home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-06-03 | 225.0 KB | 4,784 lines |
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- Wherein Freckles Strives Mightily and the Swamp Angel Rewards Him
-
- The Bird Woman and the Angel did not seem to count in the common
- run, for they arrived on time for the third of the series and found
- McLean on the line talking to Freckles. The Boss was filled with
- enthusiasm over a marsh article of the Bird Woman's that he just
- had read. He begged to be allowed to accompany her into the swamp
- and watch the method by which she secured an illustration in such
- a location.
-
- The Bird Woman explained to him that it was an easy matter with the
- subject she then had in hand; and as Little Chicken was too small
- to be frightened by him, and big enough to be growing troublesome,
- she was glad for his company. They went to the chicken log
- together, leaving to the happy Freckles the care of the Angel, who
- had brought her banjo and a roll of songs that she wanted to hear
- him sing. The Bird Woman told them that they might practice in
- Freckles' room until she finished with Little Chicken, and then she
- and McLean would come to the concert.
-
- It was almost three hours before they finished and came down the
- west trail for their rest and lunch. McLean walked ahead, keeping
- sharp watch on the trail and clearing it of fallen limbs from
- overhanging trees. He sent a big piece of bark flying into the
- swale, and then stopped short and stared at the trail.
-
- The Bird Woman bent forward. Together they studied that imprint of
- the Angel's foot. At last their eyes met, the Bird Woman's filled
- with astonishment, and McLean's humid with pity. Neither said a
- word, but they knew. McLean entered the swale and hunted up the bark.
- He replaced it, and the Bird Woman carefully stepped over. As they
- reached the bushes at the entrance, the voice of the Angel stopped
- them, for it was commanding and filled with much impatience.
-
- "Freckles James Ross McLean!" she was saying. "You fill me with
- dark-blue despair! You're singing as if your voice were glass and
- might break at any minute. Why don't you sing as you did a week ago?
- Answer me that, please."
-
- Freckles smiled confusedly at the Angel, who sat on one of his
- fancy seats, playing his accompaniment on her banjo.
-
- "You are a fraud," she said. "Here you went last week and led me to
- think that there was the making of a great singer in you, and now
- you are singing--do you know how badly you are singing?"
-
- "Yis," said Freckles meekly. "I'm thinking I'm too happy to be
- singing well today. The music don't come right only when I'm
- lonesome and sad. The world's for being all sunshine at prisint,
- for among you and Mr. McLean and the Bird Woman I'm after being
- THAT happy that I can't keep me thoughts on me notes. It's more
- than sorry I am to be disappointing you. Play it over, and I'll be
- beginning again, and this time I'll hold hard."
-
- "Well," said the Angel disgustedly, "it seems to me that if I had
- all the things to be proud of that you have, I'd lift up my head
- and sing!"
-
- "And what is it I've to be proud of, ma'am?" politely inquired Freckles.
-
- "Why, a whole worldful of things," cried the Angel explosively.
- "For one thing, you can be good and proud over the way you've kept
- the timber thieves out of this lease, and the trust your father has
- in you. You can be proud that you've never even once disappointed
- him or failed in what he believed you could do. You can be proud
- over the way everyone speaks of you with trust and honor, and about
- how brave of heart and strong of body you are I heard a big man say
- a few days ago that the Limberlost was full of disagreeable
- things--positive dangers, unhealthful as it could be, and that
- since the memory of the first settlers it has been a rendezvous for
- runaways, thieves, and murderers. This swamp is named for a man
- that was lost here and wandered around `til he starved. That man I
- was talking with said he wouldn't take your job for a thousand
- dollars a month--in fact, he said he wouldn't have it for any
- money, and you've never missed a day or lost a tree. Proud! Why, I
- should think you would just parade around about proper over that!
-
- "And you can always be proud that you are born an Irishman. My
- father is Irish, and if you want to see him get up and strut give
- him a teeny opening to enlarge on his race. He says that if the
- Irish had decent territory they'd lead the world. He says they've
- always been handicapped by lack of space and of fertile soil.
- He says if Ireland had been as big and fertile as Indiana, why,
- England wouldn't ever have had the upper hand. She'd only be an
- appendage. Fancy England an appendage! He says Ireland has the
- finest orators and the keenest statesmen in Europe today, and when
- England wants to fight, with whom does she fill her trenches?
- Irishmen, of course! Ireland has the greenest grass and trees, the
- finest stones and lakes, and they've jaunting-cars. I don't know
- just exactly what they are, but Ireland has all there are, anyway.
- They've a lot of great actors, and a few singers, and there never
- was a sweeter poet than one of theirs. You should hear my father
- recite `Dear Harp of My Country.' He does it this way."
-
- The Angel arose, made an elaborate old-time bow, and holding up the
- banjo, recited in clipping feet and meter, with rhythmic swing and
- a touch of brogue that was simply irresistible:
-
- "Dear harp of my country" [The Angel ardently clasped the banjo],
-
- "In darkness I found thee" [She held it to the light],
-
- "The cold chain of silence had hung o'er thee long" [She muted the
- strings with her rosy palm];
-
- "Then proudly, my own Irish harp, I unbound thee" [She threw up her
- head and swept a ringing harmony];
-
- "And gave all thy chords to light, freedom, and song" [She crashed
- into the notes of the accompaniment she had been playing for Freckles].
-
- "That's what you want to be thinking of!" she cried. "Not darkness,
- and lonesomeness, and sadness, but `light, freedom, and song.'
- I can't begin to think offhand of all the big, splendid things an
- Irishman has to be proud of; but whatever they are, they are all
- yours, and you are a part of them. I just despise that `saddest-
- when-I-sing' business. You can sing! Now you go over there
- and do it! Ireland has had her statesmen, warriors, actors, and
- poets; now you be her voice! You stand right out there before the
- cathedral door, and I'm going to come down the aisle playing that
- accompaniment, and when I stop in front of you--you sing!"
-
- The Angel's face wore an unusual flush. Her eyes were flashing and
- she was palpitating with earnestness.
-
- She parted the bushes and disappeared. Freckles, straight and
- tense, stood waiting. Presently, before he saw she was there, she
- was coming down the aisle toward him, playing compellingly, and
- rifts of light were touching her with golden glory. Freckles stood
- as if transfixed.
-
- The cathedral was majestically beautiful, from arched dome of
- frescoed gold, green, and blue in never-ending shades and
- harmonies, to the mosaic aisle she trod, richly inlaid in choicest
- colors, and gigantic pillars that were God's handiwork fashioned
- and perfected through ages of sunshine and rain. But the fair young
- face and divinely molded form of the Angel were His most perfect
- work of all. Never had she appeared so surpassingly beautiful.
- She was smiling encouragingly now, and as she came toward him, she
- struck the chords full and strong.
-
- The heart of poor Freckles almost burst with dull pain and his
- great love for her. In his desire to fulfill her expectations he
- forgot everything else, and when she reached his initial chord he
- was ready. He literally burst forth:
-
-
- "Three little leaves of Irish green,
- United on one stem,
- Love, truth, and valor do they mean,
- They form a magic gem."
-
-
- The Angel's eyes widened curiously and her lips parted. A deep
- color swept into her cheeks. She had intended to arouse him.
- She had more than succeeded. She was too young to know that in the
- effort to rouse a man, women frequently kindle fires that they
- neither can quench nor control. Freckles was looking over her head
- now and singing that song, as it never had been sung before, for
- her alone; and instead of her helping him, as she had intended, he
- was carrying her with him on the waves of his voice, away, away
- into another world. When he struck into the chorus, wide-eyed and
- panting, she was swaying toward him and playing with all her might.
-
-
- "Oh, do you love? Oh, say you love
- You love the shamrock green!"
-
-
- At the last note, Freckles' voice ceased and he looked at the Angel.
- He had given his best and his all. He fell on his knees and
- folded his arms across his breast. The Angel, as if magnetized,
- walked straight down the aisle to him, and running her fingers into
- the crisp masses of his red hair, tilted his head back and laid her
- lips on his forehead.
-
- Then she stepped back and faced him. "Good boy!" she said, in a
- voice that wavered from the throbbing of her shaken heart.
- "Dear boy! I knew you could do it! I knew it was in you!
- Freckles, when you go into the world, if you can face a big
- audience and sing like that, just once, you will be immortal,
- and anything you want will be yours."
-
- "Anything!" gasped Freckles.
-
- "Anything," said the Angel.
-
- Freckles arose, muttered something, and catching up his old bucket,
- plunged into the swamp blindly on a pretence of bringing water.
- The Angel walked slowly across the study, sat on the rustic bench,
- and, through narrowed lids, intently studied the tip of her shoe.
-
- On the trail the Bird Woman wheeled to McLean with a dumbfounded look.
-
- "God!" muttered he.
-
- At last the Bird Woman spoke.
-
- "Do you think the Angel knew she did that?" she asked softly.
-
- "No," said McLean; "I do not. But the poor boy knew it. Heaven help him!"
-
- The Bird Woman stared across the gently waving swale. "I don't see
- how I am going to blame her," she said at last. "It's so exactly
- what I would have done myself."
-
- "Say the remainder," demanded McLean hoarsely. "Do him justice."
-
- "He was born a gentleman," conceded the Bird Woman. "He took
- no advantage. He never even offered to touch her. Whatever that
- kiss meant to him, he recognized that it was the loving impulse of a
- child under stress of strong emotion. He was fine and manly as any
- man ever could have been."
-
- McLean lifted his hat. "Thank you," he said simply, and parted the
- bushes for her to enter Freckles' room.
-
- It was her first visit. Before she left she sent for her cameras
- and made studies of each side of it and of the cathedral. She was
- entranced with the delicate beauty of the place, while her eyes
- kept following Freckles as if she could not believe that it could
- be his conception and work.
-
- That was a happy day. The Bird Woman had brought a lunch, and they
- spread it, with Freckles' dinner, on the study floor and sat,
- resting and enjoying themselves. But the Angel put her banjo into
- its case, silently gathered her music, and no one mentioned the concert.
-
- The Bird Woman left McLean and the Angel to clear away the lunch,
- and with Freckles examined the walls of his room and told him all
- she knew about his shrubs and flowers. She analyzed a
- cardinal-flower and showed him what he had wanted to know all
- summer--why the bees buzzed ineffectually around it while the
- humming-birds found in it an ever-ready feast. Some of his
- specimens were so rare that she was unfamiliar with them, and
- with the flower book between them they knelt, studying the
- different varieties. She wandered the length of the cathedral
- aisle with him, and it was at her suggestion that he lighted his
- altar with a row of flaming foxfire.
-
- As Freckles came to the cabin from his long day at the swamp he saw
- Mrs. Chicken sweeping to the south and wondered where she was going.
- He stepped into the bright, cosy little kitchen, and as he reached
- down the wash-basin he asked Mrs. Duncan a question.
-
- "Mother Duncan, do kisses wash off?"
-
- So warm a wave swept her heart that a half-flush mantled her face.
- She straightened her shoulders and glanced at her hands tenderly.
-
- "Lord, na! Freckles," she cried. "At least, the anes ye get from
- people ye love dinna. They dinna stay on the outside. They strike
- in until they find the center of your heart and make their
- stopping-place there, and naething can take them from ye--I doubt
- if even death----Na, lad, ye can be reet sure kisses dinna wash off!"
-
- Freckles set the basin down and muttered as he plunged his hot,
- tired face into the water, "I needn't be afraid to be washing,
- then, for that one struck in."
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- Wherein the Butterflies Go on a Spree and Freckles Informs the Bird Woman
-
- "I wish," said Freckles at breakfast one morning, "that I had some
- way to be sending a message to the Bird Woman. I've something at
- the swamp that I'm believing never happened before, and surely
- she'll be wanting it."
-
- "What now, Freckles?" asked Mrs. Duncan.
-
- "Why, the oddest thing you ever heard of," said Freckles; "the
- whole insect tribe gone on a spree. I'm supposing it's my doings,
- but it all happened by accident, like. You see, on the swale side
- of the line, right against me trail, there's one of these scrub
- wild crabtrees. Where the grass grows thick around it, is the
- finest place you ever conceived of for snakes. Having women about
- has set me trying to clean out those fellows a bit, and yesterday
- I noticed that tree in passing. It struck me that it would be a
- good idea to be taking it out. First I thought I'd take me hatchet
- and cut it down, for it ain't thicker than me upper arm. Then I
- remembered how it was blooming in the spring and filling all the
- air with sweetness. The coloring of the blossoms is beautiful, and
- I hated to be killing it. I just cut the grass short all around it.
- Then I started at the ground, trimmed up the trunk near the height
- of me shoulder, and left the top spreading. That made it look so
- truly ornamental that, idle like, I chips off the rough places neat,
- and this morning, on me soul, it's a sight! You see, cutting off
- the limbs and trimming up the trunk sets the sap running. In this
- hot sun it ferments in a few hours. There isn't much room for more
- things to crowd on that tree than there are, and to get drunker
- isn't noways possible."
-
- "Weel, I be drawed on!" exclaimed Mrs. Duncan. "What kind of things
- do ye mean, Freckles?"
-
- "Why, just an army of black ants. Some of them are sucking away
- like old topers. Some of them are setting up on their tails and
- hind legs, fiddling with their fore-feet and wiping their eyes.
- Some are rolling around on the ground, contented. There are
- quantities of big blue-bottle flies over the bark and hanging on
- the grasses around, too drunk to steer a course flying; so they
- just buzz away like flying, and all the time sitting still.
- The snake-feeders are too full to feed anything--even more sap to
- themselves. There's a lot of hard-backed bugs--beetles, I
- guess--colored like the brown, blue, and black of a peacock's tail.
- They hang on until the legs of them are so wake they can't stick a
- minute longer, and then they break away and fall to the ground.
- They just lay there on their backs, fably clawing air. When it
- wears off a bit, up they get, and go crawling back for more, and they
- so full they bump into each other and roll over. Sometimes they
- can't climb the tree until they wait to sober up a little.
- There's a lot of big black-and-gold bumblebees, done for entire,
- stumbling over the bark and rolling on the ground. They just lay
- there on their backs, rocking from side to side, singing to
- themselves like fat, happy babies. The wild bees keep up a steady
- buzzing with the beating of their wings.
-
- "The butterflies are the worst old topers of them all. They're just
- a circus! You never saw the like of the beauties! They come every
- color you could be naming, and every shape you could be thinking up.
- They drink and drink until, if I'm driving them away, they stagger
- as they fly and turn somersaults in the air. If I lave them alone,
- they cling to the grasses, shivering happy like; and I'm blest,
- Mother Duncan, if the best of them could be unlocking the front
- door with a lead pencil, even."
-
- "I never heard of anything sae surprising," said Mrs. Duncan.
-
- "It's a rare sight to watch them, and no one ever made a picture of
- a thing like that before, I'm for thinking," said Freckles earnestly.
-
- "Na," said Mrs. Duncan. "Ye can be pretty sure there didna. The
- Bird Woman must have word in some way, if ye walk the line and I
- walk to town and tell her. If ye think ye can wait until after
- supper, I am most sure ye can gang yoursel', for Duncan is coming
- home and he'd be glad to watch for ye. If he does na come, and na
- ane passes that I can send word with today, I really will gang
- early in the morning and tell her mysel'."
-
- Freckles took his lunch and went to the swamp. He walked and
- watched eagerly. He could find no trace of anything, yet he felt a
- tense nervousness, as if trouble might be brooding. He examined
- every section of the wire, and kept watchful eyes on the grasses of
- the swale, in an effort to discover if anyone had passed through
- them; but he could discover no trace of anything to justify his fears.
-
- He tilted his hat brim to shade his face and looked for his chickens.
- They were hanging almost beyond sight in the sky.
-
- "Gee!" he said. "If I only had your sharp eyes and convenient
- location now, I wouldn't need be troubling so."
-
- He reached his room and cautiously scanned the entrance before he
- stepped in. Then he pushed the bushes apart with his right arm and
- entered, his left hand on the butt of his favorite revolver.
- Instantly he knew that someone had been there. He stepped to the
- center of the room, closely scanning each wall and the floor.
- He could find no trace of a clue to confirm his belief, yet so
- intimate was he with the spirit of the place that he knew.
-
- How he knew he could not have told, yet he did know that someone
- had entered his room, sat on his benches, and walked over his floor.
