“For they
have sown the wind, and
they shall reap the whirlwind.”
CHAPTER I PRELUDE
Silence, the silence of double doors
and of padded walls was upon the private room of the
down-town office. Across the littered, ink-stained
desk a man and a woman faced each other. Threads
of gray lightened the hair of each. Faint lines,
delicate as pencillings, marked the forehead of the
woman and radiated from the angles of her eyes.
A deep fissure unequally separated the brows of the
man, and on his shaven face another furrow added firmness
to the mouth. Their eyes met squarely, without
a motion from faces imperturbable in middle age and
knowledge of life.
The man broke silence slowly.
“You mean,” he hesitated, “what
that would seem to mean?”
“Why not?” A shade of resentment was in
the answering voice.
“But you’re a woman ”
“Well ”
“And married ”
The note of resentment became positive.
“What difference does that make?”
“It ought to.” The
man spoke almost mechanically. “You took
oath before man and higher than man ”
The woman interrupted him shortly.
“Another took oath with me and
broke it.” She leaned gracefully forward
in the big chair until their eyes met. “I’m
no longer bound.”
“But I ”
“I love you!” she interjected.
The man’s eyebrows lifted.
“Love?” he inflected.
“Yes, love. What is love but good friendship and
sex?”
The man was silent.
A strong white hand slid under the
woman’s chin and her elbow met the desk.
“I meant what you thought,” she completed
slowly.
“But I cannot ”
“Why?”
“It destroys all my ideas of things. Your
promise to another ”
“I say he’s broken his promise to me.”
“But your being a woman ”
“Why do you expect more of me
because I’m a woman? Haven’t I feelings,
rights, as well as you who are a man?” She waited
until he looked up. “I ask you again, won’t
you come?”
The man arose and walked slowly back
and forth across the narrow room. At length he
stopped by her chair.
“I cannot.”
In swift motion his companion stood up facing him.
“Don’t you wish to?” she challenged.
The hand of the man dropped in outward motion of deprecation.
“The question is useless. I’m human.”
“Why shouldn’t we do what
pleases us, then?” The voice was insistent.
“What is life for if not for pleasure?”
“Would it be pleasure, though?
Wouldn’t the future hold for us more of pain
than of pleasure?”
“No, never.” The
words came with a slowness that meant finality.
“Why need to-morrow or a year from now be different
from to-day unless we make it so?”
“But it would change unconsciously.
We’d think and hate ourselves.”
“For what reason? Isn’t
it Nature that attracts us to each other and can Nature
be wrong?”
“We can’t always depend
upon Nature,” commented the man absently.
“That’s an artificial
argument, and you know it.” A reprimand
was in her voice. “If you can’t depend
upon Nature to tell you what is right, what other
authority can you consult?”
“But Nature has been perverted,” he evaded.
“Isn’t it possible your judgment instead
is at fault?”
“It can’t be at fault,
here.” The voice was neutral as before.
“Something tells us both it would be wrong to
do as we want to do.”
Once more they sat down facing each
other, the desk between them as at first.
“Artificial convention, I tell
you again.” In motion graceful as nature
the woman extended her hand, palm upward, on the polished
desk top. “How could we be other than right?
What do we mean by right, anyway? Is there any
judge higher than our individual selves, and don’t
they tell us pleasure is the chief aim of life and
as such must be right?”
The muscles at the angle of the man’s
jaw tightened involuntarily.
“But pleasure is not the chief end of life.”
“What is, then?”
“Development evolution.”
“Evolution to what?” she insisted.
“That we cannot answer as yet.
Future generations must and will give answer.”
“It’s for this then that
you deny yourself?” A shade almost of contempt
was in the questioning voice.
The taunt brought no change of expression to the man’s
face.
“Yes.”
The woman walked over to a bookcase,
and, drawing out a volume, turned the pages absently.
Without reading a word, she came back and looked the
man squarely in the face.
“Will denying yourself help the world to evolve?”
“I think so.”
“How?”
“My determination makes me a
positive force. It is my Karma for good, that
makes my child stronger to do things.”
“But you have no child,” swiftly.
Their eyes met again without faltering.
“I shall have sometime.”
Silence fell upon them.
“Where were you a century ago?” digressed
the woman.
“I wasn’t born.”
“Where will your child be a hundred years from
now?”
“Dead likewise, probably; but
the force for good, the Karma of the life, will be
passed on and remain in the world.”
Unconsciously they both rose to their feet.
“Was man always on the earth?” she asked.
The question was answered almost before spoken.
“No.”
“Will he always be here?”
“Science says ‘no.’”
The woman came a step forward until they almost touched.
“What then becomes of your life of denial?”
she challenged.
“You make it hard for me,” said the man,
simply.
“But am I not right?”
She came toward him passionately. “I come
near you, and you start.” She laid her
hand on his. “I touch you, and your eyes
grow warm. Both our hearts beat more quickly.
Look at the sunshine! It’s brighter when
we’re so close together. What of life?
It’s soon gone and then? What
of convention that says ‘no’? It’s
but a farce that gives the same thing we ask at
the price of a few words of mummery. Our strongest
instincts of nature call for each other. Why
shouldn’t we obey them when we wish?” She
hesitated, and her voice became tender. “We
would be very happy together. Won’t you
come?”
The man broke away almost roughly.
“Don’t you know,”
he demanded, “it’s madness for us to be
talking like this? We’ll be taking it seriously,
and then ”
The woman made a swift gesture of protest.
“Don’t. Let’s
be honest with each other, at least.
I’m tired of pretending to be other than I am.
Why did you say ’being true to my husband’?
You know it’s mockery. Is it being true
to live with a man I hate because man’s law
demands it, rather than true to you whom Nature’s
law sanctions? Don’t speak to me of society’s
right and wrong! I despise it. There is
no other tribunal than Nature, and Nature says ‘Come.’”
The man sat down slowly and dropped his head wearily
into his hands.
“I say again, I cannot.
I respect you too much. We’re intoxicated
now being together. In an hour, after we’re
separate ”
She broke in on him passionately.
“Do you think a woman says what
I have said on the spur of the moment? Do you
think I merely happened to see you to-day, merely happened
to say what I’ve said? You know better.
This has been coming for months. I fought it
hard at first; with convention, with your idea of right
and wrong. Now I laugh at them both. Life
is life, and short, and beyond is darkness. Think
what atoms we are; and we struggle so hard. Our
life that seems to us so short and so long!
A thousand, perhaps ten thousand such, end to end,
and we have the life of a world. And what is
that? A cycle! A thing self-created, self-destructive:
then of human life nothingness. Oh,
it’s humorous! Our life, a ten thousandth
part of that nothingness; and so full of tiny great
struggles and worries!” She was silent a moment,
her throat trembling, a multitude of expressions shifting
swiftly on her face.
“Do you believe in God?” she questioned
suddenly.
“I hardly know. There must be ”
“Don’t you suppose, then,
He’s laughing at us now?” She hesitated
again and then went on, almost unconsciously.
“I had a dream a few nights ago.”
The voice was low and very soft. “It seemed
I was alone in a desert place, and partial darkness
was about me. I was conscious only of listening
and wondering, for out of the shadow came sounds of
human suffering. I waited with my heart beating
strangely. Gradually the voices grew louder,
until I caught the meaning of occasional words and
distinctly saw coming toward me the figure of a man
and a woman bearing a great burden, a load so great
that both together bent beneath the weight and sweat
stood thick upon their brows. The edges of the
burden were very sharp so that the hands of the man
and the woman bled from the wounds and their shoulders
were torn grievously where the load had shifted:
those of the woman more than the man, for she bore
more of the weight. I marvelled at the sight.
“Suddenly an intense brightness
fell about me and I saw, near and afar, other figures
each bearing similar burdens. The light passed
away, and I drew near the man and questioned him.
“‘What rough load is that you carry?’
I asked.
“‘The burden of conventionality,’
answered the man, wearily and with a note of surprise
in his voice.
“‘Why do you bear it needlessly?’
I remonstrated.
“‘We dare not drop it,’
said the woman, hopelessly, ’lest that light,
which is the searchlight of public opinion, return,
showing us different from the others.’
“Even as she spoke the illumination
again fell upon us, and by its brightness I saw a
drop of blood gather slowly from the wounds on the
woman’s hand and fall into the dust at her feet.”
A silence fell upon the inmates of
the tiny muffled office.
“But the burden isn’t
useless,” said the man, gently. “The
condemnation of society is an hourly reality.
From the patronage of others we live. The sun
burns us, but we submit, for in return it gives life.”
The woman arose with an abrupt movement,
and looked down at him coldly.
“Are you a man, and use those
arguments?” An expression akin to contempt formed
about her mouth. “Are you afraid of a united
voice the individuals of which you despise?”
The first hint of restrained passion
was in the answering voice.
“You taunt me in safety, for
you know I love you.” He looked up at her
unhesitatingly. “Man’s law is artificial,
that I know; but it’s made for conditions which
are artificial, and for such it’s right.
Were we as in the beginning, Nature’s law, which
beside the law of man is no law, would be right; but
we’re of the world as it is now. Things
are as they are, and we must conform or pay the price.”
He hesitated. His face settled back into a mask.
“And that price of non-conformity is too high,”
he completed steadily.
The eyes of the woman blazed and her
hands tightened convulsively.
“Oh, you’re frozen fossilized,
man! I called you man! You’re not a
man at all, but a nineteenth century machine!
You’re run like a motor, from a power house;
by the force of conventional thought, over wires of
red tape. Fie on you! I thought to meet a
human being, not a lifeless thing.” She
looked at him steadily, her chin in the air, a world
of scorn in her face. “Go on sweating beneath
the useless load! Go on building your structure
of artificiality that ends centuries from now in nothingness!
Here’s happiness to you in your empty life of
self-effacement, with your machine prompted acts, years
considered!” Without looking at him, one hand
made scornful motion of dismissal. “Good-bye,
ghost of man; I wash my hands of you.”
“Wait, Eleanor!” The man
sprang to his feet, the mask lifting from his face,
and there stood revealed a multitude of emotions, unseen
of the world, that flashed from the depths of his
brown eyes and quivered in the angles of his mouth.
He came quickly over and took her hand between his
own.
“I’m proud of you,” a
world of tenderness was in his voice “unspeakably
proud for I love you. I’ve done
my best to keep us apart, yet all the time I believed
with you. Nature is higher than man, and no power
on earth can prove it otherwise.” He looked
into the softest of brown eyes, and his voice trembled.
“Beside you the world is nothing. Its approval
or its condemnation are things to be laughed at.
With you I challenge conventionality society everything.”
He bent over her hand almost reverently and touched
it softly with his lips.
“Farewell until I come,” he
said.
CHAPTER II THE LEAP
A man and a woman emerged from the
dilapidated day-car as it drew up before the tiny,
sanded station which marked the terminus of the railway.
The man was tall, clean-shaven, quick of step and of
glance. The woman was likewise tall, well-gloved,
and, strange phenomenon at a country station, carried
no parcels.
Though easily the centre of attention,
the couple were far from being alone. On the
contrary, the car and platform fairly swarmed with
humanity. Men mostly composed the throng that
alighted big, weather-stained fellows in
rough jeans and denims. In the background, as
spectators moved or lounged a sprinkling of others:
thinner, lighter, enveloped in felt, woollen and buckskin,
a fringe of heavy hair peeping out at their backs
beneath the broad hat-brims. A few women were
intermingled. Coarsely gowned, sun-browned, they
stood; themselves like suns, but each the centre of
a system of bleach-haired minor satellites. It
was into this heterogeneous mass that the tall man
elbowed his way, a neat grip in either hand; the woman
following closely in his wake, her skirts carefully
lifted.
Clear of the out-flowing stream the
man put down the satchels, and looked over the heads
of the motley crowd into the still more motley street
beyond. Two short rows of one-story buildings,
distinctive by the brightness of new lumber on their
sheltered side, bordered a narrow street, half clogged
by the teams of visiting farmers. Not the faintest
clue to a hostelry was visible, and the eyes of the
man wandered back, interrupting by the way another
pair of eyes frankly inquisitive.
The curious one was short; by comparison
his face was still shorter, and round. From his
chin a tiny tuft of whiskers protruded, like the handle
of a gourd. Never was countenance more unmistakably
labelled good-humored, Americanized German.
The eyes of the tall man stopped.
“Is there a hotel in this” he
groped for a classification “this
city?” he asked.
A rattling sound, startlingly akin
to the agitated contents of over-ripe vegetables,
came from somewhere in the internal mechanism of the
small man. Inferentially, the inquiry was amusing
to the questioned, likewise the immediately surrounding
listeners who became suddenly silent, gazing at the
stranger with the wonder of young calves.
At length the innate spirit of courtesy
in the German triumphed over his amusement.
“Hans Becher up by the postoffice
takes folks in.” The inward commotion showed
indications of resumption. “I never heard,
though, that he called his place a hotel!”
“Thank you,” and the circle of silence
widened.
The man and the woman walked up the
street. Beneath their feet the cottonwood sidewalk,
despite its newness, was warped in agony under sun
and storm. Big puddles of water from a recent
rain stood in the hollows of the roadway, side by
side with tufts of native grasses fighting bravely
for life against the intruder Man.
A fresh, indescribable odor was in their nostrils;
an odor which puzzled them then, but which later they
learned to recognize and never forgot the
pungent scent of buffalo grass. A stillness, deeper
than of Sabbath, unbelievable to urban ears, wrapped
all things, and united with an absence of broken sky
line, to produce an all-pervading sense of loneliness.
Hans Becher did not belie his name.
He was very German. Likewise the little woman
who courtesied at his side. Ditto the choice assortment
of inquisitive tow-heads, who stared wide-eyed from
various corners. He shook hands at the door with
each of his guests, which action also was
unmistakably German.
