and
brilliant. He seemed hardly able to sit on his
horse, because of a sort of enervating restlessness;
he paid no attention whatever to his bridle; both
of his hands were in the pockets of the tattered old
coat that covered his body.
“Hi there, Pard!” hallooed
Piney, with a boy’s rich assurance that recognises
neither class nor age.
“Found!” the old man tried
to speak, but made a dry, clicking sound instead.
He took his hands from his pockets and held up in each
hand a lump of mineral earth. As he came toward
them in that way, both hands upheld, the wild fever
light in his eyes, his thin body electrified with
a strange new vitality, to Steering, who saw all at
once what it meant, his movement was that of the last
full strain of the miner’s epic. “Found!
Found!” he repeated, as though the sound was
blessed, and he held up the rocks, as though the sight
was heaven. When they reached him, trembling
by now themselves, they had to help him from his horse
and quiet and rest him by the roadside before he could
tell his tale. Waiting nervously, Bruce took
the nuggets and regarded them; beautiful specimens,
one stratum opaque, and seaming on to that stratum
another, reddish and glinting, like the spiked fire
of gold; and on that stratum another, grey and silver-faceted.
“Pretty splendid,” cried
Steering, and sat down suddenly and weakly. It
was not to be forgotten that Old Bernique had emerged
from the bridle-path in the Canaan Tigmores.
“When did you make the find,
Uncle Bernique?” he asked hoarsely.
“Thees minute,” control
was coming back to the old man, he raised his head
from Piney’s shoulder and leaned toward Bruce “only
thees minute! And for twenty year I have known
that it must be here, the ore, lead and zinc, in the
gr-r-eat quantity! For twenty year!
And just thees minute have I found it!” At the
wailing sound of time lost, life lost, in Bernique’s
voice, long lines of ghostly, bent-backed miners, with
ghostly, unavailing picks and shovels, seemed to defile
down the bridle-path from the Canaan Tigmores in historic
illustration, conjured up by the hypnosis of the old
man’s words.
“The troub’ has been,”
went on Bernique feverishly, “that we have not
looked for the ore in that place where the ore is ”
“That’s always the troub’,”
muttered Piney. He had got his composure back
and he seemed now rather good-naturedly contemptuous.
Piney’s was not a nature to accommodate itself
to the exaltation of an ore find.
“The mother lode runs through
the Canaan Tigmores,” went on Bernique hurriedly,
“of that I am now convince’, but it comes
to the surface, it comes to the surface, ah,
God above! I expire with it, let us
go to Choke Gulch, and I will show you where it comes
to the surface!”
He was insistent, his breath had come
back to him, and they let him have his way, following
him up the bridle-path into the long shadow of the
Canaan Tigmores. On the top of the first bluff
they tied their horses again and took a foot trail
where the bluff, having rolled back a mile from the
river, tumbled precipitately into a deep yawning gully.
From the timbered eminence the prospect below was
as dank and gloomy as a paleolithic fern forest.
Sodden, mossy, and almost impenetrable, the hill split
and dropped into Choke Gulch. From far down within
the black and tangled fastnesses came the solemn ripple
of slow-running water. A veil of weird loneliness
hung over the cavernous place and the air that shivered
up to the three was cool and laden with damp, sweet
odours. Old Bernique began to descend. As
they proceeded, the old man’s sense of something
stupendous impressed itself more and more upon his
companions. Farther on down, the solemn quiet
of the Gulch became unbearable, but no one spoke.
Little sunlight penetrated the dense curtain of brown
and red leaves overhead, and what little flickered
through had an electric brightness against the dead
brown of the leaf-carpeted ground and the grey and
hoary tree-trunks. Every bird that came to the
tree-tops sang once, but it was only when he discovered
his mistake, lifted his wings and careened away gladly
into the upper light.
“Whayee!” Piney found
a shivering voice at last, “ef I never git rich
till I come down into an ugly hole fer riches
I’ll be mighty pore all my days.”
Bruce smiled absently at the boy’s susceptibility,
but threw a reassuring arm about his shoulder.
He smiled again when presently Piney drew away.
That was Piney’s habit, as affectionate in instinct
as a kitten, and as timid of manifestation as a wild
doe.
Old Bernique called his little party
to a halt at the bottommost dip of the Gulch, where
a deep, clear and rock-bound spring wound murmurously
over a rocky bed. Two red spots came out in the
old man’s cheeks, his eyes began fairly to flame
again, his breath came in wheezy gasps, and his old
face pinched up sharp and sensitive as a pointer’s
nose. He pointed to the debris of shattered rock
about the spring. “The wataire fell over
a cap-rock here,” he said brusquely, the nervous
constriction of his throat making it hard for him
to say anything. “The strata underneath
were soft and had been worn away by the wataire.
I put a duck-nest of dynamite in there this morning, and see there!”