- He was surest around the case. Nothing was disturbed, yet it
- seemed to Freckles that he could see where prying fingers had tried
- the lock. He stepped behind the case, carefully examining the
- ground all around it, and close beside the tree to which it was
- nailed he found a deep, fresh footprint in the spongy soil--a long,
- narrow print, that was never made by the foot of Wessner. His heart
- tugged in his breast as he mentally measured the print, but he did
- not linger, for now the feeling arose that he was being watched.
- It seemed to him that he could feel the eyes of some intruder at
- his back. He knew he was examining things too closely: if anyone
- were watching, he did not want him to know that he felt it.
-
- He took the most open way, and carried water for his flowers and
- moss as usual; but he put himself into no position in which he was
- fully exposed, and his hand was close his revolver constantly.
- Growing restive at last under the strain, he plunged boldly into
- the swamp and searched minutely all around his room, but he could
- not discover the least thing to give him further cause for alarm.
- He unlocked his case, took out his wheel, and for the remainder of
- the day he rode and watched as he never had before. Several times
- he locked the wheel and crossed the swamp on foot, zigzagging to
- cover all the space possible. Every rod he traveled he used the
- caution that sprang from knowledge of danger and the direction from
- which it probably would come. Several times he thought of sending
- for McLean, but for his life he could not make up his mind to do it
- with nothing more tangible than one footprint to justify him.
-
- He waited until he was sure Duncan would be at home, if he were
- coming for the night, before he went to supper. The first thing he
- saw as he crossed the swale was the big bays in the yard.
-
- There had been no one passing that day, and Duncan readily agreed
- to watch until Freckles rode to town. He told Duncan of the
- footprint, and urged him to guard closely. Duncan said he might
- rest easy, and filling his pipe and taking a good revolver, the big
- man went to the Limberlost.
-
- Freckles made himself clean and neat, and raced to town, but it was
- night and the stars were shining before he reached the home of the
- Bird Woman. From afar he could see that the house was ablaze
- with lights. The lawn and veranda were strung with fancy lanterns and
- alive with people. He thought his errand important, so to turn back
- never occurred to Freckles. This was all the time or opportunity
- he would have. He must see the Bird Woman, and see her at once.
- He leaned his wheel inside the fence and walked up the broad
- front entrance. As he neared the steps, he saw that the place was
- swarming with young people, and the Angel, with an excuse to a
- group that surrounded her, came hurrying to him.
-
- "Oh Freckles!" she cried delightedly. "So you could come? We were
- so afraid you could not! I'm as glad as I can be!"
-
- "I don't understand," said Freckles. "Were you expecting me?"
-
- "Why of course!" exclaimed the Angel. "Haven't you come to my party?
- Didn't you get my invitation? I sent you one."
-
- "By mail?" asked Freckles.
-
- "Yes," said the Angel. "I had to help with the preparations, and I
- couldn't find time to drive out; but I wrote you a letter, and told
- you that the Bird Woman was giving a party for me, and we wanted
- you to come, surely. I told them at the office to put it with Mr.
- Duncan's mail."
-
- "Then that's likely where it is at present," said Freckles.
- "Duncan comes to town only once a week, and at times not that.
- He's home tonight for the first in a week. He's watching an
- hour for me until I come to the Bird Woman with a bit of work
- I thought she'd be caring to hear about bad. Is she where I
- can see her?"
-
- The Angel's face clouded.
-
- "What a disappointment!" she cried. "I did so want all my friends
- to know you. Can't you stay anyway?"
-
- Freckles glanced from his wading-boots to the patent leathers of
- some of the Angel's friends, and smiled whimsically, but there was
- no danger of his ever misjudging her again.
-
- "You know I cannot, Angel," he said.
-
- "I am afraid I do," she said ruefully. "It's too bad! But there is
- a thing I want for you more than to come to my party, and that is
- to hang on and win with your work. I think of you every day, and I
- just pray that those thieves are not getting ahead of you.
- Oh, Freckles, do watch closely!"
-
- She was so lovely a picture as she stood before him, ardent in his
- cause, that Freckles could not take his eyes from her to notice
- what her friends were thinking. If she did not mind, why should he?
- Anyway, if they really were the Angel's friends, probably they were
- better accustomed to her ways than he.
-
- Her face and bared neck and arms were like the wild rose bloom.
- Her soft frock of white tulle lifted and stirred around her with the
- gentle evening air. The beautiful golden hair, that crept around
- her temples and ears as if it loved to cling there, was caught back
- and bound with broad blue satin ribbon. There was a sash of blue at
- her waist, and knots of it catching up her draperies.
-
- "Must I go after the Bird Woman?" she pleaded.
-
- "Indade, you must," answered Freckles firmly.
-
- The Angel went away, but returned to say that the Bird Woman was
- telling a story to those inside and she could not come for a short time.
-
- "You won't come in?" she pleaded.
-
- "I must not," said Freckles. "I am not dressed to be among your
- friends, and I might be forgetting meself and stay too long."
-
- "Then," said the Angel, "we mustn't go through the house, because
- it would disturb the story; but I want you to come the outside way
- to the conservatory and have some of my birthday lunch and some
- cake to take to Mrs. Duncan and the babies. Won't that be fun?"
-
- Freckles thought that it would be more than fun, and followed delightedly.
-
- The Angel gave him a big glass, brimming with some icy, sparkling
- liquid that struck his palate as it never had been touched before,
- because a combination of frosty fruit juices had not been a
- frequent beverage with him. The night was warm, and the Angel most
- beautiful and kind. A triple delirium of spirit, mind, and body
- seized upon him and developed a boldness all unnatural. He slightly
- parted the heavy curtains that separated the conservatory from the
- company and looked between. He almost stopped breathing. He had
- read of things like that, but he never had seen them.
-
- The open space seemed to stretch through half a dozen rooms, all
- ablaze with lights, perfumed with flowers, and filled with
- elegantly dressed people. There were glimpses of polished floors,
- sparkling glass, and fine furnishings. From somewhere, the voice of
- his beloved Bird Woman arose and fell.
-
- The Angel crowded beside him and was watching also.
-
- "Doesn't it look pretty?" she whispered.
-
- "Do you suppose Heaven is any finer than that?" asked Freckles.
-
- The Angel began to laugh.
-
- "Do you want to be laughing harder than that?" queried Freckles.
-
- "A laugh is always good," said the Angel. "A little more
- avoirdupois won't hurt me. Go ahead."
-
- "Well then," said Freckles, "it's only that I feel all over as if
- I belonged there. I could wear fine clothes, and move over those
- floors, and hold me own against the best of them."
-
- "But where does my laugh come in?" demanded the Angel, as if she
- had been defrauded.
-
- "And you ask me where the laugh comes in, looking me in the face
- after that," marveled Freckles.
-
- "I wouldn't be so foolish as to laugh at such a manifest truth as
- that," said the Angel. "Anyone who knows you even half as well as
- I do, knows that you are never guilty of a discourtesy, and you
- move with twice the grace of any man here. Why shouldn't you feel
- as if you belonged where people are graceful and courteous?"
-
- "On me soul!" said Freckles, "you are kind to be thinking it.
- You are doubly kind to be saying it."
-
- The curtains parted and a woman came toward them. Her silks and
- laces trailed across the polished floors. The lights gleamed on her
- neck and arms, and flashed from rare jewels. She was smiling
- brightly; and until she spoke, Freckles had not realized fully that
- it was his loved Bird Woman.
-
- Noticing his bewilderment, she cried: "Why, Freckles! Don't you
- know me in my war clothes?"
-
- "I do in the uniform in which you fight the Limberlost," said Freckles.
-
- The Bird Woman laughed. Then he told her why he had come, but she
- scarcely could believe him. She could not say exactly when she
- would go, but she would make it as soon as possible, for she was
- most anxious for the study.
-
- While they talked, the Angel was busy packing a box of sandwiches,
- cake, fruit, and flowers. She gave him a last frosty glass, thanked
- him repeatedly for bringing news of new material; then Freckles
- went into the night. He rode toward the Limberlost with his eyes on
- the stars. Presently he removed his hat, hung it to his belt, and
- ruffled his hair to the sweep of the night wind. He filled the air
- all the way with snatches of oratorios, gospel hymns, and dialect
- and coon songs, in a startlingly varied programme. The one thing
- Freckles knew that he could do was to sing. The Duncans heard him
- coming a mile up the corduroy and could not believe their senses.
- Freckles unfastened the box from his belt, and gave Mrs. Duncan and
- the children all the eatables it contained, except one big piece of
- cake that he carried to the sweet-loving Duncan. He put the flowers
- back in the box and set it among his books. He did not say
- anything, but they understood it was not to be touched.
-
- "Thae's Freckles' flow'rs," said a tiny Scotsman, "but," he added
- cheerfully, "it's oor sweeties!"
-
- Freckles' face slowly flushed as he took Duncan's cake and started
- toward the swamp. While Duncan ate, Freckles told him something
- about the evening, as well as he could find words to express
- himself, and the big man was so amazed he kept forgetting the treat
- in his hands.
-
- Then Freckles mounted his wheel and began a spin that terminated
- only when the biggest Plymouth Rock in Duncan's coop saluted a new
- day, and long lines of light reddened the east. As he rode he sang,
- while he sang he worshiped, but the god he tried to glorify was a
- dim and faraway mystery. The Angel was warm flesh and blood.
-
- Every time he passed the little bark-covered imprint on the trail
- he dismounted, removed his hat, solemnly knelt and laid his lips on
- the impression. Because he kept no account himself, only the
- laughing-faced old man of the moon knew how often it happened; and
- as from the beginning, to the follies of earth that gentleman has
- ever been kind.
-
- With the near approach of dawn Freckles tuned his last note.
- Wearied almost to falling, he turned from the trail into the path
- leading to the cabin for a few hours' rest.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- Wherein Black Jack Captures Freckles and the Angel Captures Jack
-
- As Freckles left the trail, from the swale close the south
- entrance, four large muscular men arose and swiftly and carefully
- entered the swamp by the wagon road. Two of them carried a big saw,
- the third, coils of rope and wire, and all of them were heavily armed.
- They left one man on guard at the entrance. The other three made
- their way through the darkness as best they could, and were soon
- at Freckles' room. He had left the swamp on his wheel from the
- west trail. They counted on his returning on the wheel and circling
- the east line before he came there.
-
- A little below the west entrance to Freckles' room, Black Jack
- stepped into the swale, and binding a wire tightly around a scrub
- oak, carried it below the waving grasses, stretched it taut across
- the trail, and fastened it to a tree in the swamp. Then he
- obliterated all signs of his work, and arranged the grass over
- the wire until it was so completely covered that only minute
- examination would reveal it. They entered Freckles' room with
- coarse oaths and jests. In a few moments, his specimen case with
- its precious contents was rolled into the swamp, while the saw was
- eating into one of the finest trees of the Limberlost.
-
- The first report from the man on watch was that Duncan had driven
- to the South camp; the second, that Freckles was coming. The man
- watching was sent to see on which side the boy turned into the
- path; as they had expected, he took the east. He was a little tired
- and his head was rather stupid, for he had not been able to sleep
- as he had hoped, but he was very happy. Although he watched until
- his eyes ached, he could see no sign of anyone having entered the swamp.
-
- He called a cheery greeting to all his chickens. At Sleepy Snake
- Creek he almost fell from his wheel with surprise: the saw-bird
- was surrounded by four lanky youngsters clamoring for breakfast.
- The father was strutting with all the importance of a drum major.
-
- "No use to expect the Bird Woman today," said Freckles; "but now
- wouldn't she be jumping for a chance at that?"
-
- As soon as Freckles was far down the east line, the watch was
- posted below the room on the west to report his coming. It was only
- a few moments before the signal came. Then the saw stopped, and the
- rope was brought out and uncoiled close to a sapling. Wessner and
- Black Jack crowded to the very edge of the swamp a little above the
- wire, and crouched, waiting.
-
- They heard Freckles before they saw him. He came gliding down the
- line swiftly, and as he rode he was singing softly:
-
-
- "Oh, do you love,
- Oh, say you love----"
-
-
- He got no farther. The sharply driven wheel struck the tense wire
- and bounded back. Freckles shot over the handlebar and coasted down
- the trail on his chest. As he struck, Black Jack and Wessner were
- upon him. Wessner caught off an old felt hat and clapped it over
- Freckles' mouth, while Black Jack twisted the boy's arms behind him
- and they rushed him into his room. Almost before he realized that
- anything had happened, he was trussed to a tree and securely gagged.
-
- Then three of the men resumed work on the tree. The other followed
- the path Freckles had worn to Little Chicken's tree, and presently
- he reported that the wires were down and two teams with the loading
- apparatus coming to take out the timber. All the time the saw was
- slowly eating, eating into the big tree.
-
- Wessner went to the trail and removed the wire. He picked up
- Freckles' wheel, that did not seem to be injured, and leaned it
- against the bushes so that if anyone did pass on the trail he would
- not see it doubled in the swamp-grass.
-
- Then he came and stood in front of Freckles and laughed in
- devilish hate. To his own amazement, Freckles found himself
- looking fear in the face, and marveled that he was not afraid.
- Four to one! The tree halfway eaten through, the wagons coming
- up the inside road--he, bound and gagged! The men with Black
- Jack and Wessner had belonged to McLean's gang when last he
- had heard of them, but who those coming with the wagons might
- be he could not guess.
-
- If they secured that tree, McLean lost its value, lost his wager,
- and lost his faith in him. The words of the Angel hammered in
- his ears. "Oh, Freckles, do watch closely!"
-
- The saw worked steadily.
-
- When the tree was down and loaded, what would they do? Pull out,
- and leave him there to report them? It was not to be hoped for.
- The place always had been lawless. It could mean but one thing.
-
- A mist swept before his eyes, while his head swam. Was it only last
- night that he had worshiped the Angel in a delirium of happiness?
- And now, what? Wessner, released from a turn at the saw, walked to
- the flower bed, and tearing up a handful of rare ferns by the
- roots, started toward Freckles. His intention was obvious.
- Black Jack stopped him, with an oath.
-
- "You see here, Dutchy," he bawled, "mebby you think you'll wash his
- face with that, but you won't. A contract's a contract. We agreed
- to take out these trees and leave him for you to dispose of whatever
- way you please, provided you shut him up eternally on this deal.
- But I'll not see a tied man tormented by a fellow that he can
- lick up the ground with, loose, and that's flat. It raises my gorge
- to think what he'll get when we're gone, but you needn't think
- you're free to begin before. Don't you lay a hand on him while
- I'm here! What do you say, boys?"
-
- "I say yes," growled one of McLean's latest deserters. "What's more,
- we're a pack of fools to risk the dirty work of silencing him.
- You had him face down and you on his back; why the hell didn't
- you cover his head and roll him into the bushes until we were gone?
- When I went into this, I didn't understand that he was to see all
- of us and that there was murder on the ticket. I'm not up to it.
- I don't mind lifting trees we came for, but I'm cursed if I want
- blood on my hands."
-
- "Well, you ain't going to get it," bellowed Jack. "You fellows
- only contracted to help me get out my marked trees. He belong to
- Wessner, and it ain't in our deal what happens to him."
-
- "Yes, and if Wessner finishes him safely, we are practically in for
- murder as well as stealing the trees; and if he don't, all hell's
- to pay. I think you've made a damnable bungle of this thing; that's
- what I think!"
-
- "Then keep your thoughts to yourself," cried Jack. "We're doing
- this, and it's all planned safe and sure. As for killing that
- buck--come to think of it, killing is what he needs. He's away too
- good for this world of woe, anyhow. I tell you, it's all safe
- enough. His dropping out won't be the only secret the old
- Limberlost has never told. It's too dead easy to make it look like
- he helped take the timber and then cut. Why, he's played right into
- our hands. He was here at the swamp all last night, and back again
- in an hour or so. When we get our plan worked out, even old fool
- Duncan won't lift a finger to look for his carcass. We couldn't
- have him going in better shape."
-
- "You just bet," said Wessner. "I owe him all he'll get, and be
- damned to you, but I'll pay!" he snarled at Freckles.
-
- So it was killing, then. They were not only after this one tree,
- but many, and with his body it was their plan to kill his honor.
- To brand him a thief, with them, before the Angel, the Bird Woman,
- the dear Boss, and the Duncans--Freckles, in sick despair, sagged
- against the ropes.