“You would in my house put
up, you call it?” he inquired in labored English,
while the little woman polished two speckless chairs
with her apron, and with instinctive photographic
art placed them stiffly side by side for the visitors.
“Yes, we’d like to stay
with you for a time,” corroborated the tall
man.
The little German ran his fingers
uncertainly through his hair for a moment; then his
round face beamed.
“We should then become to each
other known. Is it not so?” Without pausing
for an answer, he put out a big hand to each in turn.
“I am Hans Becher, and this” with
elaborate indications “this my wife
is Minna.”
Minna courtesied dutifully, lower
than before. The little Bechers were not
classified, but their connection was apparent.
They calmly sucked their thumbs.
The lords of creation obviously held
the rostrum. It was the tall man who responded.
“My name is Maurice, Ichabod
Maurice.” He looked at the woman, his companion,
from the corner of his eye. “Allow me, Camilla,
to present Mr. Becher.” Then turning to
his hosts, “Camilla Maurice: Mr. and Mrs.
Becher.”
The tall lady shook hands with each.
“Pleased to meet you,”
she said, and smiled a moment into their eyes.
Thus Camilla Maurice made friends.
There were a few low-spoken words
in German and Minna vanished.
“She will dinner make ready,” Hans explained.
The visitors sat down in their chairs,
with Hans opposite studying them narrowly; singly
and together.
“The town is very new,” suggested Ichabod.
“One year ago it was not.”
The German’s short legs crossed each other nervously
and their owner seized the opportunity to make further
inspection. “It is very new,” he repeated
absently.
Camilla Maurice stood up.
“Might we wash, Mr. Becher?” she asked.
The ultimate predicament was all at
once staring the little man in the face.
“To be sure.... I might
have known.... You will a room desire.”
... He ran his fingers through his hair, and
inspiration came. “Mr. Maurice,”
he motioned, “might I a moment with you speak?”
“Certainly, Mr. Becher.”
The German saw light, and fairly beamed
as he sought the safe seclusion of the doorway.
“She is your sister or cousin nein?”
he asked.
There was the faintest suggestion
of a smile in the corners of Ichabod’s mouth.
“No, she is neither my sister
nor my cousin, Mr. Becher.”
Hans heaved a sigh of relief:
it had been a close corner.
“She is your wife. One
must know,” and he mopped his brow.
“Certainly one must know,”
very soberly.
Alone together in the little unfinished
room under the rafters, the woman sat down on the
corner of the bed, physical discomfort forgotten in
feminine curiosity.
“Those names where did you get them?”
she queried.
“They came to me at the moment,”
smiled the man.
“But the cold-blooded horror of them!...
Ichabod!”
“The glory has departed.”
His companion started, and the smile left the man’s
face.
“And Camilla?” slowly.
“Attendant at a sacrifice.”
Of a sudden the room became very still.
Ichabod, exploring, discovered a tiny
wash basin and a bucket of water.
“You wished to wash, Camilla?”
The woman did not move.
“They were very kind” she
looked through the window with the tiny panes:
“have we any right to lie to them?”
“We have not lied.”
“Tacitly.”
“No. I’m Ichabod
Maurice and you’re Camilla Maurice. We have
not lied.”
“But ”
“The past is dead, dead!”
The woman’s face dropped into
her hands. Woman ever weeps instinctively for
the dead.
“You are sorry that it is so?”
There was no bitterness in the man’s voice,
but he did not look at her, and Camilla misunderstood.
“Sorry!” She came close,
and a soft warm face pressed tightly against his face.
“Sorry!” Her arms were around him.
“Sorry!” again repeated. “No!
No! No! No, without end! I’m not
sorry. I’m Camilla Maurice, the happiest
woman in the world!”
Later they utilized the tin basin
and the mirror with a crack across its centre.
Dinner was waiting when they went below.
To a casual observer, Hans had been
very idle while they were gone. He sat absently
on the doorstep, watching the grass that grew almost
visibly in the warm spring sun. Occasionally he
tapped his forehead with his finger tips. It
helped him to think, and just now he sadly needed
assistance.
“Who were these people, anyway?”
he wondered. Not farmers, certainly. Farmers
did not have hands that dented when you pressed them,
and farmers’ wives did not lift their skirts
daintily from behind. Hans had been very observant
as his visitors came up the muddy street. No,
that was not the way of farmers’ wives:
they took hold at the sides with both hands, and splashed
right through on their heels.
Hans pulled the yellow tuft on his
chin. What could they be, then? Not summer
boarders. It was only early spring; and, besides,
although the little German was an optimist, even he
could not imagine any one selecting a Dakota prairie
for an outing. Yet ... No, they could not
be summer boarders.
But what then? In his intensity
Hans actually forgot the grass and, unfailing producer
of inspiration, ran his fingers frantically through
his mane.
“Ah at last of
course!” The round face beamed and a hard hand
smote a harder knee, joyously. That he had not
remembered at once! It was the new banker, to
be sure. He would tell Minna, quite as a matter
of fact, for there could be no mistake. Hank
Judge, the machine agent, and Eli Stevens, the proprietor
of the corner store, had said only yesterday there
was to be a bank. Looking up the street the little
man spied a familiar figure, and sprang to his feet
as though released by a spring, his hand already in
the air. There was Hank Judge, now, and he didn’t
know
“Dinner, Hans,” announced Minna at his
elbow.
Holding the child of his brain hard
in both hands lest it should escape prematurely, the
little German went inside to preside over a repast,
the distinctively German incense of which ascended
most appetizingly.
Hans, junior, in a childish treble,
spoke an honest little German blessing, beginning
“Mein Vater von Himmel,” and emphasized
by the raps of Hans senior’s knuckles on certain
other small heads to keep their owners quiet.
“Fresh lettuce and radishes!”
commented Camilla, joyously.
“Raised in our own garden hinein,”
bobbed Minna, in ecstasy.
“And sauerkraut ” began Ichabod.
“From cabbages so large,”
completed Hans, spreading his arms to designate an
imaginary vegetable of heroic proportions.
“They must have grown very fast
to be so large in May,” commented Camilla.
Hans and Minna exchanged glances pitying,
superior glances such as we give behind
the backs of the infirm, or the very old; and the
subject of vegetables dropped.
“A great country for a bank,
this,” commented Mr. Becher, with infinite finesse
and between intermittent puffs at a hot potato.
“Is that so?”
Hans nodded violent confirmation,
then words, English words, being valuable to him,
he came quickly to the test.
“You will build for the bank yourself, is it
not so?”
It was not the German and Minna who exchanged glances
this time.
“No, I shall not build for the bank myself,
Mr. Becher.”
“You will rent, perhaps?” Hans’s
faith was beautiful.
“No, I shall not rent.”
The German’s face fell.
To have wasted all that thought; for after all it
was not the banker!
Minna, senior, stared in surprise,
and her attention being diverted, Minna the younger
seized the opportunity to inundate herself with a
cup of hot coffee.
The spell was broken.
“I’m going to take a homestead,”
explained Ichabod.
Hans’s fork paused in mid-air
and his mouth forgot to close. At the point where
the German struck, the earth was very hard.
“So?” he interrogated, weakly.
At this juncture the difference between
the two Minnas, which had been transferred from the
table to the kitchen, was resumed; and although Ichabod
ate the remaining kraut to the last shred, and Camilla
talked to Hans of the Vaterland in his native
German, each knew the occasion was a failure.
An ideal had been raised, the ideal of a Napoleon
of finance, a banker; and that ideal materializing,
lo there stood forth a farmer! Ach Gott von Himmel!
After dinner Hans stood in the doorway
and pointed out the land-office. Ichabod thanked
him, and under the impulse of habit felt in his pocket
for a cigar. None was there, and all at once he
remembered Ichabod Maurice did not smoke. Strange
he should have such an abominable inclination to do
so just then; but nevertheless the fact remained.
Ichabod Maurice never had smoked.
He started up the street.
A small man, with very high boots
and a very long moustache, sat tipped back in the
sun in front of the land-office. He was telling
a story; a good one, judging from the attention of
the row of listeners. He grasped the chair tightly
with his left hand while his right, holding a cob
pipe, gesticulated actively. The story halted
abruptly as Ichabod came up.
“Howdy!” greeted the little man.
Maurice nodded.
“Don’t let me interrupt you,” he
temporized.
“Not at all,” courtesied
the teller of stories, as he led the way inside.
“I’ve told that one until I’m tired
of it, anyway.” He tapped the ashes from
his pipe-bowl, meditatively. “A fellow has
to kill the time some way, though, you know.”
“Yes, I know,” acquiesced Ichabod.
The agent took a chair behind the
battered pine desk, and pointed to another opposite.
“Any way I can help you?” he suggested.
“Yes,” answered Maurice. “I’m
thinking of taking a homestead.”
The agent looked his visitor up and
down and back again; then, being native born, his
surprise broke forth in idiom.
“Well, I’m jiggered!” he avowed.
It was Ichabod’s turn to make observation.
“I believe you; you look it,” he corroborated
at length.
Again the little man stared; and in
the silence following, a hungry-looking bird-dog thrust
his thin muzzle in at the door, and sniffed.
“Get out,” shouted the
owner at the intruder, adding in extenuation:
“I’m busy.” He certainly was
“jiggered.”
Ichabod came to the rescue.
“I called to learn how one goes
at it to take a claim,” he explained. “The
modus operandi isn’t exactly clear in
my mind.”
The agent braced up in his chair.
“I suppose you’ll say
it’s none of my business,” he commented,
“but as a speculation you’d do a lot better
to buy up the claims of poor cusses who have to relinquish,
than to settle yourself.”
“I’m not speculating. I expect to
build a house, and live here.”
“As a friend, then, let me tell
you you’ll never stand it.” A stubby
thumb made motion up the narrow street. “You
see this town. I won’t say what it is you
realize for yourself; but bad as it is, it’s
advanced civilization alongside of the country.
You’ll have to go ten miles out to get any land
that’s not taken.” He stopped and
lit his pipe. “Do you know what it means
to live alone ten miles out on the prairie?”
“I’ve never lived in the country.”
“I’ll tell you, then,
what it means.” He put down his pipe and
looked out at the open door. His face changed;
became softer, milder, younger. His voice, when
he spoke, added to the impression of reminiscence,
bearing an almost forgotten tone of years ago.
“The prairie!” he apostrophized.
“It means the loneliest place on God’s
earth. It means that living there, in life you
bury yourself, your hopes, your ambitions. It
means you work ever to forget the past and
fail. It means self, always; morning, noon, night;
until the very solitude becomes an incubus. It
means that in time you die, or, from being a man,
become as the cattle.” The speaker turned
for the first time to the tall man before him, his
big blue eyes wide open and round, his voice an entreaty.
“Don’t move into it, man.
It’s death and worse than death to such as you!
You’re too old to begin. One must be born
to the life; must never have known another. Don’t
do it, I say.”
Ichabod Maurice, listening, read in
that appeal, beneath the words, the wild, unsatisfied
tale of a disappointed human life.
“You are dissatisfied, lonesome There
was a time years ago perhaps ”
“I don’t know.”
The glow had passed and the face was old again, and
heavy. “I remember nothing. I’m
dead, dead.” He drew a rough map from his
pocket and spread it out before him.
“If you’ll move close,
please, I’ll show you the open lands.”
For an hour he explained homesteads,
préemptions and tree claims, and the method of
filing and proving up. At parting, Ichabod held
out his hand.
“I thank you for your advice,” he said.
The man behind the desk puffed stolidly.
“But don’t intend to follow it,”
he completed.
Instinctively, metaphor sprang to the lips of Ichabod
Maurice.
“A small speck of circumstance,
which is near, obliterates much that is in the distance.”
He turned toward the door. “I shall not
be alone.”
The little agent smoked on in silence
for some minutes, gazing motionless at the doorway
through which Ichabod had passed out. Again the
lean bird-dog thrust in an apologetic head, dutifully
awaiting recognition. At length the man shook
his pipe clean, and leaned back in soliloquy.
“Man, woman, human nature; habit,
solitude, the prairie.” He spoke each word
slowly, and with a shake of his head. “He’s
mad, mad; but I pity him” a pause “for
I know.”
The dog whined an interruption from
the doorway, and the man looked up.
“Come in, boy,” he said, in recognition.
CHAPTER III THE WONDER OF PRAIRIE
Ichabod and Camilla selected their
claim together. A fair day’s drive it was
from the little town; a half-mile from the nearest
neighbor, a Norwegian, without two-score English words
in his vocabulary. Level it was, as the surface
of a lake or the plane of a railroad bed.
Together, too, they chose the spot
for their home. Camilla sobbed over the word;
but she was soon dry-eyed and smiling again. Afterwards,
side by side, they did much journeying to and from
the nearest sawmill each trip through a
day and a night thirty odd miles away.
The mill was a small, primitive affair, almost lost
in the straggling box-elders and soft maples that
bordered the muddy Missouri, producing, amid noisy
protestations, the most despisable of all lumber on
the face of the globe twisting, creeping,
crawling cottonwood.
Having the material on the spot, Ichabod
built the house himself, after a plan never before
seen of man; joint product of his and Camilla’s
brains. It took a month to complete; and in the
meantime, each night they threw their tired bodies
on the brown earth, indifferent to the thin canvas,
which alone was spread between them and the stars.
Too utterly weary for immediate sleep,
they listened to the sounds of animal life wholly
unfamiliar to ears urban trained as they
stood out distinct by contrast with a silence otherwise
absolute as the grave.
... The sharp bark of the coyote,
near or far away; soft as an echo, the gently cadenced
tremolo of the prairie owl. To these, the mere
opening numbers of the nightly concerts, the two exotics
would listen wonderingly; then, of a sudden, typical,
indescribable, lonely as death, there would boom the
cry which, as often as it was repeated, recalled to
Ichabod’s mind the words of the little man in
the land-office, “loneliest sound on earth” the
sound which, once heard, remains forever vivid the
night call of the prairie rooster. Even now,
new and fascinating as it all was, at the last wailing
cry the two occupants of the tent would reach out
in the darkness until their hands met. Not till
then would they sleep.
