The painter went round to the front
of the house and walked up and down before it for
different points of view. He ran down the lane
some way, and then came back and climbed to the sloping
field behind the barn, where he could look at Lion’s
Head over the roof of the house. He tried an
open space in the orchard, where he backed against
the wall enclosing the little burial-ground.
He looked round at it without seeming to see it, and
then went back to the level where the house stood.
“This is the place,” he said to himself.
But the boy, who had been lurking after him, with
the dog lurking at, his own heels in turn, took the
words as a proffer of conversation.
“I thought you’d come to it,” he
sneered.
“Did you?” asked the painter,
with a smile for the unsatisfied grudge in the boy’s
tone. “Why didn’t you tell me sooner?”
The boy looked down, and apparently
made up his mind to wait until something sufficiently
severe should come to him for a retort. “Want
I should help you get your things?” he asked,
presently.
“Why, yes,” said the painter,
with a glance of surprise. “I shall be much
obliged for a lift.” He started toward the
porch where his burden lay, and the boy ran before
him. They jointly separated the knapsack from
the things tied to it, and the painter let the boy
carry the easel and campstool which developed themselves
from their folds and hinges, and brought the colors
and canvas himself to the spot he had chosen.
The boy looked at the tag on the easel after it was
placed, and read the name on it Jere Westover.
“That’s a funny name.”
“I’m glad it amuses you,” said the
owner of it.
Again the boy cast down his eyes discomfited,
and seemed again resolving silently to bide his time
and watch for another chance.
Westover forgot him in the fidget
he fell into, trying this and that effect, with his
head slanted one way and then slanted the other, his
hand held up to shut out the mountain below the granite
mass of Lion’s Head, and then changed to cut
off the sky above; and then both hands lifted in parallel
to confine the picture. He made some tentative
scrawls on his canvas in charcoal, and he wasted so
much time that the light on the mountain-side began
to take the rich tone of the afternoon deepening to
evening. A soft flush stole into it; the sun dipped
behind the top south of the mountain, and Lion’s
Head stood out against the intense clearness of the
west, which began to be flushed with exquisite suggestions
of violet and crimson.
“Good Lord!” said Westover;
and he flew at his colors and began to paint.
He had got his canvas into such a state that he alone
could have found it much more intelligible than his
palette, when he heard the boy saying, over his shoulder:
“I don’t think that looks very much like
it.” He had last been aware of the boy
sitting at the grassy edge of the lane, tossing small
bits of earth and pebble across to his dog, which sat
at the other edge and snapped at them. Then he
lost consciousness of him. He answered, dreamily,
while he found a tint he was trying for with his brush:
“Perhaps you don’t know.” He
was so sure of his effect that the popular censure
speaking in the boy’s opinion only made him happier
in it.
“I know what I see,” said the boy.
“I doubt it,” said Westover,
and then he lost consciousness of him again.
He was rapt deep and far into the joy of his work,
and had no thought but for that, and for the dim question
whether it would be such another day to-morrow, with
that light again on Lion’s Head, when he was
at last sensible of a noise that he felt he must have
been hearing some time without noting it. It
was a lamentable, sound of screaming, as of some one
in mortal terror, mixed with wild entreaties.
“Oh, don’t, Jeff! Oh, don’t,
don’t, don’t! Oh, please! Oh,
do let us be! Oh, Jeff, don’t!”
Westover looked round bewildered,
and not able, amid the clamor of the echoes, to make
out where the cries came from. Then, down at the
point where the lane joined the road to the southward
and the road lost itself in the shadow of a woodland,
he saw the boy leaping back and forth across the track,
with his dog beside him; he was shouting and his dog
barking furiously; those screams and entreaties came
from within the shadow. Westover plunged down
the lane headlong, with a speed that gathered at each
bound, and that almost flung him on his face when he
reached the level where the boy and the dog were dancing
back and forth across the road. Then he saw,
crouching in the edge of the wood, a little girl, who
was uttering the appeals he had heard, and clinging
to her, with a face of frantic terror, a child of
five or six years; her cries had grown hoarse, and
had a hard, mechanical action as they followed one
another. They were really in no danger, for the
boy held his dog tight by his collar, and was merely
delighting himself with their terror.
The painter hurled himself upon him,
and, with a quick grip upon his collar, gave him half
a dozen flat-handed blows wherever he could plant
them and then flung him reeling away.
“You infernal little ruffian!”
he roared at him; and the sound of his voice was enough
for the dog; he began to scale the hill-side toward
the house without a moment’s stay.
The children still crouched together,
and Westover could hardly make them understand that
they were in his keeping when he bent over them and
bade them not be frightened. The little girl
set about wiping the child’s eyes on her apron
in a motherly fashion; her own were dry enough, and
Westover fancied there was more of fury than of fright
in her face. She seemed lost to any sense of
his presence, and kept on talking fiercely to herself,
while she put the little boy in order, like an indignant
woman.
“Great, mean, ugly thing!
I’ll tell the teacher on him, that’s what
I will, as soon as ever school begins. I’ll
see if he can come round with that dog of his scaring
folks! I wouldn’t ‘a’ been a
bit afraid if it hadn’t ‘a’ been
for Franky. Don’t cry any more, Franky.
Don’t you see they’re gone? I presume
he thinks it smart to scare a little boy and a girl.
If I was a boy once, I’d show him!”
She made no sign of gratitude to Westover:
as far as any recognition from her was concerned,
his intervention was something as impersonal as if
it had been a thunder-bolt falling upon her enemies
from the sky.
“Where do you live?” he
asked. “I’ll go home with you if you’ll
tell me where you live.”
She looked up at him in a daze, and
Westover heard the Durgin boy saying: “She
lives right there in that little wood-colored house
at the other end of the lane. There ain’t
no call to go home with her.”
Westover turned and saw the boy kneeling
at the edge of a clump of bushes, where he must have
struck; he was rubbing, with a tuft of grass, at the
dirt ground into the knees of his trousers.
The little, girl turned hawkishly
upon him. “Not for anything you can do,
Jeff Durgin!”
The boy did not answer.
“There!” she said, giving
a final pull and twitch to the dress of her brother,
and taking him by the hand tenderly. “Now,
come right along, Franky.”
“Let me have your other hand,”
said Westover, and, with the little boy between them,
they set off toward the point where the lane joined
the road on the northward. They had to pass the
bushes where Jeff Durgin was crouching, and the little
girl turned and made a face at him. “Oh,
oh! I don’t think I should have done that,”
said Westover.
“I don’t care!”
said the little girl. But she said, in explanation
and partial excuse: “He tries to scare
all the girls. I’ll let him know ’t
he can’t scare one!”
Westover looked up toward the Durgin
house with a return of interest in the canvas he had
left in the lane on the easel. Nothing had happened
to it. At the door of the barn he saw the farmer
and his eldest son slanting forward and staring down
the hill at the point he had come from. Mrs.
Durgin was looking out from the shelter of the porch,
and she turned and went in with Jeff’s dog at
her skirts when Westover came in sight with the children.