-
- Then he gathered his forces and thought swiftly. There was no hope
- of McLean's coming. They had chosen a day when they knew he had a
- big contract at the South camp. The Boss could not come before
- tomorrow by any possibility, and there would be no tomorrow for
- the boy. Duncan was on his way to the South camp, and the Bird Woman
- had said she would come as soon as she could. After the fatigue of
- the party, it was useless to expect her and the Angel today, and
- God save them from coming! The Angel's father had said they would
- be as safe in the Limberlost as at home. What would he think of this?
-
- The sweat broke on Freckles' forehead. He tugged at the ropes
- whenever he felt that he dared, but they were passed around the
- tree and his body several times, and knotted on his chest.
- He was helpless. There was no hope, no help. And after they had
- conspired to make him appear a runaway thief to his loved ones,
- what was it that Wessner would do to him?
-
- Whatever it was, Freckles lifted his head and resolved that he
- would bear in mind what he had once heard the Bird Woman say.
- He would go out bonnily. Never would he let them see, if he
- grew afraid. After all, what did it matter what they did to his
- body if by some scheme of the devil they could encompass his disgrace?
-
- Then hope suddenly rose high in Freckles' breast. They could not
- do that! The Angel would not believe. Neither would McLean. He would
- keep up his courage. Kill him they could; dishonor him they could not.
-
- Yet, summon all the fortitude he might, that saw eating into the
- tree rasped his nerves worse and worse. With whirling brain he
- gazed into the Limberlost, searching for something, he knew not
- what, and in blank horror found his eyes focusing on the Angel.
- She was quite a distance away, but he could see her white lips and
- angry expression.
-
- Last week he had taken her and the Bird Woman across the swamp over
- the path he followed in going from his room to the chicken tree.
- He had told them the night before, that the butterfly tree was on the
- line close to this path. In figuring on their not coming that day,
- he failed to reckon with the enthusiasm of the Bird Woman. They must
- be there for the study, and the Angel had risked crossing the swamp
- in search of him. Or was there something in his room they needed?
- The blood surged in his ears as the roar of the Limberlost in the
- wrath of a storm.
-
- He looked again, and it had been a dream. She was not there.
- Had she been? For his life, Freckles could not tell whether he
- really had seen the Angel, or whether his strained senses had
- played him the most cruel trick of all. Or was it not the kindest?
- Now he could go with the vision of her lovely face fresh with him.
-
- "Thank You for that, oh God!" whispered Freckles." `Twas more than
- kind of You and I don't s'pose I ought to be wanting anything else;
- but if You can, oh, I wish I could know before this ends, if `twas
- me mother"--Freckles could not even whisper the words, for he
- hesitated a second and ended--"IF `TWAS ME MOTHER DID IT!"
-
- "Freckles! Freckles! Oh, Freckles!" the voice of the Angel
- came calling. Freckles swayed forward and wrenched at the rope
- until it cut deeply into his body.
-
- "Hell!" cried Black Jack. "Who is that? Do you know?"
-
- Freckles nodded.
-
- Jack whipped out a revolver and snatched the gag from Freckles' mouth.
-
- "Say quick, or it's up with you right now, and whoever that is with you!"
-
- "It's the girl the Bird Woman takes with her," whispered Freckles
- through dry, swollen lips.
-
- "They ain't due here for five days yet," said Wessner. "We got on
- to that last week."
-
- "Yes," said Freckles, "but I found a tree covered with butterflies
- and things along the east line yesterday that I thought the Bird
- Woman would want extra, and I went to town to tell her last night.
- She said she'd come soon, but she didn't say when. They must be
- here. I take care of the girl while the Bird Woman works. Untie me
- quick until she is gone. I'll try to send her back, and then you
- can go on with your dirty work."
-
- "He ain't lying," volunteered Wessner. "I saw that tree covered
- with butterflies and him watching around it when we were spying on
- him yesterday."
-
- "No, he leaves lying to your sort," snapped Black Jack, as he undid
- the rope and pitched it across the room. "Remember that you're
- covered every move you make, my buck," he cautioned.
-
- "Freckles! Freckles!" came the Angel's impatient voice, closer and closer.
-
- "I must be answering," said Freckles, and Jack nodded. "Right here!"
- he called, and to the men: "You go on with your work, and
- remember one thing yourselves. The work of the Bird Woman is known
- all over the world. This girl's father is a rich man, and she is
- all he has. If you offer hurt of any kind to either of them, this
- world has no place far enough away or dark enough for you to be
- hiding in. Hell will be easy to what any man will get if he touches
- either of them!"
-
- "Freckles, where are you?" demanded the Angel.
-
- Soulsick with fear for her, Freckles went toward her and parted the
- bushes that she might enter. She came through without apparently
- giving him a glance, and the first words she said were: "Why have
- the gang come so soon? I didn't know you expected them for three
- weeks yet. Or is this some especial tree that Mr. McLean needs to
- fill an order right now?"
-
- Freckles hesitated. Would a man dare lie to save himself? No.
- But to save the Angel--surely that was different. He opened his lips,
- but the Angel was capable of saving herself. She walked among them,
- exactly as if she had been reared in a lumber camp, and never
- waited for an answer.
-
- "Why, your specimen case!" she cried. "Look! Haven't you noticed
- that it's tipped over? Set it straight, quickly!"
-
- A couple of the men stepped out and carefully righted the case.
-
- "There! That's better," she said. "Freckles, I'm surprised at your
- being so careless. It would be a shame to break those lovely
- butterflies for one old tree! Is that a valuable tree? Why didn't
- you tell us last night you were going to take out a tree this morning?
- Oh, say, did you put your case there to protect that tree from
- that stealing old Black Jack and his gang? I bet you did!
- Well, if that wasn't bright! What kind of a tree is it?"
-
- "It's a white oak," said Freckles.
-
- "Like those they make dining-tables and sideboards from?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "My! How interesting!" she cried. "I don't know a thing about
- timber, but my father wants me to learn just everything I can. I am
- going to ask him to let me come here and watch you until I know
- enough to boss a gang myself. Do you like to cut trees, gentlemen?"
- she asked with angelic sweetness of the men.
-
- Some of them appeared foolish and some grim, but one managed to say
- they did.
-
- Then the Angel's eyes turned full on Black Jack, and she gave the
- most natural little start of astonishment.
-
- "Oh! I almost thought that you were a ghost!" she cried. "But I see
- now that you are really and truly. Were you ever in Colorado?"
-
- "No," said Jack.
-
- "I see you aren't the same man," said the Angel. "You know, we
- were in Colorado last year, and there was a cowboy who was the
- handsomest man anywhere around. He'd come riding into town every
- night, and all we girls just adored him! Oh, but he was a beauty!
- I thought at first glance you were really he, but I see now he
- wasn't nearly so tall nor so broad as you, and only half as handsome."
-
- The men began to laugh while Jack flushed crimson. The Angel joined
- in the laugh.
-
- "Well, I'll leave it to you! Isn't he handsome?" she challenged.
- "As for that cowboy's face, it couldn't be compared with yours.
- The only trouble with you is that your clothes are spoiling you.
- It's the dress those cowboys wear that makes half their attraction.
- If you were properly clothed, you could break the heart of the
- prettiest girl in the country."
-
- With one accord the other men looked at Black Jack, and for the
- first time realized that he was a superb specimen of manhood, for
- he stood six feet tall, was broad, well-rounded, and had dark, even
- skin, big black eyes, and full red lips.
-
- "I'll tell you what!" exclaimed the Angel. "I'd just love to see
- you on horseback. Nothing sets a handsome man off so splendidly.
- Do you ride?"
-
- "Yes," said Jack, and his eyes were burning on the Angel as if he
- would fathom the depths of her soul.
-
- "Well," said the Angel winsomely, "I know what I just wish you'd do.
- I wish you would let your hair grow a little longer. Then wear
- a blue flannel shirt a little open at the throat, a red tie, and a
- broad-brimmed felt hat, and ride past my house of evenings.
- I'm always at home then, and almost always on the veranda, and, oh!
- but I would like to see you! Will you do that for me?" It is impossible
- to describe the art with which the Angel asked the question. She was
- looking straight into Jack's face, coarse and hardened with sin and
- careless living, which was now taking on a wholly different expression.
- The evil lines of it were softening and fading under her clear gaze.
- A dull red flamed into his bronze cheeks, while his eyes were
- growing brightly tender.
-
- "Yes," he said, and the glance he gave the men was of such a nature
- that no one saw fit even to change countenance.
-
- "Oh, goody!" she cried, tilting on her toes. "I'll ask all the
- girls to come see, but they needn't stick in! We can get along
- without them, can't we?"
-
- Jack leaned toward her. He was the charmed fluttering bird, while
- the Angel was the snake.
-
- "Well, I rather guess!" he cried.
-
- The Angel drew a deep breath and surveyed him rapturously.
-
- "My, but you're tall!" she commented. "Do you suppose I ever will
- grow to reach your shoulders?"
-
- She stood on tiptoe and measured the distance with her eyes. Then she
- developed timid confusion, while her glance sought the ground.
-
- "I wish I could do something," she half whispered.
-
- Jack seemed to increase an inch in height.
-
- "What?" he asked hoarsely.
-
- "Lariat Bill used always to have a bunch of red flowers in his
- shirt pocket. The red lit up his dark eyes and olive cheeks and
- made him splendid. May I put some red flowers on you?"
-
- Freckles stared as he wheezed for breath. He wished the earth would
- open and swallow him. Was he dead or alive? Since his Angel had
- seen Black Jack she never had glanced his way. Was she completely
- bewitched? Would she throw herself at the man's feet before them all?
- Couldn't she give him even one thought? Hadn't she seen that
- he was gagged and bound? Did she truly think that these were
- McLean's men? Why, she could not! It was only a few days ago that
- she had been close enough to this man and angry enough with him to
- peel the hat from his head with a shot! Suddenly a thing she had
- said jestingly to him one day came back with startling force:
- "You must take Angels on trust." Of course you must! She was
- his Angel. She must have seen! His life, and what was far more,
- her own, was in her hands. There was nothing he could do but
- trust her. Surely she was working out some plan.
-
- The Angel knelt beside his flower bed and recklessly tore up by the
- roots a big bunch of foxfire.
-
- "These stems are so tough and sticky," she said. "I can't
- break them. Loan me your knife," she ordered Freckles.
-
- As she reached for the knife, her back was for one second toward
- the men. She looked into his eyes and deliberately winked.
-
- She severed the stems, tossed the knife to Freckles, and walking to
- Jack, laid the flowers over his heart.
-
- Freckles broke into a sweat of agony. He had said she would be safe
- in a herd of howling savages. Would she? If Black Jack even made a
- motion toward touching her, Freckles knew that from somewhere he
- would muster the strength to kill him. He mentally measured the
- distance to where his club lay and set his muscles for a spring.
- But no--by the splendor of God! The big fellow was baring his head
- with a hand that was unsteady. The Angel pulled one of the long
- silver pins from her hat and fastened her flowers securely.
-
- Freckles was quaking. What was to come next? What was she planning,
- and oh! did she understand the danger of her presence among those
- men; the real necessity for action?
-
- As the Angel stepped from Jack, she turned her head to one side and
- peered at him, quite as Freckles had seen the little yellow fellow
- do on the line a hundred times, and said: "Well, that does the trick!
- Isn't that fine? See how it sets him off, boys? Don't you forget
- the tie is to be red, and the first ride soon. I can't wait
- very long. Now I must go. The Bird Woman will be ready to start,
- and she will come here hunting me next, for she is busy today.
- What did I come here for anyway?"
-
- She glanced inquiringly around, and several of the men laughed.
- Oh, the delight of it! She had forgotten her errand for him!
- Jack had a second increase in height. The Angel glanced helplessly
- as if seeking a clue. Then her eyes fell, as if by accident, on
- Freckles, and she cried, "Oh, I know now! It was those magazines
- the Bird Woman promised you. I came to tell you that we put them
- under the box where we hide things, at the entrance to the swamp
- as we came in. I knew I would need my hands crossing the swamp,
- so I hid them there. You'll find them at the same old place."
-
- Then Freckles spoke.
-
- "It's mighty risky for you to be crossing the swamp alone," he said.
- "I'm surprised that the Bird Woman would be letting you try it.
- I know it's a little farther, but it's begging you I am to be
- going back by the trail. That's bad enough, but it's far safer than
- the swamp."
-
- The Angel laughed merrily.
-
- "Oh stop your nonsense!" she cried. "I'm not afraid! Not in
- the least! The Bird Woman didn't want me to try following a path
- that I'd been over only once, but I was sure I could do it, and I'm
- rather proud of the performance. Now, don't go babying! You know
- I'm not afraid!"
-
- "No," said Freckles gently, "I know you're not; but that has
- nothing to do with the fact that your friends are afraid for you.
- On the trail you can see your way a bit ahead, and you've all the
- world a better chance if you meet a snake."
-
- Then Freckles had an inspiration. He turned to Jack imploringly.
-
- "You tell her!" he pleaded. "Tell her to go by the trail. She will
- for you."
-
- The implication of this statement was so gratifying to Black Jack
- that he seemed again to expand and take on increase before their
- very eyes.
-
- "You bet!" exclaimed Jack. And to the Angel: "You better take
- Freckles' word for it, miss. He knows the old swamp better than any
- of us, except me, and if he says `go by the trail,' you'd best do it."
-
- The Angel hesitated. She wanted to recross the swamp and try to
- reach the horse. She knew Freckles would brave any danger to save
- her crossing the swamp alone, but she really was not afraid, while
- the trail added over a mile to the walk. She knew the path.
- She intended to run for dear life the instant she felt herself from
- their sight, and tucked in the folds of her blouse was a fine
- little 32-caliber revolver that her father had presented her for
- her share in what he was pleased to call her military exploit.
- One last glance at Freckles showed her the agony in his eyes, and
- immediately she imagined he had some other reason. She would follow
- the trail.
-
- "All right," she said, giving Jack a thrilling glance. "If you say
- so, I'll return by the trail to please you. Good-bye, everybody."
-
- She lifted the bushes and started toward the entrance.
-
- "You damned fool! Stop her!" growled Wessner. "Keep her till we're
- loaded, anyhow. You're playing hell! Can't you see that when this
- thing is found out, there she'll be to ruin all of us. If you let
- her go, every man of us has got to cut, and some of us will be
- caught sure."
-
- Jack sprang forward. Freckles' heart muffled in his throat.
- The Angel seemed to divine Jack's coming. She was humming a
- little song. She deliberately stopped and began pulling the heads
- of the curious grasses that grew all around her. When she straightened,
- she took a step backward and called: "Ho! Freckles, the Bird Woman
- wants that natural history pamphlet returned. It belongs to a set
- she is going to have bound. That's one of the reasons we put it
- under the box. You be sure to get them as you go home tonight, for
- fear it rains or becomes damp with the heavy dews."
-
- "All right," said Freckles, but it was in a voice that he never had
- heard before.
-
- Then the Angel turned and sent a parting glance at Jack. She was
- overpoweringly human and bewitchingly lovely.
-
- "You won't forget that ride and the red tie," she half asserted,
- half questioned.
-
- Jack succumbed. Freckles was his captive, but he was the Angel's,
- soul and body. His face wore the holiest look it ever had known as
- he softly re-echoed Freckles' "All right." With her head held well
- up, the Angel walked slowly away, and Jack turned to the men.
-
- "Drop your damned staring and saw wood," he shouted. "Don't you
- know anything at all about how to treat a lady?" It might have been
- a question which of the cronies that crouched over green wood fires
- in the cabins of Wildcat Hollow, eternally sucking a corncob pipe
- and stirring the endless kettles of stewing coon and opossum, had
- taught him to do even as well as he had by the Angel.
-
- The men muttered and threatened among themselves, but they began
- working desperately. Someone suggested that a man be sent to follow
- the Angel and to watch her and the Bird Woman leave the swamp.
- Freckles' heart sank within him, but Jack was in a delirium and
- past all caution.
-
- "Yes," he sneered. "Mebby all of you had better give over on the
- saw and run after the girl. I guess not! Seems to me I got the
- favors. I didn't see no bouquets on the rest of you! If anybody
- follows her, I do, and I'm needed here among such a pack of idiots.