In May, they finished and moved their
few belongings into the odd little two-room house.
True to instinct, Ichabod had built a fireplace, though
looking in any direction until the earth met the sky,
not a tree was visible; and Camilla had added a cozy
reading corner, which soon developed into a sleeping
corner, out-of-door occupations in sun
and wind being insurmountable obstacles to mental
effort.
But what matter! One straggling
little folio, the local newspaper, made its way into
the corner each week and that was all.
They had cut themselves off from the world, deliberately,
irrevocably. It was but natural that they should
sleep. All dead things sleep!
Month after month slipped by, and
the first ripple of local excitement and curiosity
born of their advent subsided. Ichabod knew nothing
of farming, but to learn was simple. It needed
only that he watch what his neighbors were doing,
and proceed to do likewise. He learned soon to
hold a breaking-plough in the tough prairie sod, and
to swear mightily when it balked at an unusually tough
root. As well, he came to know the oily feel
of flax as he scattered it by hand over the brown
breaking. Later he learned the smell of buckwheat
blossoms, and the delicate green coloring of sod corn,
greener by contrast with its dark background.
Nor was Camilla idle. The dresses
she had brought with her, dainty creations of foreign
make, soon gave way to domestic productions of gingham
and print. In these, the long brown hands neatly
gloved, she struggled with a tiny garden, becoming
in ratio as passed the weeks, warmer, browner, and
healthier.
“Are you happy?” asked
Ichabod, one day, observing her thus amid the fruits
of her hands.
Camilla hesitated. Catching her
hand, Ichabod lifted her chin so that their eyes met.
“Tell me, are you happy?” he repeated.
Another pause, though her eyes did not falter.
“Happier than I ever thought
to be.” She touched his sleeve tenderly.
“But not completely so, for ”
she was not looking at him now, “for
I love you, and and I’m
a woman.”
They said no more; and though Ichabod
went back to his team, it was not to work. For
many minutes he stood motionless, a new problem of
right and wrong throbbing in his brain.
Fall came slowly, bringing the drowsy,
hazy days of so-called Indian Summer. It was
the season of threshing, and all day long to the drowse
of the air was added, near and afar, all-pervading
through the stillness, the sleepy hum of the separator.
Typical voice of the prairie was that busy drone,
penetrating to the ears as the ubiquitous odor of
the buffalo grass to the nostril, again bearing resemblance
in that, once heard, memory would reproduce the sound
until recollection was no more.
Winter followed, and they, who had
thought the earth quiet before, found it still now
indeed. Even the voice of the prairie-chicken
was hushed; only the sharp knife-like cutting of spread
wings told of a flock’s passage at night.
The level country, mottled white with occasional drifts,
and brown from spots blown bare by the wind, stretched
out seemingly interminable, until the line of earth
and sky met.
Idle perforce, the two exotics would
stand for hours in the sunshine of their open doorway,
shading their eyes from the glare and looking out,
out into the distance that was as yet only a name and
that the borrowed name of an Indian tribe.
“What a country!” Camilla
would say, struck each time anew with a never-ending
wonder.
“Yes, what a country,”
Ichabod would echo, unconscious that he had repeated
the same words in the same way a score of times before.
In January, a blizzard settled upon
them, and for two days and nights they took turns
keeping the big kitchen stove red hot. The West
knows no such storms, now. Man has not only changed
the face of the earth, but, in so doing, has annihilated
that terror of the past the Dakota blizzard.
In those days, though, it was very
real, as Ichabod learned. He had prepared for
winter, by hauling a huge pile of cordwood and stacking
it, as a protection to windward, the full length of
the little cabin, thinking the spot always accessible;
but he had builded in ignorance.
The snow first commenced falling in
the afternoon. By the next morning the tiny house
was buried to the window sashes. Looking out,
there could be seen but an indistinct slanting white
wall, scarcely ten feet away: a screen through
which the sunlight filtered dimly, like the solemn
haze of a church. The earth was not silent, now.
The falling of the sleet and snow was as the striking
of fine shot, and the sound of the wind a steady unceasing
moan, resembling the sigh of a big dynamo at a distance.
Slowly, inch by inch, during that
day the snow crept up the window panes until, before
the coming of darkness without, it fell within.
Banked though they were on three sides, on the fourth
side, unprotected, the cold penetrated bitterly, a
cold no living thing could withstand without shelter.
Then it was that Ichabod and Camilla feared to sleep,
and that the long vigil began.
By the next morning there was no light
from the windows. The snow had drifted level
with the eaves. Ichabod stood in the narrow window
frame, and, lowering the glass from the top, beat a
hole upward with a pole to admit air. Through
the tunnel thus formed there filtered the dull gray
light of day: and at its end, obstructing, there
stood revealed a slanting drab wall, a
condensed milky way.
The storm was yet on, and he closed
the window. To get outside for fuel that day
was impossible, so with an axe Ichabod chopped a hole
through the wall into the big pile, and on wood thus
secured sawed steadily in the tiny kitchen, while
the kerosene lamp at his side sputtered, and the fire
crackled in a silence, like that surrounding a hunted
animal in its den.
Many usual events had occurred in
the lives of the wandering Ichabod and Camilla, which
had been forgotten; but the memory of that day, the
overwhelming, incontestible knowledge of the impotency
of wee, restless, inconsequent man, they were never
to forget.
“Tiny, tiny, mortal!”
laughed the storm. “To think you would combat
Nature, would defy her, the power of which I am but
one of many, many manifestations!” And it laughed
again. The two prisoners, listening, their ears
to the tunnel, heard the sound, and felt to the full
its biting mockery.
Next day the siege was raised, and
the sun smiled as only the sun can smile upon miles
and miles of dazzling snow crystals. Ichabod climbed
out by way of the window route and
worked for hours with a shovel before he had a channel
from the tiny, submerged shanty to the light of day
beyond. Then together he and Camilla stood side
by side in the doorway, as they had done so many times
before, looking about them at the boundless prairie,
drifted in waves of snow like the sea: the wonder
of it all, ever new, creeping over them.
“What a country!” voiced Camilla.
“What a country, indeed,” echoed Ichabod.
“Lonely and mysterious as Death.”
“Yes, as Death or Life.”
CHAPTER IV A REVELATION
Time, unchanging automaton, moved
on until late spring. Paradox of nature, the
warm brown tints of chilly days gave place under the
heat of slanting suns to the cool green of summer.
All at once, sudden as though autochthonal, there
appeared meadow-larks and blackbirds: dead weeds
or man-erected posts serving in lieu of trees as vantage
points from which to sing. Ground squirrels whistled
cheerily from newly broken fields and roadways.
Coveys of quail, tame as barn-yard fowls, played about
the beaten paths, and ran pattering in the dust ahead
of each passing team. Again, from its winter’s
rest, lonely, uncertain as to distance, came the low,
booming call of the prairie rooster. Nature had
awakened, and the joy of that awakening was upon the
land.
Of a morning in May the faded, dust-covered
day-coach drew in at the tiny prairie village.
A little man alighted. He stood a moment on the
platform, his hands deep in his pockets, a big black
cigar between his teeth, and looked out over the town.
The coloring of the short straggling street was more
weather-stained than a year ago, yet still very new,
and the newcomer smiled as he looked; a big broad smile
that played about his lips, turning up the corners
of his brown moustache, showing a flash of white teeth,
and lighting a pair of big blue eyes which lay, like
a woman’s, beneath heavy lashes. In youth,
that smile would have been a grin; but it was no grin
now. The man was far from youth, and about the
mouth and eyes were deep lines, which told of one
who knew of the world.
Slowly the smile disappeared, and
as it faded the little man puffed harder at the cigar.
Evidently something he particularly wished to explain
would not become clear to his mind.
“Of all places,” he soliloquized,
“to have chosen this!”
He started up the street, over the
irregular warping sidewalk.
“Hotel, sir-r?” The formula
was American, the trilling r’s distinctly German.
The traveller turned at the sound,
to make acquaintance with Hans Becher; for it was
Hans Becher, very much metamorphosed from the retiring
German of a year ago. He made the train regularly
now.
The small man nodded and held out
his grip; together they walked up the street.
In front of the hotel they stopped, and the stranger
pulled out his watch.
“Is there a livery here?” he asked.
“Yes; at the street end the side
to the left hand.”
“Thanks. I’ll be back with you this
evening.”
Hans Becher stared, open-mouthed, as the man moved
off.
“You will not to dinner return?”
The little man stopped, and smiled without apparent
reason.
“No. Keep the grip.
I expect to lunch,” again he smiled without
provocation, “elsewhere. By the way,”
he added, as an afterthought, “can you tell
me where Mr. Maurice Ichabod Maurice lives?”
The German nodded violent confirmation
of a direction indicated by his free hand.
“Straight out, eight miles.
Little house with paint” strong
emphasis on the last “white
paint.”
“Thanks.”
Hans saw the escape of an opportunity.
“They are friends of yours, perhaps?” he
grasped at it.
The little man did not turn, but the
smile that seemed almost a habit, sprang to his face.
“Yes, they’re friends of mine,”
he corroborated.
Hans, personification of knowledge,
stood bobbing on the doorstep, until the trail of
smoke vanished from sight, then brought the satchel
inside and set it down hard.
“Her brother has come,” he announced to
the wide-eyed Minna.
“Wessen Bruder?”
Minna was obviously excited, as attested by the lapse
from English.
“Are we not now Americans naturalized?”
rebuked Hans, icily. Suddenly he thawed.
“Whose brother! The brother of Camilla Maurice,
to be sure.”
Minna scrutinized the bag, curiously.
“Did he so inform you?” she
questioned unadvisedly.
“It was not necessary. I have eyes.”
Offended masculine dignity clumped
noisily toward the door; instinctive feminine diplomacy
sprang to the rescue.
“You are so wise, Hans!”
And Peace, sweet Peace, returned to the household
of Becher.
Meanwhile the little man had secured
a buggy, and was jogging out into the country.
He drove very leisurely, looking about him curiously.
Of a sudden he threw down his cigar, and sniffed at
the air.
“Buffalo grass, I’ll wager!
I’ve heard of it,” and in the instinctive
action of every newcomer he sniffed again.
Camilla Maurice sat in front of her
tiny house, the late morning sun warm about her; one
hand supported a book, slanted carefully to avoid
the light, the other held the crank of a barrel-churn.
As she read, she turned steadily, the monotonous chug!
chug! of the tumbling cream drowning all other
sounds.
Suddenly the shadow of a horse passed
her and a rough livery buggy stopped at her side.
She looked up. Instinctively her hand dropped
the crank, and her face turned white; then equally
involuntarily she returned to her work, and the chug!
chug! continued.
“Does Ichabod Maurice,”
drawling emphasis on the name, “live here?”
asked a voice.
“He does.” Camilla’s
chin was trembling; her answer halted abruptly.
The man looked down at her, genuine
amusement depicted upon his face.
“Won’t you please stop
your work for a moment, Camilla?”
With the name, one hand made swift
movement of deprecation. “Pardon if I mistake,
but I take it you’re Camilla Maurice?”
“Yes, I’m Camilla Maurice.”
“Quite so! You see, Ichabod
and I were old chums together in college all
that sort of thing; consequently I’ve always
wanted to meet ”
The woman stood up. Her face
still was very white, but her chin did not tremble
now.
“Let’s stop this farce,”
she insisted. “What is it you wish?”
The man in the buggy again made a
motion of deprecation.
“I was just about to say, that
happening to be in town, and incidentally hearing
the name, I wondered if it were possible.... But,
pardon, I haven’t introduced myself. Allow
me ” and he bowed elaborately.
“Arnold, Asa Arnold.... You’ve heard
Ichabod mention my name, perhaps?”
The woman held up her hand.
“Again I ask, what do you wish?”
“Since you insist, first of
all I’d like to speak a moment with Ichabod.”
His face changed suddenly. “For Heaven’s
sake, Eleanor, if he must alter his name, why did
he choose such a barbaric substitute as Ichabod?”
“Were he here” evenly “he’d
doubtless explain that himself.”
“He’s not here, then?” No banter
in the voice now.
“Never fear” quickly “he’ll
return.”
A moment they looked into each other’s
eyes; challengingly, as they had looked unnumbered
times before.
“As you suggest, Eleanor,”
said the man, slowly, “this farce has gone far
enough. Where may I tie this horse? I wish
to speak with you.”
Camilla pointed to a post, and silently
went toward the house. Soon the man followed
her, stopping a moment to take a final puff at his
cigar before throwing it away.
Within the tiny kitchen they sat opposite,
a narrow band of warm spring sunshine creeping in
at the open door separating them. The woman looked
out over the broad prairie, her color a trifle higher
than usual, the lids of her eyes a shade nearer together that
was all. The man crossed his legs and waited,
looking so small that he seemed almost boyish.
In the silence, the drone of feeding poultry came
from the back-yard, and the sleepy breathing of the
big collie on the steps sounded plainly through the
room.
A minute passed. Neither spoke.
Then, with a shade of annoyance, the man shifted in
his chair.
“I thought, perhaps, you’d
have something you wished to say. If not, however ”
He paused meaningly.
“You said a moment ago, you wished to speak
to me.”
“As usual, you make everything
as difficult as possible.” The shade of
annoyance became positive. “Such being the
case, we may as well come to the point. How soon
do you contemplate bringing this this incident
to a close?”
“The answer to that question concerns me alone.”
An ordinary man would have laughed;
but Asa Arnold was not an ordinary man not
at this time.
“As your husband, I can’t agree with you.”