Anybody could see; the zinc and lead
ores were disseminated, rich and warm, in the loose
rocks of the out-cropping. “It’s a
vein thirty inches thick and it runs, it
runs str-r-aight through the Canaan Tigmores, sometimes
sinking many feet from the surface, but
always there, I am vair’ sure
of that, str-r-aight through the Canaan
Tigmores ” The old man’s
breath began to jerk with a sick, sobbing sound.
“Well,” Steering
was not so unaccustomed a miner by now but what the
sight there in the Gulch had its effect upon him, “Well,”
he said gingerly, “if you are right, Uncle Bernique,
if the face doesn’t cut blind, why, Mr. Crittenton
Madeira and old Grierson have a good thing, haven’t
they?”
“Urg-h-h!” Old Bernique
made a gnashing sound and leaned his head listeningly.
The thud of the stream-drill reached them faintly from
its place afar in the Canaan Tigmores. “They
come fas’!” he said mournfully.
“Wisht I wuz aoûter this,” interrupted
Piney, shivering.
“I have been track’ thees
mother lode,” began old Bernique again,
his feverish gaze again seeking out Bruce, “I
think,” he stopped and fell to musing, “What
you gawn do, Mistaire Steering,” he queried suddenly,
with his weary old head twisted to one side, “what
you gawn do about thees?”
“Lord, Uncle Bernique, I can’t
do anything. You might do something for yourself.
You might sell your rights of discovery, might not
you?”
“Non! Non! There is
othaire thing, there is a most good possibilitee, thees
mother lode, Mistaire Steering, it come out, I
think it come out somewhere, eh? Mistaire
Steering, have you got leetle mawney?”
“That’s exactly how much, Uncle Bernique,
a little.”
“Mistaire Steering, eef you
got leetle mawney to buy leetle land, I think I know
good land to buy.”
“I have told you all along to
consider my money your money, Uncle Bernique.”
“We must be vair’
quiet about all thees, Mistaire Steering, Piney,
you compr-r-ehend that we tr-r-us’ you,
as I have always tr-r-us’ you, absolutement!
We must be vair’ quiet. Thees leetle
piece land run down close to the rivaire, below Poetical,
at those Sowfoot Crossing, and eet ees not vair’
good land for the farming ”
Thud! Thud! The old man
caught his temples with both hands. “I am
’most craze’ by that steam-drill,”
he whispered. “Eet come so close to our
secret. Let us get away. That sound cr-r-aze
me. Found! Found! Vair’ large
lode, Mistaire Steering. Sacre! The
sound of that steam-drill is to me the most worse
thing. That lode run through and come out by the
rivaire, eef I am not mistake’, Mistaire Steering.
I go to buy that land to-night. You go back with
Piney, please sair. Eef you come with me, you
excite the question and the price. To me it will
be sold without question. I am eccentrique, they
say. You return to Canaan and have your mawney
ready for me, Mistaire Steering. That bat Grierson,
Mistaire Steering! When I think ”
Old Bernique was still throwing out
riches of castigation at Grierson, Madeira, himself,
fate, still half incoherent, when the three friends
at last got back to their horses, and separated.
Down at the foot of the bluff again, Steering, a little
sore-headed with the ache of anticipation, hope, doubt,
sat his horse in Piney’s company and watched
the old man ride off up the river unattended.
Steering felt excited and exalted himself, but the
old Frenchman was really, as he said, “craze’.”
Piney was the only sensible one left. Piney was
not at all enthused and stayed very quiet until he
parted with Bruce some distance out from Canaan.
Bruce went on back to town to wait for Old Bernique
at the hotel.
Piney took the path that led up to
the bluff behind Madeira Place. As he came through
the Madeira grounds Crittenton Madeira came out of
the house and stood on the back porch, regarding him
quizzically. Piney had a peculiar, poorly hidden
dislike of Madeira that, taken with the boy’s
charm of personality, more or less amused the Canaan
capitalist.
“Where have you been, young man?”
“In the woods.”
“Look here, learning anything when you are out
with that man Steering?”
“Yep.”
“What, for instance?”
“Not to talk.”
Madeira laughed carelessly. “You
go and get Miss Madeira to sing, young Impudence,”
he said. “I’d just as soon hear the
tenor, too. I am going to rest,” he
sighed deeply, “I’m going to
try to rest out here in the garden. I’d
like some music.”
Madeira went to the garden and stretched
out on a bench, the smile that he had given Piney
staying on his face, crinkling in automatically with
the grievous strain that was about his eyes and mouth
in these days. After a little he closed his eyes
softly, enjoyingly. From the library came the
carolling sweetness of Piney’s tenor. And
by and by, following it, soaring up with it, the glorious
fulness of Salome Madeira’s velvety soprano.
Bruce, far down the river road, heard, too.