- There's no danger in that baby face. She wouldn't give me away!
- You double and work like forty, while me and Wessner will take the
- axes and begin to cut in on the other side."
-
- "What about the noise?" asked Wessner.
-
- "No difference about the noise," answered Jack. "She took us to be
- from McLean's gang, slick as grease. Make the chips fly!"
-
- So all of them attacked the big tree.
-
- Freckles sat on one of his benches and waited. In their haste to
- fell the tree and load it, so that the teamsters could start, and
- leave them free to attack another, they had forgotten to rebind him.
-
- The Angel was on the trail and safely started. The cold
- perspiration made Freckles' temples clammy and ran in little
- streams down his chest. It would take her more time to follow the
- trail, but her safety was Freckles' sole thought in urging her to
- go that way. He tried to figure on how long it would require to
- walk to the carriage. He wondered if the Bird Woman had unhitched.
- He followed the Angel every step of the way. He figured on when she
- would cross the path of the clearing, pass the deep pool where his
- "find-out" frog lived, cross Sleepy Snake Creek, and reach the carriage.
-
- He wondered what she would say to the Bird Woman, and how long it
- would take them to pack and start. He knew now that they would
- understand, and the Angel would try to get the Boss there in time
- to save his wager. She could never do it, for the saw was over half
- through, and Jack and Wessner cutting into the opposite side of
- the tree. It appeared as if they could fell at least that tree,
- before McLean could come, and if they did he lost his wager.
-
- When it was down, would they rebind him and leave him for Wessner
- to wreak his insane vengeance on, or would they take him along to
- the next tree and dispose of him when they had stolen all the
- timber they could? Jack had said that he should not be touched
- until he left. Surely he would not run all that risk for one tree,
- when he had many others of far greater value marked. Freckles felt
- that he had some hope to cling to now, but he found himself praying
- that the Angel would hurry.
-
- Once Jack came to Freckles and asked if he had any water. Freckles
- arose and showed him where he kept his drinking-water. Jack drank
- in great gulps, and as he passed back the bucket, he said: "When a
- man's got a chance of catching a fine girl like that, he ought not
- be mixed up in any dirty business. I wish to God I was out of this!"
-
- Freckles answered heartily: "I wish I was, too!"
-
- Jack stared at him a minute and then broke into a roar of rough laughter.
-
- "Blest if I blame you," he said. "But you had your chance!
- We offered you a fair thing and you gave Wessner his answer.
- I ain't envying you when he gives you his."
-
- "You're six to one," answered Freckles. "It will be easy enough for
- you to be killing the body of me, but, curse you all, you can't
- blacken me soul!"
-
- "Well, I'd give anything you could name if I had your honesty,"
- said Jack.
-
- When the mighty tree fell, the Limberlost shivered and screamed
- with the echo. Freckles groaned in despair, but the gang took heart.
- That was so much accomplished. They knew where to dispose of it
- safely, with no questions asked. Before the day was over, they
- could remove three others, all suitable for veneer and worth far
- more than this. Then they would leave Freckles to Wessner and
- scatter for safety, with more money than they had ever hoped for in
- their possession.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- Wherein the Angel Releases Freckles, and the Curse of Black Jack
- Falls upon Her
-
- On the line, the Angel gave one backward glance at Black Jack, to
- see that he had returned to his work. Then she gathered her skirts
- above her knees and leaped forward on the run. In the first three
- yards she passed Freckles' wheel. Instantly she imagined that was
- why he had insisted on her coming by the trail. She seized it and
- sprang on. The saddle was too high, but she was an expert rider and
- could catch the pedals as they came up. She stopped at Duncan's
- cabin long enough to remedy this, telling Mrs. Duncan while working
- what was happening, and for her to follow the east trail until she
- found the Bird Woman, and told her that she had gone after McLean
- and for her to leave the swamp as quickly as possible.
-
- Even with her fear for Freckles to spur her, Sarah Duncan blanched
- and began shivering at the idea of facing the Limberlost. The Angel
- looked her in the eyes.
-
- "No matter how afraid you are, you have to go," she said. "If you
- don't the Bird Woman will go to Freckles' room, hunting me, and
- they will have trouble with her. If she isn't told to leave at
- once, they may follow me, and, finding I'm gone, do some terrible
- thing to Freckles. I can't go--that's flat--for if they caught me,
- then there'd be no one to go for help. You don't suppose they are
- going to take out the trees they're after and then leave Freckles
- to run and tell? They are going to murder the boy; that's what they
- are going to do. You run, and run for life! For Freckles' life!
- You can ride back with the Bird Woman."
-
- The Angel saw Mrs. Duncan started; then began her race.
-
- Those awful miles of corduroy! Would they never end? She did not
- dare use the wheel too roughly, for if it broke she never could
- arrive on time afoot. Where her way was impassable for the wheel,
- she jumped off, and pushing it beside her or carrying it, she ran
- as fast as she could. The day was fearfully warm. The sun poured
- with the fierce baking heat of August. The bushes claimed her hat,
- and she did not stop for it.
-
- Where it was at all possible, the Angel mounted and pounded over
- the corduroy again. She was panting for breath and almost worn out
- when she reached the level pike. She had no idea how long she had
- been--and only two miles covered. She leaned over the bars, almost
- standing on the pedals, racing with all the strength in her body.
- The blood surged in her ears while her head swam, but she kept a
- straight course, and rode and rode. It seemed to her that she was
- standing still, while the trees and houses were racing past her.
-
- Once a farmer's big dog rushed angrily into the road and she
- swerved until she almost fell, but she regained her balance, and
- setting her muscles, pedaled as fast as she could. At last she
- lifted her head. Surely it could not be over a mile more. She had
- covered two of corduroy and at least three of gravel, and it was
- only six in all.
-
- She was reeling in the saddle, but she gripped the bars with new
- energy, and raced desperately. The sun beat on her bare head and
- hands. Just when she was choking with dust, and almost prostrate
- with heat and exhaustion--crash, she ran into a broken bottle.
- Snap! went the tire; the wheel swerved and pitched over. The Angel
- rolled into the thick yellow dust of the road and lay quietly.
-
- From afar, Duncan began to notice a strange, dust-covered object in the
- road, as he headed toward town with the first load of the day's felling.
-
- He chirruped to the bays and hurried them all he could. As he
- neared the Angel, he saw it was a woman and a broken wheel. He was
- beside her in an instant. He carried her to a shaded fence-corner,
- stretched her on the grass, and wiped the dust from the lovely face
- all dirt-streaked, crimson, and bearing a startling whiteness
- around the mouth and nose.
-
- Wheels were common enough. Many of the farmers' daughters owned and
- rode them, but he knew these same farmers' daughters; this face was
- a stranger's. He glanced at the Angel's tumbled clothing, the
- silkiness of her hair, with its pale satin ribbon, and noticed that
- she had lost her hat. Her lips tightened in an ominous quiver.
- He left her and picked up the wheel: as he had surmised, he knew it.
- This, then, was Freckles' Swamp Angel. There was trouble in the
- Limberlost, and she had broken down racing to McLean. Duncan turned
- the bays into a fence-corner, tied one of them, unharnessed the
- other, fastened up the trace chains, and hurried to the nearest
- farmhouse to send help to the Angel. He found a woman, who took a
- bottle of camphor, a jug of water, and some towels, and started on
- the run.
-
- Then Duncan put the bay to speed and raced to camp.
-
- The Angel, left alone, lay still for a second, then she shivered
- and opened her eyes. She saw that she was on the grass and the
- broken wheel beside her. Instantly she realized that someone had
- carried her there and gone after help. She sat up and looked
- around. She noticed the load of logs and the one horse. Someone was
- riding after help for her!
-
- "Oh, poor Freckles!" she wailed. "They may be killing him by now.
- Oh, how much time have I wasted?"
-
- She hurried to the other bay, her fingers flying as she set him free.
- Snatching up a big blacksnake whip that lay on the ground, she
- caught the hames, stretched along the horse's neck, and, for
- the first time, the fine, big fellow felt on his back the quality
- of the lash that Duncan was accustomed to crack over him. He was
- frightened, and ran at top speed.
-
- The Angel passed a wildly waving, screaming woman on the road, and
- a little later a man riding as if he, too, were in great haste.
- The man called to her, but she only lay lower and used the whip.
- Soon the feet of the man's horse sounded farther and farther away.
-
- At the South camp they were loading a second wagon, when the Angel
- appeared riding one of Duncan's bays, lathered and dripping, and
- cried: "Everybody go to Freckles! There are thieves stealing trees,
- and they had him bound. They're going to kill him!"
-
- She wheeled the horse toward the Limberlost. The alarm sounded
- through camp. The gang were not unprepared. McLean sprang to
- Nellie's back and raced after the Angel. As they passed Duncan, he
- wheeled and followed. Soon the pike was an irregular procession of
- barebacked riders, wildly driving flying horses toward the swamp.
-
- The Boss rode neck-and-neck with the Angel. He repeatedly commanded
- her to stop and fall out of line, until he remembered that he would
- need her to lead him to Freckles. Then he gave up and rode beside
- her, for she was sending the bay at as sharp a pace as the other
- horses could keep and hold out. He could see that she was not
- hearing him. He glanced back and saw that Duncan was close.
- There was something terrifying in the appearance of the big man, and
- the manner in which he sat his beast and rode. It would be a sad day
- for the man on whom Duncan's wrath broke. There were four others
- close behind him, and the pike filling with the remainder of the
- gang; so McLean took heart and raced beside the Angel. Over and
- over he asked her where the trouble was, but she only gripped the
- hames, leaned along the bay's neck, and slashed away with the
- blacksnake. The steaming horse, with crimson nostrils and heaving
- sides, stretched out and ran for home with all the speed there was
- in him.
-
- When they passed the cabin, the Bird Woman's carriage was there and
- Mrs. Duncan in the door wringing her hands, but the Bird Woman was
- nowhere to be seen. The Angel sent the bay along the path and
- turned into the west trail, while the men bunched and followed her.
- When she reached the entrance to Freckles' room, there were four
- men with her, and two more very close behind. She slid from the
- horse, and snatching the little revolver from her pocket, darted
- toward the bushes. McLean caught them back, and with drawn weapon,
- pressed beside her. There they stopped in astonishment.
-
- The Bird Woman blocked the entrance. Over a small limb lay
- her revolver. It was trained at short range on Black Jack and
- Wessner, who stood with their hands above their heads.
-
- Freckles, with the blood trickling down his face, from an ugly cut
- in his temple, was gagged and bound to the tree again; the
- remainder of the men were gone. Black Jack was raving as a maniac,
- and when they looked closer it was only the left arm that he raised.
- His right, with the hand shattered, hung helpless at his side,
- while his revolver lay at Freckles' feet. Wessner's weapon
- was in his belt, and beside him Freckles' club.
-
- Freckles' face was white, with colorless lips, but in his eyes was
- the strength of undying courage. McLean pushed past the Bird
- Woman crying. "Hold steady on them only one minute more!"
-
- He snatched the revolver from Wessner's belt, and stooped for Jack's.
-
- At that instant the Angel rushed past. She tore the gag from
- Freckles, and seizing the rope knotted on his chest, she tugged at
- it desperately. Under her fingers it gave way, and she hurled it
- to McLean. The men were crowding in, and Duncan seized Wessner.
- As the Angel saw Freckles stand out, free, she reached her arms to him
- and pitched forward. A fearful oath burst from the lips of Black Jack.
- To have saved his life, Freckles could not have avoided the glance
- of triumph he gave Jack, when folding the Angel in his arms and
- stretching her on the mosses.
-
- The Bird Woman cried out sharply for water as she ran to them.
- Someone sprang to bring that, and another to break open the case
- for brandy. As McLean arose from binding Wessner, there was a cry
- that Jack was escaping.
-
- He was already far in the swamp, running for its densest part in
- leaping bounds. Every man who could be spared plunged after him.
-
- Other members of the gang arriving, were sent to follow the tracks
- of the wagons. The teamsters had driven from the west entrance, and
- crossing the swale, had taken the same route the Bird Woman and the
- Angel had before them. There had been ample time for the drivers to
- reach the road; after that they could take any one of four directions.
- Traffic was heavy, and lumber wagons were passing almost constantly,
- so the men turned back and joined the more exciting hunt for a man.
- The remainder of the gang joined them, also farmers of the region
- and travelers attracted by the disturbance.
-
- Watchers were set along the trail at short intervals. They patrolled
- the line and roads through the swamp that night, with lighted torches,
- and the next day McLean headed as thorough a search as he felt could
- be made of one side, while Duncan covered the other; but Black Jack
- could not be found. Spies were set around his home, in Wildcat
- Hollow, to ascertain if he reached there or aid was being sent in
- any direction to him; but it was soon clear that his relatives were
- ignorant of his hiding-place, and were searching for him.
-
- Great is the elasticity of youth. A hot bath and a sound night's
- sleep renewed Freckles' strength, and it needed but little more to
- work the same result with the Angel. Freckles was on the trail
- early the next morning. Besides a crowd of people anxious to witness
- Jack's capture, he found four stalwart guards, one at each turn.
- In his heart he was compelled to admit that he was glad to have
- them there. Close noon, McLean placed his men in charge of Duncan,
- and taking Freckles, drove to town to see how the Angel fared.
- McLean visited a greenhouse and bought an armload of its finest
- products; but Freckles would have none of them. He would carry
- his message in a glowing mass of the Limberlost's first goldenrod.
-
- The Bird Woman received them, and in answer to their eager
- inquiries, said that the Angel was in no way seriously injured,
- only so bruised and shaken that their doctor had ordered her to lie
- quietly for the day. Though she was sore and stiff, they were
- having work to keep her in bed. Her callers sent up their flowers
- with their grateful regards, and the Angel promptly returned word
- that she wanted to see them.
-
- She reached both hands to McLean. "What if one old tree is gone?
- You don't care, sir? You feel that Freckles has kept his trust as
- nobody ever did before, don't you? You won't forget all those long
- first days of fright that you told us of, the fearful cold of
- winter, the rain, heat, and lonesomeness, and the brave days, and
- lately, nights, too, and let him feel that his trust is broken?
- Oh, Mr. McLean," she begged, "say something to him! Do something to
- make him feel that it isn't for nothing he has watched and suffered
- it out with that old Limberlost. Make him see how great and fine it
- is, and how far, far better he has done than you or any of us expected!
- What's one old tree, anyway?" she cried passionately.
-
- "I was thinking before you came. Those other men were rank
- big cowards. They were scared for their lives. If they were the
- drivers, I wager you gloves against gloves they never took those
- logs out to the pike. My coming upset them. Before you feel bad any
- more, you go look and see if they didn't lose courage the minute
- they left Wessner and Black Jack, dump that timber and run. I don't
- believe they ever had the grit to drive out with it in daylight.
- Go see if they didn't figure on leaving the way we did the other
- morning, and you'll find the logs before you reach the road.
- They never risked taking them into the open, when they got away
- and had time to think. Of course they didn't!
-
- "And, then, another thing. You haven't lost your wager! It never
- will be claimed, because you made it with a stout, dark, red-faced
- man who drives a bay and a gray. He was right back of you, Mr.
- McLean, when I came yesterday. He went deathly white and shook on
- his feet when he saw those men probably would be caught. Some one
- of them was something to him, and you can just spot him for one of
- the men at the bottom of your troubles, and urging those younger
- fellows to steal from you. I suppose he'd promised to divide.
- You settle with him, and that business will stop."
-
- She turned to Freckles. "And you be the happiest man alive, because
- you have kept your trust. Go look where I tell you and you'll find
- the logs. I can see just about where they are. When they go up that
- steep little hill, into the next woods after the cornfield, why,
- they could unloose the chains and the logs would roll from the
- wagons themselves. Now, you go look; and Mr. McLean, you do feel
- that Freckles has been brave and faithful? You won't love him any
- the less even if you don't find the logs"
-
- The Angel's nerve gave way and she began to cry. Freckles could not
- endure it. He almost ran from the room, with the tears in his eyes;
- but McLean took the Angel from the Bird Woman's arms, and kissed
- her brave little face, stroked her hair, and petted her into
- quietness before he left.
-
- As they drove to the swamp, McLean so earnestly seconded all that
- the Angel had said that he soon had the boy feeling much better.