Camilla Maurice took up his words, quickly.
“You mistake. You’re the husband
of Eleanor Owen. I’m not she.”
The man went on calmly, as though there had been no
interruption.
“I don’t want to be hard
on you, Eleanor. I don’t think I have been
hard on you. A year has passed, and I’ve
known you were here from the first day. But this
sort of thing can’t go on indefinitely; there’s
a limit, even to good nature. I ask you again,
when are you coming back?”
The woman looked at her companion,
for the first time steadily. Even she, who knew
him so well, felt a shade of wonder at the man who
could adjust all the affairs of his life in the same
voice with which he ordered his dinner. Before,
she had always thought this attitude of his pure affectation.
Now she knew better, knew it mirrored the man himself.
He had done this thing. Knowing her whereabouts
all the time, he had allotted her the past year, as
an employer would grant a holiday to an assistant.
Now he asked her to return to the old life, as calmly
as one returns in the fall to the city home after an
outing! Only one man in the world could have
done that thing, and that man was before her her
husband by law Asa Arnold!
The wonder of it all crept into her voice.
“I’m not coming back,
can’t you understand? I’m never coming
back,” she repeated.
The man arose and stood in the doorway.
“Don’t say that,”
he said very quietly. “Not yet. I won’t
begin, now, after all these years to make protestations
of love. The thing called Love we’ve discussed
too often already, and without result. Anyway,
that’s not the point. We never pretended
to be lovers, even when we were married. We were
simply useful, very useful to each other.”
Camilla started to interrupt him,
but, preventing, he held up his hand.
“We talked over a certain possibility one
now a reality before we were married.”
He caught the look upon her face. “I don’t
say it was ideal. It simply was,”
he digressed slowly in answer, then hurried on:
“That was only five years ago, Eleanor, and we
were far from young.” He looked at her,
searchingly. “You’ve not forgotten
the contract we drew up, that stood above the marriage
obligation, above everything, supreme law for you
and me?” Instinctively his hand went to an inner
pocket, where the rustle of a paper answered his touch.
“Remember; it’s not a favor I ask of you,
but the fulfilment of your own word. Think a
moment before you say you’ll never return.”
Camilla Maurice found an answer very
difficult. Had he been angry, or abusive, it
would have been easy; but as it was
“You overlook the fact of change.
A lifetime isn’t required for that.”
“I overlook nothing.”
The man went back to his chair. “You remember,
as well as I, that we considered the problem of change and
laughed at it. I repeat, we’re no longer
in swaddling clothes.”
“Be that as it may, I tell you
the whole world looks different to me now.”
The speaker struggled bravely, but the ghastliness
of such a discussion wore on her nerves, and her face
twitched. “No power on earth could make
me keep that contract since I’ve changed.”
The suggestion of a smile played about the man’s
mouth.
“You’ve succeeded, perhaps,
in finding that for which we searched so long in vain,
an aesthetic, non-corporeal love?”
“I refuse to answer a question
which was intended as an insult.”
The words out of her mouth, the woman regretted them.
“Though quick yourself to take
offence, you seem at no great pains to avoid giving
affront to another.” The man voiced the
reprimand without the twitch of an eyelid, and finished
with another question: “Have you any reason
for doing as you’ve done, other than the one
you gave?”
“Reason! Reason!”
Camilla Maurice stared again. “Isn’t
it reason enough that I love him, and don’t
love you? Isn’t it sufficient reason to
one who has lived until middle life in darkness that
a ray of light is in sight? Of all people in
the world, you’re the one who should understand
the reason best!”
“Would any of those arguments
be sufficient to break another contract?”
“No, but one I didn’t
mention would. Even when I lived with you, I was
of no more importance than a half-dozen other women.”
“You didn’t protest at
time of the agreement. You knew then my belief
and,” Arnold paused meaningly, “your own.”
A memory of the past came to the woman;
the dark, lonely past, which, even yet, after so many
years, came to her like a nightmare; the time when
she was a stranger in a strange town, without joy of
past or hope of future; most lonely being on God’s
earth, a woman with an ambition and without
friends.
“I was mad I see
it now lonely mad. I met you.
Our work was alike, and we were very useful to each
other.” One white hand made motion of repugnance
at the thought. “I was mad, I say.”
“Is that your excuse for ignoring
a solemn obligation?” Arnold looked her through.
“Is that your excuse for leaving me for another,
without a word of explanation, or even the conventional
form of a divorce?”
“It was just that explanation this I
wished to avoid. It’s hard for us both,
and useless.”
“Useless!” The man quickly
picked up the word. “Useless! I don’t
like the suggestion of that word. It hints of
death, and old age, and hateful things. It has
no place with the living.”
He drew a paper from his pocket, slowly,
and spread it on his knee.
“Pardon me for again recalling
past history, Eleanor; but to use a word that is dead!...
You must have forgotten ” The writing,
a dainty, feminine hand, was turned toward her, tauntingly,
compellingly.
The man waited for some response;
but Camilla Maurice was silent. That bit of paper,
the shadow of a seemingly impossible past, made her,
for the time, question her identity, almost doubt
it.
Five years ago, almost to the day,
high up in a city building, in a dainty little room,
half office, half atelier, a man and a woman
had copied an agreement, each for the other, and had
sworn an oath ever to remain true to that solemn bond....
She had brought nothing to him, but herself; not even
affection. He, on the other hand, had saved her
from a life of drudgery by elevating her to a position
where, free of the necessity of struggling for a bare
existence, she might hope to consummate the fruition
of at least a part of her dreams. On her part....
“Witnesseth: The said
Eleanor Owen is at liberty to follow her own inclinations
as she may see fit; she is to remain free of any and
all responsibilities and restrictions such as customarily
attach to the supervision of a household, excepting
as she may elect to exercise her wifely prerogatives;
being absolutely free to pursue whatsoever occupation
or devices she may desire or choose, the same as if
she were yet a spinster....
“In Consideration of Which:
The said Eleanor Owen agrees never so to comport herself
that by word or conduct will she bring ridicule....
dishonor upon the name....”
Recollection of it all came to her
with a rush; but the words ran together and swam in
a maddening blur the roar from the street
below, dull with distance; the hum of the big building,
with its faint concussions of closing doors; the air
from the open window, not like the sweet prairie air
of to-day, but heavy, smoky, typical breath of the
town, yet pregnant with the indescribable throb of
spring, impossible to efface or to disguise!
The compelling intimacy and irrevocability of that
memory overwhelmed her, now; a dark, evil flood that
blotted out the sunshine of the present.
The paper rustled, as the man smoothed
it flat with his hand.
“Shall I read?” he asked.
The woman’s face stood clear cruelly
clear in the sunlight; about her mouth
and eyes there was an expression which, from repetition,
we have learned to associate with the circle surrounding
a new-made grave: an expression hopelessly desperate,
desperately hopeless.
Of a sudden her chin trembled and
her face dropped into her hands.
“Read, if you wish”; and
the smooth brown head, with its thread of gray, trembled
uncontrollably.
“Eleanor!” with a sudden
vibration of tenderness in his voice. “Eleanor,”
he repeated.
But the woman made no response.
The man had taken a step forward;
now he sat down again, looking through the open doorway
at the stretch of green prairie, with the road, a
narrow ribbon of brown, dividing it fair in the middle.
In the distance a farmer’s wagon was rumbling
toward town, a trail of fine dust, like smoke, suspended
in the air behind. It rattled past, and the big
collie on the step woke to give furious chase in its
wake, then returned slowly, a little conscious under
the stranger’s eye, to sleep as before.
Asa Arnold sat through it all, still as one devitalized;
an expression on his face no man had ever seen before;
one hopeless, lonely, akin to that of the woman.
“Read, if you wish,” repeated Camilla,
bitterly.
For a long minute her companion made no motion.
“It’s unnecessary,”
he intoned at last. “You know as well as
I that neither of us will ever forget one word it
contains.” He hesitated and his voice grew
gentle. “Eleanor, you know I didn’t
come here to insult you, or to hurt you needlessly; but
I’m human. You seem to forget this.
You brand me less than a man, and then ask of me the
unselfishness of a God!”
Camilla’s white face lifted from her hands.
“I ask nothing except that you leave me alone.”
For the first time the little man showed his teeth.
“At last you mention the point
I came here to arrange. Were you alone, rest
assured I shouldn’t trouble you.”
“You mean ”
“I mean just this. I wouldn’t
be human if I did what you ask if I condoned
what you’ve done and are still doing.”
He was fairly started now, and words came crowding
each other; reproachful, tempestuous.
“Didn’t you ever stop
to think of the past think what you’ve
done, Eleanor?” He paused without giving her
an opportunity to answer. “Let me tell
you, then. You’ve broken every manner of
faith between man and woman. If you believe in
God, you’ve broken faith with Him as well.
Don’t think for a moment I ever had respect for
marriage as a divine institution, but I did have respect
for you, and at your wish we conformed. You’re
my wife now, by your own choosing. Don’t
interrupt me, please. I repeat, God has no more
to do with ceremonial marriage now than he had at
the time of the Old Testament and polygamy. It’s
a man-made bond, but an obligation nevertheless, and
as such, at the foundation of all good faith between
man and woman. It’s this good faith you’ve
broken.” A look of bitterness flashed over
his face.
“Still, I could excuse this
and release you at the asking, remaining your friend,
your best friend as before; but to be thrown aside
without even a ‘by your leave,’ and that
for another man ” He hesitated and
finished slowly:
“You know me well enough, Eleanor,
to realize that I’m in earnest when I say that
while I live the man has yet to be born who can take
something of mine away from me.”
Camilla gestured passionately.
“In other words: while
growling hard at the dog who approached your bone,
you have no hesitation in stealing from another!”
The accumulated bitterness of years of repression
spoke in the taunt.
Across the little man’s face
there fell an impenetrable mask, like the armor which
dropped about an ancient ship of war before the shock
of battle.
“I’m not on trial.
I’ve not changed my name ” he
nodded significantly toward the view beyond the open
door, “and sought seclusion.”
Again the bitterness of memory prompted
Camilla to speak the harshest words of her life.
“No, you hadn’t the decency.
It was more pleasure to thrust your shame daily in
my face.”
Arnold’s color paled above the
dark beard line; but the woman took no heed.
“Why did you wait a year,”
continued the bitter voice, “to end in this?
If it must have been why not before?”
“I repeat, I’m not on
trial. If you’ve anything to say, I’ll
listen.”
Something new in the man’s face
caught Camilla’s attention, softened the tone
of her voice.
“I’ve only this to say.
You’ve asked for an explanation and a promise;
but I can give you neither. If there ever comes
a time when I feel they’re due you, and I’m
able to comply, I’ll give them both gladly.”
The absent look of the past returned to her eyes.
“Even if I wished, I couldn’t give you
an explanation now. I can’t make myself
understand the contradiction. Somehow, knowing
you so long, your beliefs crept insistently into my
loneliness. It seems hideous now, but I was honest
then. I believed them, too. I don’t
blame you; I only pity you. You were the embodiment
of protest against the established, of the non-responsibility
of the individual, of skepticism in everything.
Your eternal ‘why’ covered my horizon.
Every familiar thing came to bear a question I couldn’t
answer. My whole life seemed one eternal doubt.
One thing I’d never known, and I questioned it
most of all; the one thing I know now to be the truth, the
greatest truth in the world.” For an instant
the present crowded the past from Camilla’s
mind, but only for an instant. “Whatever
I was at the time, you’d made me with
your deathless ‘why.’ When I signed
the obligation of that day, I believed it was of my
own free will; but I know now it was you who wrote
it for both of us you, with your perpetual
interrogation. I don’t accuse you of doing
this deliberately, maliciously. We were both
deceived; but none the less the fact remains.”
A shadow, almost of horror, passed over her face.
“Time passed, and though you
didn’t know, I was in Hell. Reason told
me I was right. Instinct, something, called me
a drag. I tried to compromise, and we were married.
Then, for the first time, came realization. We
were the best of friends, but only friends.”
“You wonder how I knew.
I didn’t tell you then. I couldn’t.
I could only feel, and that not clearly. The
shadow of your ‘why’ was still dark upon
me. What I vaguely felt then, though, I know now;
as I recognize light or cold or pain.”
Her voice assumed the tone of one who speaks of mysteries;
slow, vibrant. “In every woman’s mind
the maternal instinct should be uppermost; before
everything, before God, unashamed, inevitable.
It’s unmistakably the distinction of a good
woman from a bad. The choosing of the father of
her child is a woman’s unfailing test of love.”
The face of the man before her dropped
into his hands, but she did not notice.
“Gropingly I felt this, and
the knowledge came almost as an inspiration.
It gave a clue to ”
“Stop!” The man’s
eyes blazed, as he leaped from his chair. “Stop!”
He took a step forward, his hand before
him, his face twitching uncontrollably. The collie
on the step awoke, and seeing his mistress threatened,
growled ominously.
“Stop, I tell you!” Arnold
choked for words. This the man of “why,”
whom nothing before could shake!
Camilla paled as her companion arose,
and the dog, bristling, came inside the room.
“Get out!” blazed the
man, with a threatening step, and the collie fled.
The interruption loosed words which
came tumbling forth in a torrent, as Arnold returned
to face her.
“You think I’m human,
and yet tell me that to my face?” His voice was
terrible. “You women brand men cruel!
No man on earth would speak as you have spoken to
a woman he’d lived with for four years!”
The sentences crowded over each other, like water
over a fall his eyes flashing like a spray.
“I told you before, I’m
not on trial; that it was not my place to defend.
I don’t do so now; but since you’ve spoken,
I’ll answer your question. You ask why
I didn’t come a year ago, hinting that I wanted
to be more cruel. God! the blindness and injustice
of you women! Because we men don’t show Bah!...
I was paying my own price. We weren’t living
by the marriage vow; it was but a farce. Our own
contract was the vital thing, and it had said But
I won’t repeat. God, it was bitter!
But I thought you’d come back. I loved you
still.” He paused for words, breathing
hard.
“You say, I’ll never know
what love is. Blind! I’ve always loved
you until this moment, when you killed my love.
You say I was untrue. It’s false.
I swear it before you, as you were once, when
you were my god. Had you trusted me, as I trusted
you, there’d have been no thought of unfaithfulness
in your mind.”
The woman sank back in the chair,
her face covered, her whole body trembling; but Asa
Arnold went on like the storm.
“Yes, I was ever true to you.
From the first moment we met, and against my own beliefs.
You didn’t see. You expected me to protest
it daily: to repeat the tale as a child repeats
its lesson for a comfit. Blind, I say, blind!
You’ll charge that I never told you that I loved
you. You wouldn’t have believed me, even
had I done so. Besides, I didn’t realize
that you doubted, until the time when you were learning ”
he walked jerkily across the room and took up his
hat, “learning the thing you threw
in my face.” He started to leave, but stopped
in the doorway, without looking back. “You
tell me you’ve suffered. For the first
time in my life I say to another human being:
I hope so.” He turned, unsteadily, down
the steps.
“Wait,” pleaded the woman. “Wait!”
The man did not stop, or turn.
Camilla Maurice sank back in the chair,
weak as one sick unto death, her mind a throbbing,
whirling chaos, as of a patient under an
anæsthetic. Something she knew she ought to do,
intended doing, and could not. She groped desperately,
but overwhelming, insistent, there had developed in
her a sudden, preventing tumult in paradox,
a confusion in rhythm like the beating
of a great hammer on an anvil, only incredibly more
swift than blows from human hands. Over and over
again she repeated to herself the one word: “wait,”
“wait,” “wait,” but mechanically
now, without thought as to the reason. Then, all
at once, soft, all-enfolding, kindly Nature wrapped
her in darkness.
She awoke with the big collie licking
her hand, and a numbness of cramped limbs that was
positive pain. A long-necked pullet was standing
in the doorway, with her mouth open; others stood wondering,
beyond. The sun had moved until it no longer shone
in at the tiny south windows, and the shadow of the
house had begun to lengthen.
Camilla stood up in the doorway; uncertain,
dazed. A great lump was on her forehead, which
she stroked absently, without surprise at its presence.
She looked about the yard, and, her breath coming more
quickly, at the prairie. A broad green plain,
parted by the road squarely in the centre, smiled
at her in the sunlight. That was all. She
stepped outside and shaded her eyes with her hand.
Not a wagon nor a human being was in sight.
Again the weakness and the blackness
came stealing over her; she sank down on the doorstep.
“O God, what have I done!” she wailed.
The hens returned to their search
for bugs; but the big collie stayed by her side, whimpering
and fondling her hand.
CHAPTER V THE DOMINANCE OF THE EVOLVED
The keen joy of life was warmly flooding
Ichabod Maurice this spring day. Not life for
the sake of an ambition or a duty, but delight in
the mere animal pleasure of existence. He had
risen early, and, a neighbor with him, they had driven
forth: stars all about, perpendicular, horizontal,
save in the reddening east, upon their long day’s
drive to the sawmill. The two teams plodded along
steadily, their footfall muffled in the soft prairie
loam; the earth elsewhere soundless, with a silence
which even yet was a marvel to the city man.
The majesty of it held him silent
until day dawned, and with the coming of the sun there
woke in unison the chorus of joyous animal life.
Then Ichabod, his long legs dangling over the dashboard,
lifted up a voice untrained as the note of a loon,
and sang lustily, until his companion on the wagon
ahead, boy-faced, man-bodied, grinned
perilously.
The long-visaged man was near happiness
that morning, unbelievably near. By
nature unsocial, by habit, city inbred, artificially
taciturn, there came with the primitive happiness of
the moment the concomitant primitive desire for companionship.
He smiled self-tolerantly when, obeying an instinct,
he wound the lines around the seat, and went ahead
to the man, who grinned companionably as he made room
beside him.
“God’s country, this.”
Ichabod’s hand made an all-including gesture,
as he seated himself comfortably, his hat low over
his eyes.
“Yes, sir,” and the grin was repeated.
The tall man reflected. Sunburned,
roughly dressed, unshaven as he, Maurice, was, this
boy-man never failed the word of respect. Ichabod
examined him curiously out of his shaded lids.
Big brown hands; body strong as a bull; powerful shoulders;
neck turned like a model; a soft chin under a soft,
light beard; gentle blue eyes all in all,
a face so open that its very legibility seemed a mark.
It reddened now, under the scrutiny.
“Pardon,” said Ichabod.
“I was thinking how happy you are.”
“Yes, sir.” And the face reddened
again.
Ichabod smiled.
“When is it to be, Ole?”
The big body wriggled in blissful embarrassment.
“As soon as the house is built,” confusedly.
“You’re building very fast, eh?”
The Swede grinned confirmation. Words were of
value to Ole.
“I see the question was superfluous,”
and Ichabod likewise smiled in genial comradery.
A moment later, however, the smile vanished.
“You’re very content as
it is, Ole,” he digressed, equivocally; “but supposing Minna
were already the wife of a friend?”
The Swede stared in breathless astonishment.
“She isn’t, though” he gasped at
length in startled protest.
“But supposing ”
“It would be so. I couldn’t help
it.”
“You’d do nothing?” rank anarchy
in the suggestion.
“What would there be to do?”
Ichabod temporized.
“Supposing again, she loved
you, and didn’t love her husband?” Ole
scratched his head, seeing very devious passages beyond.
“That would be different,” and he crossed
his legs.
Ichabod smiled. The world over,
human nature is fashioned from one mould.
“Supposing, once more, it’s
a year from now, five years from now.
You’ve married Minna, but you’re not happy.
She’s grown to hate you, to love
another man?”
Ole’s faith was beautiful.
“It’s not to be thought of. It’s
impossible!”
“But supposing,” urged Ichabod.
The boy-man was silent for a very
long minute; then his face darkened, and the soft
jaw grew hard.
“I don’t know ”
he said slowly, “I don’t know,
but I think I kill that man.”
Ichabod did not smile this time.
“We’re all much alike, Ole. I think
you would.”
They drove on; far past the town,
now; the sun high in the sky; dew sparkling like prisms
innumerable; the prairie colorings soft as a rug its
varied greens of groundwork blending with the narrow
line of fresh breaking rolling at their feet.
“You were born in this country?” asked
Ichabod suddenly.
“In Iowa. It’s much like this only
rougher.”
“You’ll live here, always?”
The Swede shook his head and the boy’s face
grew older.
“No; some day, we’re going to the city Minna
and I. We’ve planned.”
Ichabod was thoughtful a minute.
“I’m a friend of yours, Ole.”
“A very good friend,” repeated the mystified
Swede.
“Then, listen, and don’t
forget.” The voice was vibrant, low, but
the boy heard it clearly above the noise of the wagon.
“Don’t do it, Ole; in God’s name,
don’t do it! Stay here, you’ll be
happy.” He looked the open-mouthed listener
deep in the eyes. “If you ever say a prayer,
let it be the old one, even though it be an insult
to a just God: ’Lead us not into
temptation.’ Avoid, as you would avoid death,
the love of money, the fever of unrest, the desire
to become greater than your fellows, the thirst to
know and to taste all things, which is the spirit
of the city. Live close to Nature, where all is
equal and all is good; where sleep comes in the time
of sleep, and work when it is day. Do that labor
which comes to you at the moment, leaving to-morrow
to Nature.” He crossed his long legs, and
pressed his hat down over his eyes. “Accept
life as Nature gives it, day by day. Don’t
question, and you’ll find it good.”
He repeated himself slowly. “That’s
the secret. Don’t doubt, or question anything.”
In the Swede’s throat there
was a rattling, which presaged speech, but it died
away.
“Do you love children, Ole?” asked Ichabod,
suddenly.
The boy face flushed. Ole was very young.
“I ” he lagged.
“Of course you do. Every
living human being does. It’s the one good
instinct, which even the lust of gain doesn’t
down. It’s the tie that binds, the
badge of brotherhood which makes the world one.”
He gently laid his hand on the broad shoulder beside
him.
“Don’t be ashamed to say
you love children, boy, though the rest of the world
laugh, for they’re laughing at a lie.
They’ll tell you the parental instinct is dying
out with the advance of civilization; that the time
will come when man will educate himself to his own
extinction. It’s false, I tell you, absolutely
false.” Ichabod had forgotten himself,
and he rushed on, far above the head of the gaping
Swede.
“There’s one instinct
in the world, the instinct of parenthood, which advances
eternal, stronger, infinitely, as man’s mind
grows stronger. So unvarying the rule that it’s
almost an index of civilization itself, advancing
from a crude instinct of the body-base and animal until
it reaches the realm of the mind: the highest,
the holiest of man’s desires: yet stronger
immeasurably, as with the educated, things of the
mind are stronger than things of the body. Those
who deny this are fools, or imposters, I
know not which. To do so is to strike at the
very foundation of human nature, but impotently, for
in fundamentals, human nature is good.”
Unconsciously, a smile flashed over the long face.
“Talk about depopulating the
earth! All the wars of primitive man were inadequate.
The vices of civilization have likewise failed.
Even man’s mightiest weapon, legislation, couldn’t
stay the tide for a moment, if it would. While
man is man, and woman is woman, that long, above government,
religion, life and death itself, will
reign supreme the eternal instinct of parenthood.”
Ichabod caught himself in his own
period and stopped, a little ashamed of his earnestness.
He sat up in the seat preparatory to returning to
his own wagon, then dropped his hand once more on the
boy’s shoulder.
“I’m old enough to be
your father, boy, and have done, in all things, the
reverse of what I advised you. Therefore, I know
I was wrong. We may sneer and speak of poetry
when the words proceed from another, my boy; but,
as inevitable as death, there comes to every man the
knowledge that he stands accursed of Nature, who hasn’t
heard the voice of his own child call ‘father!’”
He clambered down, leaving the speechless
Ole sprawling on the wagon-seat. Back in his
own wagon, he smiled broadly to himself.
“Strange, how easily the apple
falls when it’s ripe,” he soliloquized.
They drove on clear to the mill without
another word; without even a grin from the broad-faced
Ole, who sat in ponderous thought in the wagon ahead.
To a nature such as his the infrequency of a new idea
gives it the force of a cataclysm; during its presence,
obliterating everything else.
It was nearly noon when they reached
the narrow fringe of trees and underbrush deciduous
and wind-tortured all which bordered the
big, muddy, low-lying Missouri; and soon they could
hear the throb of the engine at the mill, and the
swish of the saw through the green lumber; a sound
that heard near by, inevitably carries the suggestion
of scalpel and living flesh. Nothing but green
timber was sawed thereabout in those days. The
country was settling rapidly, lumber was imperative,
and available timber very, very limited.
Returning, the heavy loads grumbled
slowly along, so slowly that it was nearly evening,
and their shadows preceded them by rods when they
reached the little prairie town. They stopped
to water their teams; and Ole, true to the instincts
of his plebeian ancestry, went in search of a glass
of beer. He returned, quickly, his face very red.
“A fellow in there is talking
about about Mrs. Maurice,” he blurted.
“In the saloon, Ole?”
The Swede repeated the story, watching
the tall man from the corner of his eye.
A man, very drunk, was standing by
the bar, and telling how, in coming to town, he had
seen a buggy drive away from the Maurice home very
fast. He had thought it was the doctor’s
buggy and had stopped in to see if any one was sick.
The fellow had grinned here and drank
some more, before finishing the story; the surrounding
audience winking at each other meanwhile, and drinking
in company.
Then he went on to tell how Camilla
Maurice had sat just inside the doorway, her face
in her hands, sobbing, so hard she hadn’t
noticed him; and and it wasn’t
the doctor who had been there at all!
Ichabod had been holding a pail of
water so that a horse might drink. At the end
he motioned Ole very quietly, to take his place.
“Finish watering them, and wait for
me, please.”
It was far from what the Swede had
expected; but he accepted the task, obediently.
The only saloon of the town stood
almost exactly opposite Hans Becher’s place,
flush with the street. A long, low building,
communicating with the outer world by one door sans
glass its single window in front and at
the rear lit it but imperfectly at midday, and now
at early evening made faces almost indistinguishable,
and cast kindly shadow over the fly specks and smoke
stains of a low roof. A narrow pine bar, redolent
of tribute absorbed from innumerable passing “schooners,”
stretched the entire length of the room at one side;
and back of it, in shirt sleeves and stained apron,
presided the typical bar-keeper of the frontier.
All this Ichabod saw as he stepped inside; then, himself
in shadow, he studied the group before him.
Railroad and cattle men, mostly, made
up the gathering, with a scant sprinkling of farmers
and others unclassified. A big, ill-dressed fellow
was repeating the tale of scandal for the benefit of
a newcomer; the narrative moving jerkily over hiccoughs,
like hurdles.
“ I drew up to th’
house quick, an’ went up th’ path quiet
like,” he tapped thunderously on the
bar with a heavy glass for silence “quiet sh-h like;
an’ when I come t’ th’ door, ther’
’t was open, an’ as I hope hope
t’ die,... drink on me, b’ys, aller
y’ set ‘m up, Barney ol’
b’y, m’ treat,... hope t’ die, ther’
she sat, like this ” He looked around
mistily for a chair, but none was convenient, and
he slid flat to the floor in their midst, his face
in his hands, blubbering dismally in imitation....
“Sat (hic) like this; rockin’ an’
moanin’ n’ callin’ his name:
Asa Asa Asa (hic)
Arnold ’shure ’s I’m a
sinner she ”
He did not finish. Very suddenly
the surrounding group had scattered, and he peered
up through maudlin tears to learn the cause. One
man alone stood above him. The room had grown
still as a church.