-
- "Freckles, your Angel has a spice of the devil in her, but
- she's superb! You needn't spend any time questioning or bewailing
- anything she does. Just worship blindly, my boy. By heaven! she's
- sense, courage, and beauty for half a dozen girls," said McLean.
-
- "It's altogether right you are, sir," affirmed Freckles heartily.
- Presently he added, "There's no question but the series is over now."
-
- "Don't think it!" answered McLean. "The Bird Woman is working for
- success, and success along any line is not won by being scared out.
- She will be back on the usual day, and ten to one, the Angel will
- be with her. They are made of pretty stern stuff, and they don't
- scare worth a cent. Before I left, I told the Bird Woman it would
- be safe; and it will. You may do your usual walking, but those four
- guards are there to remain. They are under your orders absolutely.
- They are prohibited from firing on any bird or molesting anything
- that you want to protect, but there they remain, and this time it
- is useless for you to say one word. I have listened to your pride
- too long. You are too precious to me, and that voice of yours is
- too precious to the world to run any more risks."
-
- "I am sorry to have anything spoil the series," said Freckles, "and
- I'd love them to be coming, the Angel especial, but it can't be.
- You'll have to tell them so. You see, Jack would have been ready to
- stake his life she meant what she said and did to him. When the
- teams pulled out, Wessner seized me; then he and Jack went to
- quarreling over whether they should finish me then or take me to
- the next tree they were for felling. Between them they were pulling
- me around and hurting me bad. Wessner wanted to get at me right
- then, and Jack said he shouldn't be touching me till the last tree
- was out and all the rest of them gone. I'm belaying Jack really
- hated to see me done for in the beginning; and I think, too, he was
- afraid if Wessner finished me then he'd lose his nerve and cut, and
- they couldn't be managing the felling without him; anyway, they
- were hauling me round like I was already past all feeling, and they
- tied me up again. To keep me courage up, I twits Wessner about
- having to tie me and needing another man to help handle me. I told
- him what I'd do to him if I was free, and he grabs up me own club
- and lays open me head with it. When the blood came streaming, it
- set Jack raving, and he cursed and damned Wessner for a coward and
- a softy. Then Wessner turned on Jack and gives it to him for
- letting the Angel make a fool of him. Tells him she was just
- playing with him, and beyond all manner of doubt she'd gone after
- you, and there was nothing to do on account of his foolishness but
- finish me, get out, and let the rest of the timber go, for likely
- you was on the way right then. That drove Jack plum crazy.
-
- "I don't think he was for having a doubt of the Angel before, but
- then he just raved. He grabbed out his gun and turned on Wessner.
- Spang! It went out of his fist, and the order comes: `Hands up!'
- Wessner reached for kingdom come like he was expecting to grab hold
- and pull himself up. Jack puts up what he has left. Then he leans
- over to me and tells me what he'll do to me if he ever gets out of
- there alive. Then, just like a snake hissing, he spits out what
- he'll do to her for playing him. He did get away, and with his
- strength, that wound in his hand won't be bothering him long.
- He'll do to me just what he said, and when he hears it really was
- she that went after you, why, he'll keep his oath about her.
-
- "He's lived in the swamp all his life, sir, and everybody says it's
- always been the home of cutthroats, outlaws, and runaways. He knows
- its most secret places as none of the others. He's alive. He's in
- there now, sir. Some way he'll keep alive. If you'd seen his face,
- all scarlet with passion, twisted with pain, and black with hate,
- and heard him swearing that oath, you'd know it was a sure thing.
- I ain't done with him yet, and I've brought this awful thing on her."
-
- "And I haven't begun with him yet," said McLean, setting his teeth.
- "I've been away too slow and too easy, believing there'd be no
- greater harm than the loss of a tree. I've sent for a couple of
- first-class detectives. We will put them on his track, and rout him
- out and rid the country of him. I don't propose for him to stop
- either our work or our pleasure. As for his being in the swamp now,
- I don't believe it. He'd find a way out last night, in spite of us.
- Don't you worry! I am at the helm now, and I'll see to that
- gentleman in my own way."
-
- "I wish to my soul you had seen and heard him!" said Freckles, unconvinced.
-
- They entered the swamp, taking the route followed by the Bird Woman
- and the Angel. They really did find the logs, almost where the
- Angel had predicted they would be. McLean went to the South camp
- and had an interview with Crowen that completely convinced him that
- the Angel was correct there also. But he had no proof, so all he
- could do was to discharge the man, although his guilt was so
- apparent that he offered to withdraw the wager.
-
- Then McLean sent for a pack of bloodhounds and put them on the
- trail of Black Jack. They clung to it, on and on, into the depths
- of the swamp, leading their followers through what had been
- considered impassable and impenetrable ways, and finally, around
- near the west entrance and into the swale. Here the dogs bellowed,
- raved, and fell over each other in their excitement. They raced
- back and forth from swamp to swale, but follow the scent farther
- they would not, even though cruelly driven. At last their owner
- attributed their actions to snakes, and as they were very valuable
- dogs, abandoned the effort to urge them on. So that all they really
- established was the fact that Black Jack had eluded their vigilance
- and crossed the trail some time in the night. He had escaped to the
- swale; from there he probably crossed the corduroy, and reaching
- the lower end of the swamp, had found friends. It was a great
- relief to feel that he was not in the swamp, and it raised the
- spirits of every man on the line, though many of them expressed
- regrets that he who was undoubtedly most to blame should escape,
- while Wessner, who in the beginning was only his tool, should be
- left to punishment.
-
- But for Freckles, with Jack's fearful oath ringing in his ears,
- there was neither rest nor peace. He was almost ill when the day
- for the next study of the series arrived and he saw the Bird Woman
- and the Angel coming down the corduroy. The guards of the east line
- he left at their customary places, but those of the west he brought
- over and placed, one near Little Chicken's tree, and the other at
- the carriage. He was firm about the Angel's remaining in the
- carriage, that he did not offer to have unhitched. He went with the
- Bird Woman to secure the picture, which was the easiest matter it
- had been at any time yet, for the simple reason that the placing of
- the guards and the unusual movement around the swamp had made Mr.
- and Mrs. Chicken timid, and they had not carried Little Chicken the
- customary amount of food. Freckles, in the anxiety of the past few
- days, had neglected him, and he had been so hungry, much of the
- time, that when the Bird Woman held up a sweet-bread, although he
- had started toward the recesses of the log at her coming, he
- stopped; with slightly opened beak, he waited anxiously for the
- treat, and gave a study of great value, showing every point of his
- head, also his wing and tail development.
-
- When the Bird Woman proposed to look for other subjects close about
- the line, Freckles went so far as to tell her that Jack had made
- fearful threats against the Angel. He implored her to take the
- Angel home and keep her under unceasing guard until Jack was
- located. He wanted to tell her all about it, but he knew how dear
- the Angel was to her, and he dreaded to burden her with his fears
- when they might prove groundless. He allowed her to go, but
- afterward blamed himself severely for having done so.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- Wherein Freckles Nurses a Heartache and Black Jack Drops Out
-
- "McLean," said Mrs. Duncan, as the Boss paused to greet her in
- passing the cabin, "do you know that Freckles hasna been in bed the
- past five nights and all he's eaten in that many days ye could pack
- into a pint cup?"
-
- "Why, what does the boy mean?" demanded McLean. "There's no
- necessity for him being on guard, with the watch I've set on
- the line. I had no idea he was staying down there."
-
- "He's no there," said Mrs. Duncan. "He goes somewhere else.
- He leaves on his wheel juist after we're abed and rides in close
- cock-crow or a little earlier, and he's looking like death and
- nothing short of it."
-
- "But where does he go?" asked McLean in astonishment.
-
- "I'm no given to bearing tales out of school," said Sarah Duncan,
- "but in this case I'd tell ye if I could. What the trouble is I
- dinna ken. If it is no' stopped, he's in for dreadful sickness, and
- I thought ye could find out and help him. He's in sair trouble;
- that's all I know."
-
- McLean sat brooding as he stroked Nellie's neck.
-
- At last he said: "I suspect I understand. At any rate, I think I
- can find out. Thank you for telling me."
-
- "Ye'll no need telling, once ye clap your eyes on him," prophesied
- Mrs. Duncan. "His face is all a glist'ny yellow, and he's peaked as
- a starving caged bird."
-
- McLean rode to the Limberlost, and stopping in the shade, sat
- waiting for Freckles, whose hour for passing the foot of the lease
- had come.
-
- Along the north line came Freckles, fairly staggering. When he
- turned east and reached Sleepy Snake Creek, sliding through the
- swale as the long black snake for which it was named, he sat on the
- bridge and closed his burning eyes, but they would not remain shut.
- As if pulled by wires, the heavy lids flew open, while the outraged
- nerves and muscles of his body danced, twitched, and tingled.
-
- He bent forward and idly watched the limpid little stream flowing
- beneath his feet. Stretching into the swale, it came creeping
- between an impenetrable wall of magnificent wild flowers, vines,
- and ferns. Milkweed, goldenrod, ironwort, fringed gentians,
- cardinal-flowers, and turtle-head stood on the very edge of the
- creek, and every flower of them had a double in the water.
- Wild clematis crowned with snow the heads of trees scattered
- here and there on the bank.
-
- From afar the creek appeared to be murky, dirty water. Really it
- was clear and sparkling. The tinge of blackness was gained from its
- bed of muck showing through the transparent current. He could see
- small and wonderfully marked fish. What became of them when the
- creek spread into the swamp? For one thing, they would make mighty
- fine eating for the family of that self-satisfied old blue heron.
-
- Freckles sat so quietly that soon the brim of his hat was covered
- with snake-feeders, rasping their crisp wings and singing while
- they rested. Some of them settled on the club, and one on
- his shoulder. He was so motionless; feathers, fur, and gauze were
- so accustomed to him, that all through the swale they continued
- their daily life and forgot he was there.
-
- The heron family were wading the mouth of the creek. Freckles idly
- wondered whether the nerve-racking rasps they occasionally emitted
- indicated domestic felicity or a raging quarrel. He could not decide.
- A sheitpoke, with flaring crest, went stalking across a bare
- space close to the creek's mouth. A stately brown bittern waded
- into the clear-flowing water, lifting his feet high at every
- step, and setting them down carefully, as if he dreaded wetting
- them, and with slightly parted beak, stood eagerly watching around
- him for worms. Behind him were some mighty trees of the swamp
- above, and below the bank glowed a solid wall of goldenrod.
-
- No wonder the ancients had chosen yellow as the color to represent
- victory, for the fierce, conquering hue of the sun was in it.
- They had done well, too, in selecting purple as the emblem of royalty.
- It was a dignified, compelling color, while in its warm tone there
- was a hint of blood.
-
- It was the Limberlost's hour to proclaim her sovereignty and triumph.
- Everywhere she flaunted her yellow banner and trailed the purple of
- her mantle, that was paler in the thistle-heads, took on strength
- in the first opening asters, and glowed and burned in the ironwort.
-
- He gazed into her damp, mossy recesses where high-piled riven trees
- decayed under coats of living green, where dainty vines swayed and
- clambered, and here and there a yellow leaf, fluttering down,
- presaged the coming of winter. His love of the swamp laid hold of
- him and shook him with its force.
-
- Compellingly beautiful was the Limberlost, but cruel withal; for
- inside bleached the uncoffined bones of her victims, while she had
- missed cradling him, oh! so narrowly.
-
- He shifted restlessly; the movement sent the snake-feeders skimming.
- The hum of life swelled and roared in his strained ears.
- Small turtles, that had climbed on a log to sun, splashed clumsily
- into the water. Somewhere in the timber of the bridge a
- bloodthirsty little frog cried sharply. "KEEL'IM! KEEL'IM!"
-
- Freckles muttered: "It's worse than that Black Jack swore to do to
- me, little fellow."
-
- A muskrat waddled down the bank and swam for the swamp, its pointed
- nose riffling the water into a shining trail in its wake.
-
- Then, below the turtle-log, a dripping silver-gray head, with
- shining eyes, was cautiously lifted, and Freckles' hand slid to his
- revolver. Higher and higher came the head, a long, heavy, furcoated
- body arose, now half, now three-fourths from the water. Freckles
- looked at his shaking hand and doubted, but he gathered his forces,
- the shot rang, and the otter lay quiet. He hurried down and tried to
- lift it. He scarcely could muster strength to carry it to the bridge.
- The consciousness that he really could go no farther with it made
- Freckles realize the fact that he was close the limit of
- human endurance. He could bear it little, if any, longer.
- Every hour the dear face of the Angel wavered before him, and
- behind it the awful distorted image of Black Jack, as he had sworn
- to the punishment he would mete out to her. He must either see
- McLean, or else make a trip to town and find her father. Which should
- he do? He was almost a stranger, so the Angel's father might not be
- impressed with what he said as he would if McLean went to him.
- Then he remembered that McLean had said he would come that morning.
- Freckles never had forgotten before. He hurried on the east trail
- as fast as his tottering legs would carry him.
-
- He stopped when he came to the first guard, and telling him of his
- luck, asked him to get the otter and carry it to the cabin, as he
- was anxious to meet McLean.
-
- Freckles passed the second guard without seeing him, and hurried to
- the Boss. He took off his hat, wiped his forehead, and stood silent
- under the eyes of McLean.
-
- The Boss was dumbfounded. Mrs. Duncan had led him to expect that
- he would find a change in Freckles, but this was almost deathly.
- The fact was apparent that the boy scarcely knew what he was doing.
- His eyes had a glazed, far-sighted appearance, that wrung the heart of
- the man who loved him. Without a thought of preliminaries, McLean
- leaned in the saddle and drew Freckles to him.
-
- "My poor lad!" he said. "My poor, dear lad! tell me, and we will
- try to right it!"
-
- Freckles had twisted his fingers in Nellie's mane. At the kind
- words his face dropped on McLean's thigh and he shook with a
- nervous chill. McLean gathered him closer and waited.
-
- When the guard came with the otter, McLean without a word motioned
- him to lay it down and leave them.
-
- "Freckles," said McLean at last, "will you tell me, or must I set
- to work in the dark and try to find the trouble?"
-
- "Oh, I want to tell you! I must tell you, sir," shuddered Freckles.
- "I cannot be bearing it the day out alone. I was coming to you when
- I remimbered you would be here."
-
- He lifted his face and gazed across the swale, with his jaws set
- firmly a minute, as if gathering his forces. Then he spoke.
-
- "It's the Angel, sir," he said.
-
- Instinctively McLean's grip on him tightened, and Freckles looked
- into the Boss's face in wonder.
-
- "I tried, the other day," said Freckles, "and I couldn't seem to
- make you see. It's only that there hasn't been an hour, waking or
- sleeping, since the day she parted the bushes and looked into me
- room, that the face of her hasn't been before me in all the
- tinderness, beauty, and mischief of it. She talked to me
- friendly like. She trusted me entirely to take right care of her.
- She helped me with things about me books. She traited me like I
- was born a gintleman, and shared with me as if I were of her own blood.
- She walked the streets of the town with me before her friends with all
- the pride of a queen. She forgot herself and didn't mind the Bird
- Woman, and run big risks to help me out that first day, sir.
- This last time she walked into that gang of murderers, took their
- leader, and twisted him to the will of her. She outdone him and
- raced the life almost out of her trying to save me.
-
- "Since I can remimber, whatever the thing was that happened to me
- in the beginning has been me curse. I've been bitter, hard, and
- smarting under it hopelessly. She came by, and found me voice, and
- put hope of life and success like other men into me in spite of it."
-
- Freckles held up his maimed arm.
-
- "Look at it, sir!" he said. "A thousand times I've cursed it,
- hanging there helpless. She took it on the street, before all the
- people, just as if she didn't see that it was a thing to hide and
- shrink from. Again and again I've had the feeling with her, if I
- didn't entirely forget it, that she didn't see it was gone and I
- must he pointing it out to her. Her touch on it was so sacred-like,
- at times since I've caught meself looking at the awful thing near
- like I was proud of it, sir. If I had been born your son she
- couldn't be traiting me more as her equal, and she can't help
- knowing you ain't truly me father. Nobody can know the homeliness
- or the ignorance of me better than I do, and all me lack of birth,
- relatives, and money, and what's it all to her?"
-
- Freckles stepped back, squared his shoulders, and with a royal lift
- of his head looked straight into the Boss's eyes.