The drunken one blinked his watery
eyes and showed his yellow teeth in a convivial grin.
“G’d evnin’, pard....
Serve th’ th’ gem’n, Barney;
m’ treat.” Again the teeth obtruded.
“Was jes’ ”
“Get up!”
He of the story winked harder than before.
“Bless m’ ”
He paused for an expletive, hiccoughed, and forgetting
what had caused the halt, stumbled on: “Didn’
rec’gniz’ y’ b’fore.
Shake, ol’ boy. S sh-sorry for
y’.” Tears rose copiously. “Tough when
feller’s wife ”
Interrupting suddenly a muffled sound
like the distant exhaust of a big engine the
meeting of a heavy boot with an obstacle on the floor.
“Get up!”
A very mountain of human brawn resolved
itself upward; a hand on its hips; a curse on its
lips.
“You damned lantern-faced ”
No hiccough now, but a pause from pure physical impotence,
pending a doubtful struggle against a half-dozen men.
“Order, gentlemen!” demanded
the bar-keeper, adding emphasis by hammering a heavy
bottle on the bar.
“Let him go,” commanded
Ichabod very quietly; but they all heard through the
confusion. “Let him go.”
The country was by no means the wild
West of the story-papers, but it was primitive, and
no man thought, then, of preventing the obviously
inevitable.
Ichabod held up his hand, suggestively,
imperatively, and the crowd fell back, silent, leaving
him facing the big man.
“You’ll apologize!”
The thin jaw showed clear, through the shade of brown
stubble on Ichabod’s face.
For answer, the big man leaning on
the bar exhibited his discolored teeth and breathed
hard.
“How shall it be?” asked Ichabod.
A grimy hand twitched toward a grimier hip.
“You’ve seen the likes of this ”
Ichabod turned toward the spectators.
“Will any man lend me ”
“Here ”
“Here ”
“And give us a little light.”
“Outside,” suggested the saloon-keeper.
“We’re not advertising
patent medicine,” blazed Ichabod, and the lamps
were lit immediately.
Once more the long-visaged man appealed
to the group lined up now against the bar.
“Gentlemen I never
carried a revolver a half-hour in my life. Is
it any more than fair that I name the details?”
“Name ’m and be quick,”
acquiesced his big opponent before the others could
speak.
“Thanks, Mr. Duggin,”
with equal swiftness. “These, then, are
the conditions.” For three seconds, that
seemed a minute, Ichabod looked steadily between his
adversary’s bushy eyebrows. “The conditions,”
he repeated, “are, that starting from opposite
ends of the room, we don’t fire until our toes
touch in the middle line.”
“Good!” commended a voice;
but it was not big Duggin who spoke.
“I’ll see that it’s
done, too,” added a listening cattleman,
grasping Ichabod by the hand.
“And I.”
The building had been designed as
a bowling-alley and was built the entire length of
the lot. With an alacrity born of experience,
the long space opposite the bar was cleared, and the
belligerents stationed one at either end, their faces
toward the wall. Midway between them a heavy
line had been drawn with chalk, and beside it stood
a half-dozen grim men, their hands resting suggestively
on their hips. The room was again very quiet,
and from out-of-doors penetrated the shrill sound
of a schoolboy whistling “Annie Laurie”
with original variations. So exotic seemed the
entire scene in its prairie setting, that it might
have been transferred bodily from the stage of a distant
theatre and set down here, by mistake.
“Now,” directed a voice.
“You understand, men. You’re to face
and walk to the line. When your feet touch fire;
and,” warningly “remember,
not before. Ready, gentlemen. Turn.”
Ichabod faced about, the cocked revolver
in his hand, the name Asa Arnold singing in his ears.
A terrible cold-white anger was in his heart against
the man opposite, who had publicly caused the resurrection
of this hated, buried thing. For a moment it blotted
out all other sensations; then, rushing, crowding came
other thoughts, vision from boyhood down.
In the space of seconds, faded scenes of the dead
past took on sudden color and as suddenly vanished.
Faces, he had forgotten for years, flashed instantaneously
into view. Voices long hushed in oblivion, re-embodied,
spoke in accents as familiar as his own. Inwardly
he was seething with the myriad shifting pictures
of a drowning man. Outwardly he walked those
half-score steps to the line, unflinchingly; came to
certain death, and waited: personification
of all that is cool and deliberate of the
sudden abundant nerve in emergencies which comes only
to the highly evolved.
Duggin, the big man, turned likewise
at the word and came part way swiftly; then stopped,
his face very pale. Another step he took, with
another pause, and with great drops of perspiration
gathering on his face, and on the backs of his hands.
Yet another start, and he came very near; so near
that he gazed into the blue of Ichabod’s eyes.
They seemed to him now devil’s eyes, and he
halted, looking at them, fingering the weapon in his
hand, his courage oozing at every pore.
Out of those eyes and that long, thin
face stared death; not hot, sudden death, but nihility,
cool, deliberate, that waited for one! The big
beads on his forehead gathered in drops and ran down
his cheeks. He tried to move on, but his legs
only trembled beneath him. The hopeless, unreasoning
terror of the frightened animal, the raw recruit,
the superstitious negro, was upon him. The last
fragment of self-respect, of bravado even, was in
tatters. No object on earth, no fear of hereafter,
could have made him face death in that way, with those
eyes looking into his.
The weapon shook from Duggin’s
hand to the floor, with a sound like the
first clatter of gravel on a coffin lid; and in abasement
absolute he dropped his head; his hands nerveless,
his jaw trembling.
“I beg your pardon and your wife’s,”
he faltered.
“It was all a lie? You
were drunk?” Ichabod crossed the line, standing
over him.
A rustle and a great snort of contempt
went around the room; but Duggin still felt those
terrible eyes upon him.
“I was very drunk. It was all a lie.”
Without another word Ichabod turned
away, and almost immediately the other men followed,
the door closing behind them. Only the bar-keeper
stood impassive, watching.
That instant the red heat of the liquor
returned to the big man’s brain and he picked
up the revolver. Muttering, he staggered over
to the bar.
“D n him the
hide-faced ” he cursed. “Gimme
a drink, Barney. Whiskey, straight.”
“Not a drop.”
“What?”
“Never another drop in my place so long as I
live.”
“Barney, damn you!”
“Get out! You coward!”
“But, Barney ”
“Not another word. Go.”
Again Duggin was sober as he stumbled out into the
evening.
Ichabod moved slowly up the street,
months aged in those last few minutes. Reaction
was inevitable, and with it the future instead of
the present, stared him in the face. He had crowded
the lie down the man’s throat, but well he knew
it had been useless. The story was true, and
it would spread; no power of his could prevent.
He could not deceive himself, even. That name!
Again the white anger born of memory, flooded him.
Curses on the name and on the man who had spoken it!
Why must the fellow have turned coward at the last
moment? Had they but touched feet over the line
Suddenly Ichabod stopped, his hands
pressed to his head. Camilla, home alone!
And he had forgotten! He hurried back to the waiting
Swede, an anathema that was not directed at another,
hot on his lips.
“All ready, Ole,” he announced, clambering
to the seat.
The boy handed up the lines lingeringly.
“Here, sir.” Then
uncontrollable, long-repressed curiosity broke the
bounds of deference. “You heard
him, sir?”
“Yes.”
Ole edged toward his own wagon.
“It wasn’t so?”
“Duggin swore it was a lie.”
“He ”
“He swore it was false, I say.”
They drove out into the prairie and
the night; the stars looking down, smiling, as in
the morning which was so long ago, the man had smiled, looking
upward.
“Tiny, tiny mortal,” they
twinkled, each to the other. “So small and
hot, and rebellious. Tiny, tiny, mortal!”
But the man covered his face with his hands, shutting
them out.
CHAPTER VI BY A CANDLE’S FLAME
Asa Arnold sat in the small upstairs
room at the hotel of Hans Becher. It was the
same room that Ichabod and Camilla had occupied when
they first arrived; but he did not know that.
Even had he known, however, it would have made slight
difference; nothing could have kept them more constantly
in his mind than they were at this time. He had
not slept any the night before; a fact which would
have spoken loudly to one who knew him well; and this
morning he was very tired. He lounged low in
the oak chair, his feet on the bed, the usual big cigar
in his mouth.
This morning, the perspective of the
little man was anything but normal. Worse than
that, he could not reduce it to the normal, try as
he might.
His meeting with Camilla yesterday
had produced a deep and abiding shock; for either
of them to have been so moved signified the stirring
of dangerous forces. They and especially
himself who had always accepted life, even
crises, so calmly; who had heretofore laughed at all
display of emotion for them to have acted
as they had, for them to have spoken to each other
the things they had spoken, the things they could
not forget, that he never could forgive it
was unbelievable! It upset all the established
order of things!
His anger of yesterday against Camilla
had died out. She was not to blame; she was a
woman, and women were all alike. He had thought
differently before; that she was an exception; but
now he knew better. One and all they were mere
puppets of emotion, and fickle.
In a measure, though, as he had excused
Camilla he had incriminated Ichabod. Ichabod
was the guilty one, and a man. Ichabod had filched
from him his possession of most value; and without
even the form of a by-your-leave. The incident
of last evening at the saloon (for he had heard of
it in the hour, as had every one in the little town)
had but served to make more implacable his resentment.
By the satire of circumstances it had come about that
he again, Asa Arnold, had been the cause of another’s
defending the honor of his own wife, for
she was his wife as yet, and that other,
the defender, was Ichabod Maurice!
The little man’s face did not
change at the thought. He only smoked harder,
until the room was blue; but though he did not put
the feeling in words even to himself, he knew in the
depths of his own mind that the price of that last
day was death. Whether it was his own death, or
the death of Ichabod, he did not know; he did not care;
but that one of them must die was inevitable.
Horrible as was the thought, it had no terror for
him, now. He wondered that it did not have; but,
on the contrary, it seemed to him very ordinary, even
logical as one orders a dinner when he
is hungry.
He lit another cigar, calmly.
It was this very imperturbability of the little man
which made him terrible. Like a great movement
of Nature, it was awful from its very resistlessness;
its imperviability to appeal. Steadily, as he
had lit the cigar, he smoked until the air became
bluer than before. In a ghastly way, he was trying
to decide whose death it should be, as
one decides a winter’s flitting, whether to
Florida or California; only now the question was:
should it be suicide, or, as in the saloon
yesterday, leave the decision to Chance?
For the time the personal equation was eliminated;
the man weighed the evidence as impartially as though
he were deciding the fate of another.
He sat long and very still; until
even in the daylight the red cigar-end grew redder
in the haze. Without being conscious of the fact,
he was probably doing the most unselfish thinking of
his life. What the result of that thought would
have been no man will ever know, for of a sudden,
interrupting, Hans Becher’s round face appeared
in the doorway.
“Ichabod Maurice to see you,”
coughed the German, obscured in the cloud of smoke
which passed out like steam through the opening.
It cannot be said that Asa Arnold’s
face grew impassive; it was that already. Certain
it was, though, that behind the mask there occurred,
at that moment, a revolution. Born of it, the
old mocking smile sprang to his lips.
“The devil fights for his own,”
he soliloquized. “I really believe I,” again
the smile, “I was about to make a
sacrifice.”
“Sir?”
“Thank you, Hans.”
The German’s jaw dropped in inexpressible surprise.
“Sir?” he repeated.
“You made a decision for me, then. Thank
you.”
“I do not you understand.”
“Tell Mr. Maurice I shall be pleased to see
him.”
The round face disappeared from the door.
“Donnerwetter!”
commented the little landlord in the safe seclusion
of the stairway. Later, in relating the incident
to Minna, he tapped his forehead, suggestively.
Ichabod climbed the stair alone.
“To your old room,” Hans had said; and
Ichabod knew the place well. He knocked on the
panel, a voice answered: “Come,”
and he opened the door. Arnold had thrown away
his cigar and opened the window. The room was
clearing rapidly.
Ichabod stepped inside and closed
the door carefully behind him. A few seconds
he stood holding it, then swung it open quickly and
glanced down the hallway. Answering, there was
a sudden, scuttling sound, not unlike the escape of
frightened rats, as Hans Becher precipitately disappeared.
The tall man came back and for the second time slowly
closed the door.
Asa Arnold had neither moved nor spoken
since that first word, “come”;
and the self-invited visitor read the inaction correctly.
No man, with the knowledge Ichabod possessed, could
have misunderstood the challenge in that impassive
face. No man, a year ago, would have accepted
that challenge more quickly. Now But
God only knew whether or no he would forget, now.
For a minute, which to an onlooker
would have seemed interminable, the two men faced
each other. Up from the street came the ring of
a heavy hammer on a sweet-voiced anvil, as Jim Donovan,
the blacksmith, sharpened anew the breaking ploughs
which were battling the prairie sod for bread.
In the street below, a group of farmers were swapping
yarns, an occasional chorus of guffaws interrupting
to punctuate the narrative. The combatants heard
it all, as one hears the drone of the cicada on a
sleepy summer day; at the moment, as a mere colorless
background which later, Time, the greater adjuster,
utilizes to harmonize the whole memory.
Ichabod had been standing; now he
sat down upon the bed, his long legs stretched out
before him.
“It would be useless for us
to temporize,” he initiated. “I’ve
intruded my presence in order to ask you a question.”
The long fingers locked slowly over his knees.
“What is your object here?”
The innate spirit of mockery sprang
to the little man’s face.
“You’re mistaken,”
he smiled; “so far mistaken, that instead of
your visit being an intrusion, I expected you” an
amending memory came to him “although
I wasn’t looking for you quite so soon, perhaps.”
He paused for an instant, and the smile left his lips.
“As to the statement of object.