-
- "You saw her in the beautiful little room of her, and you can't be
- forgetting how she begged and plead with you for me. She touched
- me body, and `twas sanctified. She laid her lips on my brow, and
- `twas sacrament. Nobody knows the height of her better than me.
- Nobody's studied my depths closer. There's no bridge for the great
- distance between us, sir, and clearest of all, I'm for realizing it:
- but she risked terrible things when she came to me among that gang
- of thieves. She wore herself past bearing to save me from such an
- easy thing as death! Now, here's me, a man, a big, strong man, and
- letting her live under that fearful oath, so worse than any death
- `twould be for her, and lifting not a finger to save her. I cannot
- hear it, sir. It's killing me by inches! Black Jack's hand may not
- have been hurt so bad. Any hour he may be creeping up behind her!
- Any minute the awful revenge he swore to be taking may in some way
- fall on her, and I haven't even warned her father. I can't stay
- here doing nothing another hour. The five nights gone I've watched
- under her windows, but there's the whole of the day. She's her own
- horse and little cart, and's free to be driving through the town and
- country as she pleases. If any evil comes to her through Black Jack,
- it comes from her angel-like goodness to me. Somewhere he's hiding!
- Somewhere he is waiting his chance! Somewhere he is reaching out
- for her! I tell you I cannot, I dare not be bearing it longer!"
-
- "Freckles, be quiet!" said McLean, his eyes humid and his voice
- quivering with the pity of it all. "Believe me, I did not understand.
- I know the Angel's father well. I will go to him at once. I have
- transacted business with him for the past three years. I will make
- him see! I am only beginning to realize your agony, and the real
- danger there is for the Angel. Believe me, I will see that she
- is fully protected every hour of the day and night until Jack
- is located and disposed of. And I promise you further, that if I
- fail to move her father or make him understand the danger, I will
- maintain a guard over her until Jack is caught. Now will you go
- bathe, drink some milk, go to bed, and sleep for hours, and then be
- my brave, bright old boy again?"
-
- "Yis," said Freckles simply.
-
- But McLean could see the flesh was twitching on the lad's bones.
-
- "What was it the guard brought there?" McLean asked in an effort to
- distract Freckles' thoughts.
-
- "Oh!" Freckles said, glancing where the Boss pointed, "I forgot it!
- `Tis an otter, and fine past believing, for this warm weather.
- I shot it at the creek this morning. `Twas a good shot, considering.
- I expected to miss."
-
- Freckles picked up the animal and started toward McLean with it,
- but Nellie pricked up her dainty little ears, danced into the
- swale, and snorted with fright. Freckles dropped the otter and ran
- to her head.
-
- "For pity's sake, get her on the trail, sir," he begged. "She's
- just about where the old king rattler crosses to go into the
- swamp--the old buster Duncan and I have been telling you of.
- I haven't a doubt but it was the one Mother Duncan met. 'Twas down
- the trail there, just a little farther on, that I found her, and
- it's sure to be close yet."
-
- McLean slid from Nellie's back, led her into the trail farther down
- the line, and tied her to a bush. Then he went to examine the otter.
- It was a rare, big specimen, with exquisitely fine, long, silky hair.
-
- "What do you want to do with it, Freckles?" asked McLean, as he stroked
- the soft fur lingeringly. "Do you know that it is very valuable?"
-
- "I was for almost praying so, sir," said Freckles. "As I saw it
- coming up the bank I thought this: Once somewhere in a book there
- was a picture of a young girl, and she was just a breath like the
- beautifulness of the Angel. Her hands were in a muff as big as her
- body, and I thought it was so pretty. I think she was some queen,
- or the like. Do you suppose I could have this skin tanned and made
- into such a muff as that?--an enormous big one, sir?"
-
- "Of course you can," said McLean. "That's a fine idea and it's
- easy enough. We must box and express the otter, cold storage, by the
- first train. You stand guard a minute and I'll tell Hall to carry
- it to the cabin. I'll put Nellie to Duncan's rig, and we'll drive
- to town and call on the Angel's father. Then we'll start the otter
- while it is fresh, and I'll write your instructions later. It would
- be a mighty fine thing for you to give to the Angel as a little
- reminder of the Limberlost before it is despoiled, and as a
- souvenir of her trip for you."
-
- Freckles lifted a face with a glow of happy color creeping into it
- and eyes lighting with a former brightness. Throwing his arms
- around McLean, he cried: "Oh, how I love you! Oh, I wish I could
- make you know how I love you!"
-
- McLean strained him to his breast.
-
- "God bless you, Freckles," he said. "I do know! We're going to have
- some good old times out of this world together, and we can't begin
- too soon. Would you rather sleep first, or have a bite of lunch,
- take the drive with me, and then rest? I don't know but sleep will
- come sooner and deeper to take the ride and have your mind set at
- ease before you lie down. Suppose you go."
-
- "Suppose I do," said Freckles, with a glimmer of the old light
- in his eyes and newly found strength to shoulder the otter.
- Together they turned into the trail.
-
- McLean noticed and spoke of the big black chickens.
-
- "They've been hanging round out there for several days past,"
- said Freckles. "I'll tell you what I think it means. I think the
- old rattler has killed something too big for him to swallow, and he's
- keeping guard and won't let me chickens have it. I'm just sure,
- from the way the birds have acted out there all summer, that it is
- the rattler's den. You watch them now. See the way they dip and
- then rise, frightened like!"
-
- Suddenly McLean turned toward him with blanching face
-
- "Freckles!" he cried.
-
- "My God, sir!" shuddered Freckles.
-
- He dropped the otter, caught up his club, and plunged into the swale.
- Reaching for his revolver, McLean followed. The chickens
- circled higher at their coming, and the big snake lifted his head
- and rattled angrily. It sank in sinuous coils at the report of
- McLean's revolver, and together he and Freckles stood beside Black Jack.
- His fate was evident and most horrible.
-
- "Come," said the Boss at last. "We don't dare touch him. We will get
- a sheet from Mrs. Duncan and tuck over him, to keep these swarms of
- insects away, and set Hall on guard, while we find the officers."
-
- Freckles' lips closed resolutely. He deliberately thrust his club
- under Black Jack's body, and, raising him, rested it on his knee.
- He pulled a long silver pin from the front of the dead man's shirt
- and sent it spinning into the swale. Then he gathered up a few
- crumpled bright flowers and dropped them into the pool far away.
-
- "My soul is sick with the horror of this thing," said McLean, as he
- and Freckles drove toward town. "I can't understand how Jack dared
- risk creeping through the swale, even in desperation. No one knew
- its dangers better than he. And why did he choose the rankest,
- muckiest place to cross the swamp?"
-
- "Don't you think, sir, it was because it was on a line with the
- Limberlost south of the corduroy? The grass was tallest there, and
- he counted on those willows to screen him. Once he got among them,
- he would have been safe to walk by stooping. If he'd made it past
- that place, he'd been sure to get out."
-
- "Well, I'm as sorry for Jack as I know how to be," said McLean,
- "but I can't help feeling relieved that our troubles are over, for
- now they are. With so dreadful a punishment for Jack, Wessner under
- arrest, and warrants for the others, we can count on their going
- away and remaining. As for anyone else, I don't think they will
- care to attempt stealing my timber after the experience of these men.
- There is no other man here with Jack's fine ability in woodcraft.
- He was an expert."
-
- "Did you ever hear of anyone who ever tried to locate any trees
- excepting him?" asked Freckles.
-
- "No, I never did," said McLean. "I am sure there was no one
- besides him. You see, it was only with the arrival of our company
- that the other fellows scented good stuff in the Limberlost, and
- tried to work in. Jack knew the swamp better than anyone here.
- When he found there were two companies trying to lease, he wanted
- to stand in with the one from which he could realize the most.
- Even then he had trees marked that he was trying to dispose of.
- I think his sole intention in forcing me to discharge him from
- my gang was to come here and try to steal timber. We had no idea,
- when we took the lease, what a gold mine it was."
-
- "That's exactly what Wessner said that first day," said Freckles eagerly.
- "That 'twas a `gold mine'! He said he didn't know where the marked
- trees were, but he knew a man who did, and if I would hold off and
- let them get the marked ones, there were a dozen they could get out
- in a few days."
-
- "Freckles!" cried McLean. "You don't mean a dozen!"
-
- "That's what he said, sir--a dozen. He said they couldn't tell how
- the grain of all of them would work up, of course, but they were
- all worth taking out, and five or six were real gold mines. This
- makes three they've tried, so there must be nine more marked, and
- several of them for being just fine."
-
- "Well, I wish I knew which they are," said McLean, "so I could get
- them out first."
-
- "I have been thinking," said Freckles. "I believe if you will leave
- one of the guards on the line--say Hall--that I will begin on the
- swamp, at the north end, and lay it off in sections, and try to
- hunt out the marked trees. I suppose they are all marked something
- like that first maple on the line was. Wessner mentioned another
- good one not so far from that. He said it was best of all. I'd be
- having the swelled head if I could find that. Of course, I don't
- know a thing about the trees, but I could hunt for the marks.
- Jack was so good at it he could tell some of them by the bark, but all
- he wanted to take that we've found so far have just had a deep chip
- cut out, rather low down, and where the bushes were thick over it.
- I believe I could be finding some of them."
-
- "Good head!" said McLean. "We will do that. You may begin as soon
- as you are rested. And about things you come across in the swamp,
- Freckles--the most trifling little thing that you think the Bird
- Woman would want, take your wheel and go after her at any time.
- I'll leave two men on the line, so that you will have one on either
- side, and you can come and go as you please. Have you stopped to
- think of all we owe her, my boy?"
-
- "Yis; and the Angel--we owe her a lot, too," said Freckles. "I owe
- her me life and honor. It's lying awake nights I'll have to be
- trying to think how I'm ever to pay her up."
-
- "Well, begin with the muff," suggested McLean. "That should be fine."
-
- He bent down and ruffled the rich fur of the otter lying at his feet.
-
- "I don't exactly see how it comes to be in such splendid fur in summer.
- Their coats are always thick in cold weather, but this scarcely
- could be improved. I'll wire Cooper to be watching for it.
- They must have it fresh. When it's tanned we won't spare any
- expense in making it up. It should be a royal thing, and some way
- I think it will exactly suit the Angel. I can't think of anything
- that would be more appropriate for her."
-
- "Neither can I," agreed Freckles heartily. "When I reach the city
- there's one other thing, if I've the money after the muff is finished."
-
- He told McLean of Mrs. Duncan's desire for a hat similar to
- the Angel's. He hesitated a little in the telling, keeping sharp
- watch on McLean's face. When he saw the Boss's eyes were full of
- comprehension and sympathy, he loved him anew, for, as ever, McLean
- was quick to understand. Instead of laughing, he said: "I think
- you'll have to let me in on that, too. You mustn't be selfish,
- you know. I'll tell you what we'll do. Send it for Christmas.
- I'll be home then, and we can fill a box. You get the hat.
- I'll add a dress and wrap. You buy Duncan a hat and gloves.
- I'll send him a big overcoat, and we'll put in a lot of little
- stuff for the babies. Won't that be fun?"
-
- Freckles fairly shivered with delight.
-
- "That would be away too serious for fun," he said. "That would
- be heavenly. How long will it be?"
-
- He began counting the time, and McLean deliberately set himself to
- encourage Freckles and keep his thoughts from the trouble of the
- past few days, for he had been overwrought and needed quiet and rest.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- Wherein Freckles and the Angel Try Taking a Picture, and Little
- Chicken Furnishes the Subject
-
- A week later everything at the Limberlost was precisely as it had
- been before the tragedy, except the case in Freckles' room now
- rested on the stump of the newly felled tree. Enough of the vines
- were left to cover it prettily, and every vestige of the havoc of
- a few days before was gone. New guards were patrolling the trail.
- Freckles was roughly laying off the swamp in sections and searching
- for marked trees. In that time he had found one deeply chipped and
- the chip cunningly replaced and tacked in. It promised to be quite
- rare, so he was jubilant. He also found so many subjects for the
- Bird Woman that her coming was of almost daily occurrence, and the
- hours he spent with her and the Angel were nothing less than golden.
-
- The Limberlost was now arrayed as the Queen of Sheba in all her glory.
- The first frosts of autumn had bejewelled her crown in flashing
- topaz, ruby, and emerald. Around her feet trailed the purple
- of her garments, while in her hand was her golden scepter.
- Everything was at full tide. It seemed as if nothing could grow
- lovelier, and it was all standing still a few weeks, waiting
- coming destruction.
-
- The swamp was palpitant with life. Every pair of birds that had
- flocked to it in the spring was now multiplied by from two to ten.
- The young were tame from Freckles' tri-parenthood, and so plump and
- sleek that they were quite as beautiful as their elders, even if in
- many cases they lacked their brilliant plumage. It was the same
- story of increase everywhere. There were chubby little ground-hogs
- scudding on the trail. There were cunning baby coons and opossums
- peeping from hollow logs and trees. Young muskrats followed their
- parents across the lagoons.
-
- If you could come upon a family of foxes that had not yet
- disbanded, and see the young playing with a wild duck's carcass
- that their mother had brought, and note the pride and satisfaction
- in her eyes as she lay at one side guarding them, it would be a
- picture not to be forgotten. Freckles never tired of studying the
- devotion of a fox mother to her babies. To him, whose early life
- had been so embittered by continual proof of neglect and cruelty in
- human parents toward their children, the love of these furred and
- feathered folk of the Limberlost was even more of a miracle than to
- the Bird Woman and the Angel.
-
- The Angel liked the baby rabbits and squirrels. Earlier in the
- season, when the young were yet very small, it so happened that at
- times Freckles could give into her hands one of these little ones.
- Then it was pure joy to stand back and watch her heaving breast,
- flushed cheek, and shining eyes. Hers were such lovely eyes.
- Freckles had discovered lately that they were not so dark as he had
- thought them at first, but that the length and thickness of lash,
- by which they were shaded, made them appear darker than they really
- were. They were forever changing. Now sparkling and darkling with
- wit, now humid with sympathy, now burning with the fire of courage,
- now taking on strength of color with ambition, now flashing
- indignantly at the abuse of any creature.
-
- She had carried several of the squirrel and bunny babies home, and
- had littered the conservatory with them. Her care of them was perfect.
- She was learning her natural history from nature, and having much
- healthful exercise. To her, they were the most interesting of all,
- but the Bird Woman preferred the birds, with a close second in the
- moths and butterflies.
-
- Brown butterfly time had come. The edge of the swale was filled
- with milkweed, and other plants beloved of them, and the air was
- golden with the flashing satin wings of the monarch, viceroy,
- and argynnis. They outnumbered those of any other color three to one.
-
- Among the birds it really seemed as if the little yellow fellows
- were in the preponderance. At least, they were until the redwinged
- blackbirds and bobolinks, that had nested on the upland, suddenly
- saw in the swamp the garden of the Lord and came swarming by hundreds
- to feast and adventure upon it these last few weeks before migration.
- Never was there a finer feast spread for the birds. The grasses
- were filled with seeds: so, too, were weeds of every variety.
- Fall berries were ripe. Wild grapes and black haws were ready.
- Bugs were creeping everywhere. The muck was yeasty with worms.
- Insects filled the air. Nature made glorious pause for holiday
- before her next change, and by none of the frequenters of the
- swamp was this more appreciated than by the big black chickens.
-
- They seemed to feel the new reign of peace and fullness most of all.
- As for food, they did not even have to hunt for themselves these
- days, for the feasts now being spread before Little Chicken
- were more than he could use, and he was glad to have his parents
- come down and help him.
-
- He was a fine, big, overgrown fellow, and his wings, with quills of
- jetty black, gleaming with bronze, were so strong they almost
- lifted his body. He had three inches of tail, and his beak and
- claws were sharp. His muscles began to clamor for exercise.
- He raced the forty feet of his home back and forth many times every
- hour of the day. After a few days of that, he began lifting and
- spreading his wings, and flopping them until the down on his back
- was filled with elm fiber. Then he commenced jumping. The funny
- little hops, springs, and sidewise bounds he gave set Freckles and
- the Angel, hidden in the swamp, watching him, into smothered
- chuckles of delight.
-
- Sometimes he fell to coquetting with himself; and that was the
- funniest thing of all, for he turned his head up, down, from side
- to side, and drew in his chin with prinky little jerks and tilts.