I think” slowly “a
disinterested observer would have put the question
you ask into my mouth.” He stared his tall
visitor up and down critically, menacingly. Of
a sudden, irresistibly, a very convulsion shot over
his face. “God, man, you’re brazen!”
he commented cumulatively.
Ichabod had gambled with this man
in the past, and had seen him lose half he possessed
without the twitch of an eyelid. A force which
now could cause that sudden change of expression no
man on earth knew, better than Ichabod, its intensity.
Perhaps a shade of the same feeling crept into his
own answering voice.
“We’ll quarrel later,
if you wish,” swiftly. “Neither
of us can afford to do so now. I ask you again,
what are your intentions?”
“And I repeat, the question
is by right mine. It’s not I who’ve
changed my name and and in other things
emulated the hero of the yellow-back.”
Ichabod’s face turned a shade
paler, though his answer was calm.
“We’ve known each other
too well for either to attempt explanation or condemnation.
You wish me to testify first.” The long
fingers unclasped from over his knee. “You
know the story of the past year: it’s the
key to the future.”
A smile, sardonic, distinctive, lifted
the tips of Arnold’s big moustaches.
“Your faith in your protecting
gods is certainly beautiful.”
Ichabod nursed a callous spot on one palm.
“I understand,” very
slowly. “At least, you’ll answer my
question now, perhaps,” he suggested.
“With pleasure. You intimate
the future will be but a repetition of the past.
It’ll be my endeavor to give that statement the
lie.”
“You insist on quarrelling?”
“I insist on but one thing,” swiftly.
“That you never again come into my sight, or
into the sight of my wife.”
One of Ichabod’s long hands extended in gesture.
“And I insist you shall never
again use the name of Camilla Maurice as your wife.”
The old mocking smile sprang to Asa Arnold’s
face.
“Unconsciously, you’re
amusing,” he derided. “The old story
of the mouse who forbids the cat.... You forget,
man, she is my wife.”
Ichabod stood up, seemingly longer
and gaunter than ever before.
“Good God, Arnold,” he
flashed, “haven’t you the faintest element
of pride, or of consistency in your make-up?
Is it necessary for a woman to tell you more than
once that she hates you? By your own statement
your marriage, even at first, was merely of convenience;
but even if this weren’t so, every principle
of the belief you hold releases her. Before God,
or man, you haven’t the slightest claim, and
you know it.”
“And you ”
“I love her.”
Asa Arnold did not stir, but the pupils
of his eyes grew wider, until the whole eye seemed
black.
“You fool!” he accented
slowly. “You brazen egoist! Did it
never occur to you that others than yourself could
love?”
Score for the little man. Ichabod
had been pinked first.
“You dare tell me to my face you loved her?”
“I do.”
“You lie!” blazed Ichabod.
“Every word and action of your life gives you
the lie!”
Not five minutes had passed since
he came in and already he had forgotten!
Asa Arnold likewise was upon his feet
and they two faced each other, a bed length
between; in their minds the past and future a blank,
the present with its primitive animal hate blazing
in their eyes.
“You know what it means to tell
me that.” Arnold’s voice was a full
note higher than usual. “You’ll apologize?”
“Never. It’s true. You lied,
and you know you lied.”
The surrounding world turned dark
to the little man, and the dry-goods box with the
tin dipper on its top, danced before his eyes.
For the first time in his memory he felt himself losing
self-control, and by main force of will he turned
away to the window. For the instant all the savage
of his nature was on the surface, and he could fairly
feel his fingers gripping at the tall man’s
throat.
A moment he stood in the narrow south
window, full in the smiling irony of Nature’s
sunshine; but only a moment. Then the mocking
smile that had become an instinctive part of his nature
spread over his face.
“I see but one way to settle
this difficulty,” he intimated.
A taunt sprang to Ichabod’s
tongue, but was as quickly repressed.
“There is but one, unless ”
with meaning pause.
“I repeat, there is but one.”
Ichabod’s long face held like wood.
“Consider yourself, then, the challenged party.”
They were both very calm, now; the
immediate exciting cause in the mind of neither.
It seemed as if they had been expecting this time for
years, had been preparing for it.
“Perhaps, as yesterday, in the
saloon?” The points of the big moustaches twitched
ironically. “I promise you there’ll
be no procrastination as at certain cases
recorded.”
The mockery, malice inspired, was
cleverly turned, and Ichabod’s big chin protruded
ominously, as he came over and fairly towered above
the small man.
“Most assuredly it’ll
not be as yesterday. If we’re going to reverse
civilization, we may as well roll it away back.
We’ll settle it alone, and here.”
Asa Arnold smiled up into the blue eyes.
“You’d prefer to make
the adjustment with your hands, too, perhaps?
There’d be less risk, considering ”
He stopped at the look on the face above his.
No man vis-a-vis with Ichabod Maurice ever made
accusation of cowardice. Instead, instinctive
sarcasm leaped to his lips.
“Not being of the West, I don’t
ordinarily carry an arsenal with me, in anticipation
of such incidents as these. If you’re prepared,
however, ” and he paused again.
Ichabod turned away; a terrible weariness
and disgust of it all of life, himself,
the little man, in his face. A tragedy
would not be so bad, but this lingering comedy of
death One thing alone was in his mind:
to have it over, and quickly.
“I didn’t expect this,
either. We’ll find another way.”
He glanced about the room. A
bed, the improvised commode, a chair, a small table
with a book upon it, and a tallow candle an
idea came to him, and his search terminated.
“I may suggest ”
he hesitated.
“Go on.”
Ichabod took up the candle, and, with
his pocket-knife, cut it down until it was a mere
stub in the socket, then lit a match and held the
flame to the wick, until the tallow sputtered into
burning.
“You can estimate when that
light will go out?” he intimated impassively.
Asa Arnold watched the tall man, steadily,
as the latter returned the candle to the table and
drew out his watch.
“I think so,” sotto voce.
Ichabod returned to his seat on the bed.
“You are not afraid, perhaps, to go into the
dark alone?”
“No.”
“By your own hand?”
“No,” again, very slowly. Arnold
understood now.
“You swear?” Ichabod flashed a glance
with the question.
“I swear.”
“And I.”
A moment they both studied the sputtering candle.
“It’ll be within fifteen minutes,”
randomed Ichabod.
Arnold drew out his watch slowly.
“It’ll be longer.”
That was all. Each had made his
choice; a trivial matter of one second in the candle’s
life would decide which of these two men would die
by his own hand.
For a minute there was no sound.
They could not even hear their breathing. Then
Arnold cleared his throat.
“You didn’t say when the loser must pay
his debt,” he suggested.
Ichabod’s voice in answer was a trifle husky.
“It won’t be necessary.”
A vision of the future flashed, sinister, inevitable.
“The man who loses won’t care to face the
necessity long.”
Five minutes more passed. Down
the street the blacksmith was hammering steadily.
Beneath the window the group of farmers had separated;
their departing footsteps tapping into distance and
silence.
Minna went to the street door, calling
loudly for Hans, Jr., who had strayed, and
both men started at the sound. The quick catch
of their breathing was now plainly audible.
Arnold shifted in his chair.
“You swear ”
his voice rang unnaturally sharp, and he paused to
moisten his throat, “you swear before
God you’ll abide by this?”
“I swear before God,” repeated Ichabod
slowly.
A second, and the little man followed in echo.
“And I I swear, I, too, will abide.”
Neither man remembered that one of
this twain, who gave oath before the Deity, was an
agnostic, the other an atheist!
A lonely south wind was rising, and
above the tinkle of the blacksmith’s hammer
there sounded the tap of the light shade as it flapped
in the wind against the window-pane. Low, drowsy,
moaning, typical breath of prairie, it
droned through the loosely built house, with sound
louder, but not unlike the perpetual roar of a great
sea-shell.
Ten minutes passed, and the men sat
very still. Both their faces were white, and
in the angle of the jaw of each the muscles were locked
hard. Ichabod was leaning near the candle.
It sputtered and a tiny globule of hot tallow struck
his face. He winced and wiped the drop off quickly.
Observing, Arnold smiled and opened his lips as if
to make comment; then closed them suddenly, and the
smile passed.
Two minutes more the watches ticked
off; very, very slowly. Neither of the men had
thought, beforehand, of this time of waiting.
Big drops of sweat were forming on both their faces,
and in the ears of each the blood sang madly.
A haze, as from the dropping of a shade, seemed to
have formed and hung over the room, and in unison sounds
from without acquired a certain faintness, like that
born of distance. Through it all the two men
sat motionless, watching the candle and the time, as
the fascinated bird watches its charmer; as the subject
watches the hypnotist, as if the passive
exercise were the one imperative thing in the world.
“Thirteen minutes.”
Unconsciously, Arnold was counting
aloud. The flame was very low, now, and he started
to move his chair closer, then sank back, a smile,
almost ghastly, upon his lips. The blaze had reached
the level of the socket, and was growing smaller and
smaller. Two minutes yet to burn! He had
lost.
He tried to turn his eyes away, but
they seemed fastened to the spot, and he powerless.
It was as though death, from staring him in the face,
had suddenly gripped him hard. The panorama of
his past life flashed through his mind. The thoughts
of the drowning man, of the miner who hears the rumble
of crumbling earth, of the prisoner helpless and hopeless
who feels the first touch of flame, common
thought of all these were his; and in a space of time
which, though seeming to him endless, was in reality
but seconds.
Then came the duller reaction and
the events of the last few minutes repeated themselves,
impersonally, spectacularly, as though they
were the actions of another man; one for whom he felt
very sorry. He even went into the future and
saw this same man lying down with a tiny bottle in
his hand, preparing for the sleep from which there
would be no awakening, the sleep which,
in anticipation, seemed so pleasant.
Concomitant with this thought the
visionary shaded into the real, and there came the
determination to act at once, this very afternoon,
as soon as Ichabod had gone. He even felt a little
relief at the decision. After all, it was so
much simpler than if he had won, for then then He
laughed gratingly at the thought. Cursed if he
would have known what to have done, then!
The sound roused him and he looked
at his watch. A minute had passed, fourteen from
the first and the flame still sputtered. Was it
possible after all after he had decided that
he was not to lose, that the decision was unnecessary?
There was not in his mind the slightest feeling of
personal elation at the prospect, but rather a sense
of injury that such a scurvy trick should be foisted
off upon him. It was like going to a funeral
and being confronted, suddenly, with the grinning
head of the supposed dead projecting through the coffin
lid. It was unseemly!
Only a minute more: a half now yes,
he would win. For the first time he felt that
his forehead was wet, and he mopped his face with his
handkerchief jerkily; then sank back in the chair,
instinctively shooting forward his cuffs in motion
habitual.
“Fifteen seconds.”
There could be no question now of the result; and
the outside world, banished for the once, returned.
The blacksmith was hammering again, the strokes two
seconds apart, and the fancy seized the little man
to finish counting by the ring of the anvil.
“Twelve, ten, eight,”
he counted slowly. “Six” was forming
on the tip of the tongue when of a sudden the tiny
flame veered far over toward the holder, sputtered
and went out. For the first time in those interminable
minutes, Arnold looked at his companion. Ichabod’s
face was within a foot of the table, and in line with
the direction the flame had veered. Swift as
thought the small man was on his feet, white anger
in his face.
“You blew that candle!” he challenged.
Ichabod’s head dropped into
his hands. An awful horror of himself fell crushingly
upon him; an abhorrence of the selfishness that could
have forgotten what he forgot; and for
so long, almost irrevocably long.
Mingled with this feeling was a sudden thanksgiving
for the boon of which he was unworthy; the memory
at the eleventh hour, in time to do as he had done
before his word was passed. Arnold strode across
the room, his breath coming fast, his eyes flashing
fire. He shook the tall man by the shoulder roughly.
“You blew that flame, I say!”
Ichabod looked up at the furious, dark face almost
in surprise.
“Yes, I blew it,” he corroborated absently.
“It would have burned longer.”
“Perhaps I don’t know.”
Arnold moved back a step and the old
smile, mocking, maddening, spread over his face; tilting,
perpendicular, the tips of the big moustaches.
“After all ” very slowly “after
all, then, you’re a coward.”
The tall man stood up; six-feet-two,
long, bony, immovable: Ichabod himself again.
“You know that’s a lie.”
“You’ll meet me again, another
way, then?”
“No, never!”
“I repeat, you’re a cursed coward.”
“I’d be a coward if I did meet you,”
quickly.
Something in Ichabod’s voice
caught the little man’s ear and held him silent,
as, for a long half-minute, the last time in their
lives, the two men looked into each other’s
eyes.
“You’ll perhaps explain.”
Arnold’s voice was cold as death. “You
have a reason?”
Ichabod walked slowly over to the
window and leaned against the frame. Standing
there, the spring sunshine fell full upon his face,
drawing clear the furrows at the angles of his eyes
and the gray threads of his hair. He paused a
moment, looking out over the broad prairie shimmering
indistinctly in the heat, and the calm of it all took
hold of him, shone in his face.
“I’ve a reason,”
very measuredly, “but it’s not that I fear
death, or you.” He took up his hat and
smoothed it absently. “In future I shall
neither seek, nor avoid you. Do what you wish and
God judge us both.” Without a glance at
the other man, he turned toward the door.
Arnold moved a step, as if to prevent him going.
“I repeat, it’s my right
to know why you refuse.” His feet shifted
uneasily upon the floor. “Is it because
of another Eleanor?”
Ichabod paused.
“Yes,” very slowly. “It’s
because of Eleanor and another.”
The tall man’s hand was upon
the knob, but this time there was no interruption.
An instant he hesitated; then absently, slowly, the
door opened and closed. A moment later indistinct,
descending steps sounded on the stairway.
Alone, Asa Arnold stood immovable,
looking blindly at the closed door, listening until
the tapping feet had passed into silence. Then,
in a motion indescribable, of pain and of abandon,
he sank back into the single chair.