- He would stretch his neck, throw up his head, turn it to one side
- and smirk--actually smirk, the most complacent and self-satisfied
- smirk that anyone ever saw on the face of a bird. It was so comical
- that Freckles and the Angel told the Bird Woman of it one day.
-
- When she finished her work on Little Chicken, she left them the
- camera ready for use, telling them they might hide in the bushes
- and watch. If Little Chicken came out and truly smirked, and they
- could squeeze the bulb at the proper moment to snap him, she would
- be more than delighted.
-
- Freckles and the Angel quietly curled beside a big log, and with
- eager eyes and softest breathing they patiently waited; but Little
- Chicken had feasted before they told of his latest accomplishment.
- He was tired and sleepy, so he went into the log to bed, and for an
- hour he never stirred.
-
- They were becoming anxious, for the light soon would be gone, and
- they had so wanted to try for the picture. At last Little Chicken
- lifted his head, opened his beak, and gaped widely. He dozed a
- minute or two more. The Angel said that was his beauty sleep.
- Then he lazily gaped again and stood up, stretching and yawning.
- He ambled leisurely toward the gateway, and the Angel said:
- "Now, we may have a chance, at last."
-
- "I do hope so," shivered Freckles.
-
- With one accord they arose to their knees and trained their eyes on
- the mouth of the log. The light was full and strong. Little Chicken
- prospected again with no results. He dressed his plumage, polished
- his beak, and when he felt fine and in full toilet he began to
- flirt with himself. Freckles' eyes snapped and his breath sucked
- between his clenched teeth.
-
- "He's going to do it!" whispered the Angel. "That will come next.
- You'll best give me that bulb!"
-
- "Yis," assented Freckles, but he was looking at the log and he made
- no move to relinquish the bulb.
-
- Little Chicken nodded daintily and ruffled his feathers. He gave
- his head sundry little sidewise jerks and rapidly shifted his point
- of vision. Once there was the fleeting little ghost of a smirk.
-
- "Now!--No!" snapped the Angel.
-
- Freckles leaned toward the bird. Tensely he waited. Unconsciously
- the hand of the Angel clasped his. He scarcely knew it was there.
- Suddenly Little Chicken sprang straight in the air and landed with
- a thud. The Angel started slightly, but Freckles was immovable.
- Then, as if in approval of his last performance, the big, overgrown
- baby wheeled until he was more than three-quarters, almost full
- side, toward the camera, straightened on his legs, squared his
- shoulders, stretched his neck full height, drew in his chin and
- smirked his most pronounced smirk, directly in the face of the lens.
-
- Freckles' fingers closed on the bulb convulsively, and the Angel's
- closed on his at the instant. Then she heaved a great sigh of
- relief and lifted her hands to push back the damp, clustering hair
- from her face.
-
- "How soon do you s'pose it will be finished?" came Freckles'
- strident whisper.
-
- For the first time the Angel looked at him. He was on his knees,
- leaning forward, his eyes directed toward the bird, the
- perspiration running in little streams down his red,
- mosquito-bitten face. His hat was awry, his bright hair rampant,
- his breast heaving with excitement, while he yet gripped the bulb
- with every ounce of strength in his body.
-
- "Do you think we were for getting it?" he asked.
-
- The Angel could only nod. Freckles heaved a deep sigh of relief.
-
- "Well, if that ain't the hardest work I ever did in me life!"
- he exclaimed. "It's no wonder the Bird Woman's for coming out of
- the swamp looking as if she's been through a fire, a flood, and a
- famine, if that's what she goes through day after day. But if you
- think we got it, why, it's worth all it took, and I'm glad as ever
- you are, sure!"
-
- They put the holders in the case, carefully closed the camera, set
- it in also, and carried it to the road.
-
- Then Freckles exulted.
-
- "Now, let's be telling the Bird Woman about it!" he shouted, wildly
- dancing and swinging his hat.
-
- "We got it! We got it! I bet a farm we got it!"
-
- Hand in hand they ran to the north end of the swamp, yelling "We
- got it!" like young Comanches, and never gave a thought to what
- they might do until a big blue-gray bird, with long neck and
- trailing legs, arose on flapping wings and sailed over the Limberlost.
-
- The Angel became white to the lips and gripped Freckles with
- both hands. He gulped with mortification and turned his back.
-
- To frighten her subject away carelessly! It was the head crime in
- the Bird Woman's category. She extended her hands as she arose,
- baked, blistered, and dripping, and exclaimed: "Bless you, my
- children! Bless you!" And it truly sounded as if she meant it.
-
- "Why, why----" stammered the bewildered Angel.
-
- Freckles hurried into the breach.
-
- "You must be for blaming it every bit on me. I was thinking we got
- Little Chicken's picture real good. I was so drunk with the joy of
- it I lost all me senses and, `Let's run tell the Bird Woman,' says I.
- Like a fool I was for running, and I sort of dragged the Angel along."
-
- "Oh Freckles!" expostulated the Angel. "Are you loony? Of course,
- it was all my fault! I've been with her hundreds of times. I knew
- perfectly well that I wasn't to let anything--NOT ANYTHING--scare
- her bird away! I was so crazy I forgot. The blame is all mine, and
- she'll never forgive me."
-
- "She will, too!" cried Freckles. "Wasn't you for telling me that
- very first day that when people scared her birds away she just
- killed them! It's all me foolishness, and I'll never forgive meself!"
-
- The Bird Woman plunged into the swale at the mouth of Sleepy Snake
- Creek, and came wading toward them, with a couple of cameras and
- dripping tripods.
-
- "If you will permit me a word, my infants," she said, "I will
- explain to you that I have had three shots at that fellow."
-
- The Angel heaved a deep sigh of relief, and Freckles' face cleared
- a little.
-
- "Two of them," continued the Bird Woman, "in the rushes--one
- facing, crest lowered; one light on back, crest flared; and the
- last on wing, when you came up. I simply had been praying for
- something to make him arise from that side, so that he would fly
- toward the camera, for he had waded around until in my position I
- couldn't do it myself. See? Behold in yourselves the answer to the
- prayers of the long-suffering!"
-
- Freckles took a step toward her.
-
- "Are you really meaning that?" he asked wonderingly. "Only think,
- Angel, we did the right thing! She won't lose her picture through
- the carelessness of us, when she's waited and soaked nearly two hours.
- She's not angry with us!"
-
- "Never was in a sweeter temper in my life," said the Bird Woman,
- busily cleaning and packing the cameras.
-
- Freckles removed his hat and solemnly held out his hand. With equal
- solemnity the Angel grasped it. The Bird Woman laughed alone, for
- to them the situation had been too serious to develop any of the
- elements of fun.
-
- Then they loaded the carriage, and the Bird Woman and the Angel
- started for their homes. It had been a difficult time for all of
- them, so they were very tired, but they were joyful. Freckles was
- so happy it seemed to him that life could hold little more. As the
- Bird Woman was ready to drive away he laid his hand on the lines
- and looked into her face.
-
- "Do you suppose we got it?" he asked, so eagerly that she would
- have given much to be able to say yes with conviction.
-
- "Why, my dear, I don't know," she said. "I've no way to judge.
- If you made the exposure just before you came to me, there was yet
- a fine light. If you waited until Little Chicken was close the
- entrance, you should have something good, even if you didn't catch
- just the fleeting expression for which you hoped. Of course, I
- can't say surely, but I think there is every reason to believe that
- you have it all right. I will develop the plate tonight, make you
- a proof from it early in the morning, and bring it when we come.
- It's only a question of a day or two now until the gang arrives.
- I want to work in all the studies I can before that time, for they
- are bound to disturb the birds. Mr. McLean will need you then, and
- I scarcely see how we are to do without you."
-
- Moved by an impulse she never afterward regretted, she bent and
- laid her lips on Freckles' forehead, kissing him gently and
- thanking him for his many kindnesses to her in her loved work.
- Freckles started away so happy that he felt inclined to keep
- watching behind to see if the trail were not curling up and rolling
- down the line after him.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- Wherein the Angel Locates a Rare Tree and Dines with the Gang
-
- From afar Freckles saw them coming. The Angel was standing, waving
- her hat. He sprang on his wheel and raced, jolting and pounding,
- down the corduroy to meet them. The Bird Woman stopped the horse
- and the Angel gave him the bit of print paper. Freckles leaned the
- wheel against a tree and took the proof with eager fingers.
- He never before had seen a study from any of his chickens.
- He stood staring. When he turned his face toward them it was
- transfigured with delight.
-
- "You see!" he exclaimed, and began gazing again. "Oh, me Little
- Chicken!" he cried. "Oh me ilegant Little Chicken! I'd be giving
- all me money in the bank for you!"
-
- Then he thought of the Angel's muff and Mrs. Duncan's hat, and
- added, "or at least, all but what I'm needing bad for something else.
- Would you mind stopping at the cabin a minute and showing this
- to Mother Duncan?" he asked.
-
- "Give me that little book in your pocket," said the Bird Woman.
-
- She folded the outer edges of the proof so that it would fit into
- the book, explaining as she did so its perishable nature in
- that state. Freckles went hurrying ahead, and they arrived in time
- to see Mrs. Duncan gazing as if awestruck, and to hear her bewildered
- "Weel I be drawed on!"
-
- Freckles and the Angel helped the Bird Woman to establish herself
- for a long day at the mouth of Sleepy Snake Creek. Then she sent
- them away and waited what luck would bring to her.
-
- "Now, what shall we do?" inquired the Angel, who was a bundle of
- nerves and energy.
-
- "Would you like to go to me room awhile?" asked Freckles.
-
- "If you don't care to very much, I'd rather not," said the Angel.
- "I'll tell you. Let's go help Mrs. Duncan with dinner and play with
- the baby. I love a nice, clean baby."
-
- They started toward the cabin. Every few minutes they stopped to
- investigate something or to chatter over some natural history wonder.
- The Angel had quick eyes; she seemed to see everything, but Freckles'
- were even quicker; for life itself had depended on their sharpness
- ever since the beginning of his work at the swamp. They saw it at
- the same time.
-
- "Someone has been making a flagpole," said the Angel, running the
- toe of her shoe around the stump, evidently made that season.
- "Freckles, what would anyone cut a tree as small as that for?"
-
- "I don't know," said Freckles.
-
- "Well, but I want to know!" said the Angel. "No one came away here
- and cut it for fun. They've taken it away. Let's go back and see if
- we can see it anywhere around there."
-
- She turned, retraced her footsteps, and began eagerly searching.
- Freckles did the same.
-
- "There it is!" he exclaimed at last, "leaning against the trunk of
- that big maple."
-
- "Yes, and leaning there has killed a patch of dried bark," said
- the Angel. "See how dried it appears?"
-
- Freckles stared at her.
-
- "Angel!" he shouted, "I bet you it's a marked tree!"
-
- "Course it is!" cried the Angel. "No one would cut that sapling and
- carry it away there and lean it up for nothing. I'll tell you! This
- is one of Jack's marked trees. He's climbed up there above anyone's
- head, peeled the bark, and cut into the grain enough to be sure.
- Then he's laid the bark back and fastened it with that pole to mark it.
- You see, there're a lot of other big maples close around it. Can you
- climb to that place?"
-
- "Yes," said Freckles; "if I take off my wading-boots I can."
-
- "Then take them off," said the Angel, "and do hurry! Can't you see
- that I am almost crazy to know if this tree is a marked one?"
-
- When they pushed the sapling over, a piece of bark as big as the
- crown of Freckles' hat fell away.
-
- "I believe it looks kind of nubby," encouraged the Angel, backing
- away, with her face all screwed into a twist in an effort to
- intensify her vision.
-
- Freckles reached the opening, then slid rapidly to the ground.
- He was almost breathless while his eyes were flashing.
-
- "The bark's been cut clean with a knife, the sap scraped away, and
- a big chip taken out deep. The trunk is the twistiest thing you
- ever saw. It's full of eyes as a bird is of feathers!"
-
- The Angel was dancing and shaking his hand.
-
- "Oh, Freckles," she cried, "I'm so delighted that you found it!"
-
- "But I didn't," said the astonished Freckles. "That tree isn't my
- find; it's yours. I forgot it and was going on; you wouldn't give
- up, and kept talking about it, and turned back. You found it!"
-
- "You'd best be looking after your reputation for truth and
- veracity," said the Angel. "You know you saw that sapling first!"
-
- "Yes, after you took me back and set me looking for it," scoffed Freckles.
-
- The clear, ringing echo of strongly swung axes came crashing
- through the Limberlost.
-
- "'Tis the gang!" shouted Freckles. "They're clearing a place to
- make the camp. Let's go help!"
-
- "Hadn't we better mark that tree again?" cautioned the Angel.
- "It's away in here. There's such a lot of them, and all so
- much alike. We'd feel good and green to find it and then lose it."
-
- Freckles lifted the sapling to replace it, but the Angel motioned
- him away.
-
- "Use your hatchet," she said. "I predict this is the most valuable
- tree in the swamp. You found it. I'm going to play that you're
- my knight. Now, you nail my colors on it."
-
- She reached up, and pulling a blue bow from her hair, untied and
- doubled it against the tree. Freckles turned his eyes from her and
- managed the fastening with shaking fingers. The Angel had called
- him her knight! Dear Lord, how he loved her! She must not see his
- face, or surely her quick eyes would read what he was fighting to hide.
- He did not dare lay his lips on that ribbon then, but that night
- he would return to it. When they had gone a little distance,
- they both looked back, and the morning breeze set the bit of blue
- waving them a farewell.
-
- They walked at a rapid pace.
-
- "I am sorry about scaring the birds," said the Angel, "but it's
- almost time for them to go anyway. I feel dreadfully over having
- the swamp ruined, but isn't it a delight to hear the good, honest
- ring of those axes, instead of straining your ears for stealthy
- sounds? Isn't it fine to go openly and freely, with nothing worse
- than a snake or a poison-vine to fear?"
-
- "Ah!" said Freckles, with a long breath, "it's better than you can
- dream, Angel. Nobody will ever be guessing some of the things I've
- been through trying to keep me promise to the Boss, and to hold out
- until this day. That it's come with only one fresh stump, and the
- log from that saved, and this new tree to report, isn't it grand?
- Maybe Mr. McLean will be forgetting that stump when he sees this
- tree, Angel!"
-
- "He can't forget it," said the Angel; and in answer to Freckles'
- startled eyes she added, "because he never had any reason to
- remember it. He couldn't have done a whit better himself. My father
- says so. You're all right, Freckles!"
-
- She reached him her hand, and as two children, they broke into a
- run when they came closer the gang. They left the swamp by the west
- road and followed the trail until they found the men. To the Angel
- it seemed complete charm. In the shadiest spot on the west side of
- the line, at the edge of the swamp and very close Freckles' room,
- they were cutting bushes and clearing space for a big tent for the
- men's sleeping-quarters, another for a dining-hall, and a board
- shack for the cook. The teamsters were unloading, the horses were
- cropping leaves from the bushes, while each man was doing his part
- toward the construction of the new Limberlost quarters.
-
- Freckles helped the Angel climb on a wagonload of canvas in the shade.
- She removed her leggings, wiped her heated face, and glowed with
- happiness and interest.
-
- The gang had been sifted carefully. McLean now felt that there was
- not a man in it who was not trustworthy.
-
- They all had heard of the Angel's plucky ride for Freckles' relief;
- several of them had been in the rescue party. Others, new since
- that time, had heard the tale rehearsed in its every aspect around
- the smudge-fires at night. Almost all of them knew the Angel by
- sight from her trips with the Bird Woman to their leases. They all
- knew her father, her position, and the luxuries of her home.
- Whatever course she had chosen with them they scarcely would have
- resented it, but the Angel never had been known to choose a course.
- Her spirit of friendliness was inborn and inbred. She loved
- everyone, so she sympathized with everyone. Her generosity was only
- limited by what was in her power to give.
-
- She came down the trail, hand in hand with the red-haired, freckled
- timber guard whom she had worn herself past the limit of endurance
- to save only a few weeks before, racing in her eagerness to reach
- them, and laughing her "Good morning, gentlemen," right and left.