His dearest enemy would have pitied
the little man at that moment!
CHAPTER VII THE PRICE OF THE LEAP
In the chronology of the little town,
day followed day, as monotonously as ticks the tall
clock on the wall. Only in multiple they merged
into the seasons which glided so smoothly, one into
the other, that the change was unnoticed, until it
had taken place.
Thus three months passed by, and man’s
work for the year was nearly done. The face of
the prairie had become one of many colors; eternal
badge of civilization as opposed to Nature, who paints
each season with its own hue. Beside the roadways
great, rank sunflowers turned their glaring yellow
faces to the light. In every direction stretched
broad fields of flax; unequally ripening, their color
scheme ranging from sky blue of blossoms to warm browns
of maturity. Blotches of sod corn added here
and there a dash of green to the picture. Surrounding
all, a setting for all, the unbroken virgin prairie,
mottled green and brown, stretched, smiling, harmonious,
beneficent; a land of promise and of plenty for generations
yet unborn.
All through the long, hot summer Asa
Arnold had stayed in town, smoking a big pipe in front
of the hotel of Hans Becher. Indolent, abnormally
indolent, a stranger seeing him thus would have commented;
but, save Hans the confiding, none other of the many
interested observers were deceived. No man merely
indolent sleeps neither by night nor by day; and it
seemed the little man never slept. No man merely
indolent sits wide-eyed hour after hour, gazing blankly
at the earth beneath his feet and uttering
never a word. Brooding, not dreaming, was Asa
Arnold; brooding over the eternal problem of right
and wrong. And, as passed the slow weeks, he moved
back back on the trail of civilization,
back until Passion and not Reason was the god enthroned;
back until one thought alone was with him morning,
noon, and night, and that thought preponderant,
overmastering, deadly hate.
Observant Curtis, the doctor, shrugged his shoulders.
“The old, old trail,” he satirized.
It was to Bud Evans, the little agent, that he made
the observation.
“Which has no ending,” completed the latter.
The doctor shrugged afresh.
“That has one inevitable termination,”
he refuted.
“Which is ”
“Madness sheer madness.”
The agent was silent a moment.
“And the end of that?” he suggested.
Curtis pursed his lips.
“Tragedy, or a strait-jacket. The former,
in this instance.”
Evans was silent longer than before.
“Do you really mean that?” he queried
at last, significantly.
“I’ve warned Maurice,” sententiously.
“I can do no more.”
“And he?” quickly.
“Thanked me.”
“That was all?”
“That was all.”
The two friends looked at each other,
steadily; yet, though they said no more, each knew
the thought of the other, each knew that in future
no move of Asa Arnold’s would pass unnoticed,
unchallenged.
Again, weeks, a month, passed without
incident. It was well along in the fall and of
an early evening that a vague rumor of the unusual
passed swiftly, by word of mouth, throughout the tiny
town. Only a rumor it was, but sufficient to
set every man within hearing in motion.
On this night Hans Becher had eaten
his supper and returned to the hotel office, as was
his wont, for an evening smoke, when, without apparent
reason, Bud Evans and Jim Donovan, the blacksmith,
came quietly in and sat down.
“Evening,” they nodded, and looked about
them.
A minute later Dr. Curtis and Hank
Judge, the machine man, dropped unostentatiously into
chairs. They likewise muttered “Evening,”
and made observation from under their hat-brims.
Others followed rapidly, until the room was full and
dark figures waited outside. At last Curtis spoke.
“Your boarder, Asa Arnold, where is he, Hans?”
The unsuspecting German blew a cloud of smoke.
“He a while ago went out.”
Then, as an afterthought: “He will return
soon.”
Silence once more for a time, and
a steadily thickening haze of smoke in the room.
“Did he have supper, Hans?”
queried Bud Evans, impatiently.
Again the German’s face expressed surprise.
“No, it is waiting for him. He went to
shoot a rabbit he saw.”
The men were on their feet.
“He took a gun, Hans?”
“A rifle, to be sure.”
The mild brown eyes glanced up reproachfully.
“A man does not go hunting without ...
What is this!” he completed in consternation,
as, finding himself suddenly alone, he hurried outside
and stood confusedly scratching his bushy poll, in
the block of light surrounding the open doorway.
The yard was deserted. As one
snuffs a candle, the men had vanished. Hans’
pipe had gone out and he went inside for a match.
Though the stars fell, the German must needs smoke.
Only a minute he was gone, but during that time a
group of horsemen had gathered in the street.
Others were coming across lots, and still others were
emerging from the darkness of alleys. Some were
mounted; some led by the rein, wiry little bronchos.
Watching, it almost seemed to the German that they
sprang from the ground.
“Are you all ready?” called a voice, Bud
Evans’ voice.
“Here ”
“Here ”
“All ready?”
“Yes ”
“We’re off, then.”
There was a sudden, confused trampling,
as of cattle in stampede; a musical creaking of heavy
saddles; a knife-like swish of many quirts through
the air; a chorus of dull, chesty groans as the rowels
of long spurs bit the flanks of the mustangs, and
they were gone down the narrow street,
out upon the prairie, their hoof beats pattering diminuendo
into silence; a cloud of dust, grayish in the starlight,
marking the way they had taken.
Jim Donovan, the blacksmith, came
running excitedly up from a side street. He stopped
in front of the hotel, breathlessly. Holding his
sides, he followed with his eyes the trail of dust
leading out into the night.
“Have they gone?” he panted. “I
can’t find another horse in town.”
“Where is it to?” sputtered the German.
“Have they gone, I say?”
Hans gasped.
“Yes, to be sure.”
“They’ll never make it.”
The blacksmith mopped his brow with conviction.
“He has an hour’s start.”
Hans grasped the big man by the coat.
“Who is too late?” he emphasized.
“Where are they going?”
Jim Donovan turned about, great pity for such density
in his eyes.
“Is it possible you don’t
understand? It’s to Ichabod Maurice’s
they’re going, to tell him of Arnold.”
The speaker mopped his face anew. “It’s
useless though. They’re too late,”
he completed.
“But Arnold is not there,”
protested the German. “He went for a rabbit,
out on the breaking. He so told me.”
“He lied to you. He’s
mad. I tell you they’re too late,”
repeated the smith, obstinately.
Hans clung tenaciously to the collar.
“Some one knew and told them?”
He pointed in the direction the dust indicated.
“Yes, Bud Evans; but they wouldn’t
believe him at first, and” bitterly “and
waited.” Donovan shook himself free, and
started down the walk. “I’m going
to bed,” he announced conclusively.
Meanwhile the cloud of dust was moving
out over the prairie like the wind. The pace
was terrific, and the tough little ponies were soon
puffing steadily. Small game, roused from its
sleep by the roadside, sprang winging into the night.
Once a coyote, surprised, ran a distance confusedly
ahead in the roadway; then, an indistinct black ball,
it vanished amongst the tall grass.
Well out on the prairie, Bud Evans,
the leader, raised in his stirrups and looked ahead.
There was no light beyond where the little cottage
should be. The rowels of his spur dug anew at
the flank of his pony as he turned a voice like a
fog-horn back over his shoulder.
“The place is dark, boys,” he called.
“Hurry.”
Answering, a muttering sound, not
unlike an approaching storm, passed along the line,
and in accompaniment the quirts cut the air anew.
Silent as the grave was the little
farmstead when, forty odd minutes from the time of
starting, they steamed up at the high fence bounding
the yard. One of Ichabod’s farm horses whinnied
a lone greeting from the barn as they hastily dismounted
and swarmed within the inclosure.
“We’re too late,” prophesied a voice.
“I’m glad my name’s
not Arnold, if we are,” responded another, threateningly.
Hurrying up the path in advance, the
little land-agent stumbled over a soft, dark object,
and a curse fell from his lips as he recognized the
dead body of the big collie.
“Yes, we’re too late,” he echoed.
The door of the house swung ajar,
creaking upon its hinges; and, as penetrates the advance
wave of a flood, the men swarmed through the doorway
inside, until the narrow room was blocked. Simultaneously,
like torches, lighted matches appeared aloft in their
hands, and the tiny whitewashed room flashed into
light. As simultaneously there sprang from the
mouth of each man an oath, and another, and another.
Waiting outside, not a listener but knew the meaning
of that sound; and big, hairy faces crowded tightly
to the one small window.
For a moment not a man in the line
stirred. Death was to them no stranger; but death
such as this
In more than one hand the match burned
down until it left a mark like charcoal, and without
calling attention. One and all they stood spellbound,
their eyes on the floor, their lips unconsciously uttering
the speech universal of anger and of horror, the instinctive
language of anathema.
On the floor, sprawling, as falls
a lifeless body, lay the long Ichabod. On his
forehead, almost geometrically near the centre, was
a tiny, black spot, around it a lighter red blotch;
his face otherwise very white; his hair, on the side
toward which he leaned, a little matted; that was
all.
Prostrate across him, in an attitude
of utter abandon, reposed the body of a woman, soft,
graceful, motionless now as that of the man:
the body of Camilla Maurice. One hand had held
his head and was stained dark. On her lips was
another stain, but lighter. The meaning of that
last mark came as a flash to the spectators, and the
room grew still as the figures on the floor.
Suddenly in the silence the men caught
their breath, with the quick guttural note that announces
the unexpected. That there was no remaining life
they had taken for granted and Camilla’s
lips had moved! They stared as at sight of a
ghost; all except Curtis, the physician.
“A lamp, men,” he demanded,
pressing his ear to Camilla’s chest.
“Help me here, Evans,”
he continued without turning. “I think she’s
fainted is all,” and together they carried their
burden into the tiny sleeping-room, closing the door
behind.
That instant Ole, the Swede, thrust
a curious head in at the outer doorway. He had
noticed the light and the gathering, and came to ascertain
their meaning. Wondering, his big eyes passed
around the waiting group and from them to the floor.
With that look self-consciousness left him; he crowded
to the front, bending over the tall man and speaking
his name.
“Mr. Maurice,” he called. “Mr.
Maurice.”
He snatched off his own coat, rolling
it under Ichabod’s head, and with his handkerchief
touched the dark spot on the forehead. It was
clotted already and hardening, and realization came
to the boy Swede. He stood up, facing the men,
the big veins in his throat throbbing.
“Who did this?” he thundered,
crouching for a spring like a great dog. “Who
did this, I say?”
It was the call to action. In
the sudden horror of the tragedy the big fellows had
momentarily forgotten their own grim epilogue.
Now, at the words, they turned toward the door.
But the Swede was in advance, blocking the passage.
“Tell me first who did this
thing,” he challenged, threateningly.
A hand was laid gently upon his shoulder.
“Asa Arnold, my boy,”
answered a quiet voice, which continued, in response
to a sudden thought, “You live near here; have
you seen him to-night?”
The Swede dropped the bar.
“The little man who stays with Hans Becher?”
The questioner nodded.
“Yes, a half-hour ago.”
The boy-man understood now. “He stopped
at my house, and ”
“Which direction did he go?”
Ole stepped outside, his arm stretched
over the prairie, white now in the moonlight.
“That way,” he indicated. “East.”
As there had been quiescence before,
now there was action. No charge of cavalry was
ever more swift than their sudden departure.
“East, toward Schooner’s
ranch,” was called and repeated as they made
their way back to the road; and, following, the wiry
little bronchos groaned in unison as the back cinch
to each one of the heavy saddles, was, with one accord,
drawn tight. Then, widening out upon the reflected
whiteness of prairie, there spread a great black crescent.
A moment later came silence, broken only by the quivering
call of a lone coyote.
Ole watched them out of sight, then
turned back to the door; the mood of the heroic passed,
once more the timid, retiring Swede. But now he
was not alone. Bud Evans was quietly working over
the body on the floor, laying it out decently as the
quick ever lay out the dead.
“Evans,” called the doctor
from the bedroom. As the agent responded, Ole
heard the smothered cry of a woman in pain.
The big boy hesitated, then sat down
on the doorstep. There was nothing now for him
to do, and suddenly he felt very tired. His head
dropped listlessly into his hands; like a great dog,
he waited, watching.
Minutes passed. On the table
the oil lamp sputtered and burned lower. Out
in the stable the horse repeated its former challenging
whinny. Once again through the partition the
listener caught the choking wail of pain, and the
muffled sound of the doctor’s voice in answer.
At last Bud Evans came to the door,
his face very white. “Water,” he
requested, and Ole ran to the well and back. Then,
impassive, he sat down again to wait.
Time passed, so long a time it seemed
to the watcher that the riders must soon be returning.
Finally Evans emerged from the side room, walking
absently, his face gray in the lamplight.
The Swede stood up.
“Camilla Maurice, is she hurt?” he asked.
The little agent busied himself making a fire.
“She’s dead,” he answered slowly.
“Dead, you say?”
“Yes, dead,” very quietly.
The fire blazed up and lit the room,
shining unpityingly upon the face of the man on the
floor.
Evans noticed, and drawing off his
own coat spread it over the face and hands, covering
them from sight; then, uncertain, he returned and
sat down, mechanically holding his palms to the blaze.
A moment later Dr. Curtis appeared
at the tiny bedroom entrance; and, emerging as the
little man had done before him, he closed the door
softly behind. In his arms he carried a blanket,
carefully rolled. From the depths of its folds,
as he slowly crossed the room toward the stove, there
escaped a sudden cry, muffled, unmistakable.
The doctor sank down wearily in a
chair. Ole, the boy-faced, without a question
brought in fresh wood, laying it down on the floor
very, very softly.
“Will he live?”
asked Bud Evans, suddenly, with an uncertain glance
at the obscuring blanket; and hearing the query, the
Swede paused in his work to listen.
The big doctor hesitated, and cleared his throat.
“I think so; though God
forgive me I hope not.” And he
cleared his throat again.