- When she was ensconced on the wagonload of tenting, she sat on a
- roll of canvas as a queen on her throne. There was not a man of the
- gang who did not respect her. She was a living exponent of
- universal brotherhood. There was no man among them who needed her
- exquisite face or dainty clothing to teach him that the deference
- due a gentlewoman should be paid her. That the spirit of good
- fellowship she radiated levied an especial tribute of its own, and
- it became their delight to honor and please her.
-
- As they raced toward the wagon--"Let me tell about the tree,
- please?" she begged Freckles.
-
- "Why, sure!" said Freckles.
-
- He probably would have said the same to anything she suggested.
- When McLean came, he found the Angel flushed and glowing, sitting
- on the wagon, her hands already filled. One of the men, who was
- cutting a scrub-oak, had carried to her a handful of crimson leaves.
- Another had gathered a bunch of delicate marsh-grass heads for her.
- Someone else, in taking out a bush, had found a daintily built and
- lined little nest, fresh as when made.
-
- She held up her treasures and greeted McLean, "Good morning, Mr.
- Boss of the Limberlost!"
-
- The gang shouted, while he bowed profoundly before her.
-
- "Everyone listen!" cried the Angel, climbing a roll of canvas.
- "I have something to say! Freckles has been guarding here over a year
- now, and he presents the Limberlost to you, with every tree in it
- saved; for good measure he has this morning located the rarest one
- of them all: the one in from the east line, that Wessner spoke of
- the first day--nearest the one you took out. All together!
- Everyone! Hurrah for Freckles!"
-
- With flushing cheeks and gleaming eyes, gaily waving the grass above
- her head, she led in three cheers and a tiger. Freckles slipped
- into the swamp and hid himself, for fear he could not conceal his
- pride and his great surging, throbbing love for her.
-
- The Angel subsided on the canvas and explained to McLean about
- the maple. The Boss was mightily pleased. He took Freckles and
- set out to re-locate and examine the tree. The Angel was interested
- in the making of the camp, so she preferred to remain with the men.
- With her sharp eyes she was watching every detail of construction;
- but when it came to the stretching of the dining-hall canvas she
- proceeded to take command. The men were driving the rope-pins, when
- the Angel arose on the wagon and, leaning forward, spoke to Duncan,
- who was directing the work.
-
- "I believe if you will swing that around a few feet farther, you
- will find it better, Mr. Duncan," she said. "That way will let the
- hot sun in at noon, while the sides will cut off the best breeze."
-
- "That's a fact," said Duncan, studying the conditions.
-
- So, by shifting the pins a little, they obtained comfort for which
- they blessed the Angel every day. When they came to the
- sleeping-tent, they consulted her about that. She explained the
- general direction of the night breeze and indicated the best
- position for the tent. Before anyone knew how it happened, the
- Angel was standing on the wagon, directing the location and
- construction of the cooking-shack, the erection of the crane
- for the big boiling-pots, and the building of the store-room.
- She superintended the laying of the floor of the sleeping-tent
- lengthwise, So that it would be easier to sweep, and suggested a
- new arrangement of the cots that would afford all the men an equal
- share of night breeze. She left the wagon, and climbing on the
- newly erected dining-table, advised with the cook in placing his
- stove, table, and kitchen utensils.
-
- When Freckles returned from the tree to join in the work around the
- camp, he caught glimpses of her enthroned on a soapbox, cleaning beans.
- She called to him that they were invited for dinner, and that they
- had accepted the invitation.
-
- When the beans were steaming in the pot, the Angel advised the cook
- to soak them overnight the next time, so that they would cook more
- quickly and not burst. She was sure their cook at home did that
- way, and the CHEF of the gang thought it would be a good idea.
- The next Freckles saw of her she was paring potatoes. A little later
- she arranged the table.
-
- She swept it with a broom, instead of laying a cloth; took the
- hatchet and hammered the deepest dents from the tin plates, and
- nearly skinned her fingers scouring the tinware with rushes.
- She set the plates an even distance apart, and laid the forks and
- spoons beside them. When the cook threw away half a dozen
- fruit-cans, she gathered them up and melted off the tops, although
- she almost blistered her face and quite blistered her fingers doing it.
- Then she neatly covered these improvised vases with the Manila paper
- from the groceries, tying it with wisps of marshgrass. These she
- filled with fringed gentians, blazing-star, asters, goldenrod,
- and ferns, placing them the length of the dining-table. In one of
- the end cans she arranged her red leaves, and in the other the
- fancy grass. Two men, watching her, went away proud of themselves
- and said that she was "a born lady." She laughingly caught up a
- paper bag and fitted it jauntily to her head in imitation of a
- cook's cap. Then she ground the coffee, and beat a couple of eggs
- to put in, "because there is company," she gravely explained to
- the cook. She asked that delighted individual if he did not like it
- best that way, and he said he did not know, because he never had a
- chance to taste it. The Angel said that was her case exactly--she
- never had, either; she was not allowed anything stronger than milk.
- Then they laughed together.
-
- She told the cook about camping with her father, and explained that
- he made his coffee that way. When the steam began to rise from the
- big boiler, she stuffed the spout tightly with clean marshgrass, to
- keep the aroma in, placed the boiler where it would only simmer,
- and explained why. The influence of the Angel's visit lingered with
- the cook through the remainder of his life, while the men prayed
- for her frequent return.
-
- She was having a happy time, when McLean came back jubilant, from
- his trip to the tree. How jubilant he told only the Angel, for he
- had been obliged to lose faith in some trusted men of late, and had
- learned discretion by what he suffered. He planned to begin
- clearing out a road to the tree that same afternoon, and to set two
- guards every night, for it promised to be a rare treasure, so he
- was eager to see it on the way to the mills.
-
- "I am coming to see it felled," cried the Angel. "I feel a sort of
- motherly interest in that tree."
-
- McLean was highly amused. He would have staked his life on the
- honesty of either the Angel or Freckles; yet their versions of the
- finding of the tree differed widely.
-
- "Tell me, Angel," the Boss said jestingly. "I think I have a right
- to know. Who really did locate that tree?"
-
- "Freckles," she answered promptly and emphatically.
-
- "But he says quite as positively that it was you. I don't understand."
-
- The Angel's legal look flashed into her face. Her eyes grew tense
- with earnestness. She glanced around, and seeing no towel or basin,
- held out her hand for Sears to pour water over them. Then, using
- the skirt of her dress to dry them, she climbed on the wagon.
-
- "I'll tell you, word for word, how it happened," she said, "and
- then you shall decide, and Freckles and I will agree with you."
-
- When she had finished her version, "Tell us, `oh, most learned
- judge!'" she laughingly quoted, "which of us located that tree?"
-
- "Blest if I know who located it!" exclaimed McLean. "But I have a
- fairly accurate idea as to who put the blue ribbon on it."
-
- The Boss smiled significantly at Freckles, who just had come, for
- they had planned that they would instruct the company to reserve
- enough of the veneer from that very tree to make the most beautiful
- dressing table they could design for the Angel's share of the discovery.
-
- "What will you have for yours?" McLean had asked of Freckles.
-
- "If it's all the same to you, I'll be taking mine out in music lessons--
- begging your pardon--voice culture," said Freckles with a grimace.
-
- McLean laughed, for Freckles needed to see or hear only once to
- absorb learning as the thirsty earth sucks up water.
-
- The Angel placed McLean at the head of the table. She took the
- foot, with Freckles on her right, while the lumber gang, washed,
- brushed, and straightened until they felt unfamiliar with
- themselves and each other, filled the sides. That imposed a slight
- constraint. Then, too, the men were afraid of the flowers, the
- polished tableware, and above all, of the dainty grace of the Angel.
- Nowhere do men so display lack of good breeding and culture as
- in dining. To sprawl on the table, scoop with their knives, chew
- loudly, gulp coffee, and duck their heads as snapping-turtles for
- every bite, had not been noticed by them until the Angel, sitting
- straightly, suddenly made them remember that they, too, were
- possessed of spines. Instinctively every man at the table straightened.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- Wherein Freckles Offers His Life for His Love and Gets a Broken Body
-
- To reach the tree was a more difficult task than McLean had supposed.
- The gang could approach nearest on the outside toward the east,
- but after they reached the end of the east entrance there was
- yet a mile of most impenetrable thicket, trees big and little, and
- bushes of every variety and stage of growth. In many places the
- muck had to be filled to give the horses and wagons a solid
- foundation over which to haul heavy loads. It was several days
- before they completed a road to the noble, big tree and were ready
- to fell it.
-
- When the sawing began, Freckles was watching down the road where it
- met the trail leading from Little Chicken's tree. He had gone to the
- tree ahead of the gang to remove the blue ribbon. Carefully folded,
- it now lay over his heart. He was promising himself much
- comfort with that ribbon, when he would leave for the city next
- month to begin his studies and dream the summer over again.
- It would help to make things tangible. When he was dressed as other
- men, and at his work, he knew where he meant to home that precious
- bit of blue. It should be his good-luck token, and he would wear it
- always to keep bright in memory the day on which the Angel had
- called him her knight.
-
- How he would study, and oh, how he would sing! If only he could
- fulfill McLean's expectations, and make the Angel proud of him!
- If only he could be a real knight!
-
- He could not understand why the Angel had failed to come. She had
- wanted to see their tree felled. She would be too late if she did
- not arrive soon. He had told her it would be ready that morning,
- and she had said she surely would be there. Why, of all mornings,
- was she late on this?
-
- McLean had ridden to town. If he had been there, Freckles would
- have asked that they delay the felling, but he scarcely liked to
- ask the gang. He really had no authority, although he thought the
- men would wait; but some way he found such embarrassment in framing
- the request that he waited until the work was practically ended.
- The saw was out, and the men were cutting into the felling side of
- the tree when the Boss rode in.
-
- His first word was to inquire for the Angel. When Freckles said she
- had not yet come, the Boss at once gave orders to stop work on the
- tree until she arrived; for he felt that she virtually had located
- it, and if she desired to see it felled, she should. As the men
- stepped back, a stiff morning breeze caught the top, that towered
- high above its fellows. There was an ominous grinding at the base,
- a shiver of the mighty trunk, then directly in line of its fall the
- bushes swung apart and the laughing face of the Angel looked on them.
-
- A groan of horror burst from the dry throats of the men, and
- reading the agony in their faces, she stopped short, glanced up,
- and understood.
-
- "South!" shouted McLean. "Run south!"
-
- The Angel was helpless. It was apparent that she did not know which
- way south was. There was another slow shiver of the big tree.
- The remainder of the gang stood motionless, but Freckles sprang past
- the trunk and went leaping in big bounds. He caught up the Angel
- and dashed through the thicket for safety. The swaying trunk was
- half over when, for an instant, a near-by tree stayed its fall.
- They saw Freckles' foot catch, and with the Angel he plunged headlong.
-
- A terrible cry broke from the men, while McLean covered his face.
- Instantly Freckles was up, with the Angel in his arms, struggling on.
- The outer limbs were on them when they saw Freckles hurl the
- Angel, face down, in the muck, as far from him as he could send her.
- Springing after, in an attempt to cover her body with his own,
- he whirled to see if they were yet in danger, and with outstretched
- arms braced himself for the shock. The branches shut them from
- sight, and the awful crash rocked the earth.
-
- McLean and Duncan ran with axes and saws. The remainder of the gang
- followed, and they worked desperately. It seemed a long time before
- they caught a glimpse of the Angel's blue dress, but it renewed
- their vigor. Duncan fell on his knees beside her and tore the muck
- from underneath her with his hands. In a few seconds he dragged her
- out, choking and stunned, but surely not fatally hurt.
-
- Freckles lay a little farther under the tree, a big limb pinning
- him down. His eyes were wide open. He was perfectly conscious.
- Duncan began mining beneath him, but Freckles stopped him.
-
- "You can't be moving me," he said. "You must cut off the limb and
- lift it. I know."
-
- Two men ran for the big saw. A number of them laid hold of the limb
- and bore up. In a short time it was removed, and Freckles lay free.
-
- The men bent over to lift him, but he motioned them away.
-
- "Don't be touching me until I rest a bit," he pleaded.
-
- Then he twisted his head until he saw the Angel, who was wiping
- muck from her eyes and face on the skirt of her dress.
-
- "Try to get up," he begged.
-
- McLean laid hold of the Angel and helped her to her feet.
-
- "Do you think any bones are broken?" gasped Freckles.
-
- The Angel shook her head and wiped muck.
-
- "You see if you can find any, sir," Freckles commanded.
-
- The Angel yielded herself to McLean's touch, and he assured
- Freckles that she was not seriously injured.
-
- Freckles settled back, a smile of ineffable tenderness on his face.
-
- "Thank the Lord!" he hoarsely whispered.
-
- The Angel leaned toward him.
-
- "Now, Freckles, you!" she cried. "It's your turn. Please get up!"
-
- A pitiful spasm swept Freckles' face. The sight of it washed every
- vestige of color from the Angel's. She took hold of his hands.
-
- "Freckles, get up!" It was half command, half entreaty.
-
- "Easy, Angel, easy! Let me rest a bit first!" implored Freckles.
-
- She knelt beside him. He reached his arm around her and drew
- her closely. He looked at McLean in an agony of entreaty that
- brought the Boss to his knees on the other side.
-
- "Oh, Freckles!" McLean cried. "Not that! Surely we can do something!
- We must! Let me see!"
-
- He tried to unfasten Freckles' neckband, but his fingers shook so
- clumsily that the Angel pushed them away and herself laid Freckles'
- chest bare. With one hasty glance she gathered the clothing
- together and slipped her arm under his head. Freckles lifted his
- eyes of agony to hers.
-
- "You see?" he said.
-
- The Angel nodded dumbly.
-
- Freckles turned to McLean.
-
- "Thank you for everything," he panted. "Where are the boys?"
-
- "They are all here," said the Boss, "except a couple who have gone
- for doctors, Mrs. Duncan and the Bird Woman."
-
- "It's no use trying to do anything," said Freckles. "You won't
- forget the muff and the Christmas box. The muff especial?"
-
- There was a movement above them so pronounced that it attracted
- Freckles' attention, even in that extreme hour. He looked up, and
- a pleased smile flickered on his drawn face.
-
- "Why, if it ain't me Little Chicken!" he cried hoarsely. "He must
- be making his very first trip from the log. Now Duncan can have his
- big watering-trough."
-
- "It was Little Chicken that made me late," faltered the Angel.
- "I was so anxious to get here early I forgot to bring his breakfast
- from the carriage. He must have been hungry, for when I passed the
- log he started after me. He was so wabbly, and so slow flying from
- tree to tree and through the bushes, I just had to wait on him, for
- I couldn't drive him back."
-
- "Of course you couldn't! Me bird has too amazing good sinse to go
- back when he could be following you," exulted Freckles, exactly as
- if he did not realize what the delay had cost him. Then he lay
- silently thinking, but presently he asked slowly: "And so `twas me
- Little Chicken that was making you late, Angel?"
-
- "Yes," said the Angel.
-
- A spasm of fierce pain shook Freckles, and a look of uncertainty
- crossed his face.
-
- "All summer I've been thanking God for the falling of the feather
- and all the delights it's brought me," he muttered, "but this looks
- as if----"
-
- He stopped short and raised questioning eyes to McLean.
-
- "I can't help being Irish, but I can help being superstitious,"
- he said. "I mustn't be laying it to the Almighty, or to me bird,
- must I?"
-
- "No, dear lad," said McLean, stroking the brilliant hair.
- "The choice lay with you. You could have stood a rooted dolt like
- all the remainder of us. It was through your great love and your
- high courage that you made the sacrifice."
-
- "Don't you be so naming it, sir!" cried Freckles. "It's just
- the reverse. If I could be giving me body the hundred times over to
- save hers from this, I'd be doing it and take joy with every pain."
-
- He turned with a smile of adoring tenderness to the Angel. She was
- ghastly white, and her eyes were dull and glazed. She scarcely
- seemed to hear or understand what was coming, but she bravely tried
- to answer that smile.
-
- "Is my forehead covered with dirt?" he asked.
-
- She shook her head.
-
- "You did once," he gasped.
-
- Instantly she laid her lips on his forehead, then on each cheek,
- and then in a long kiss on his lips.
-
- McLean bent over him.
-
- "Freckles," he said brokenly, "you will never know how I love you.
- You won't go without saying good-bye to me?"
-
- That word stung the Angel to quick comprehension. She started as if
- arousing from sleep.
-
- "Good-bye?" she cried sharply, her eyes widening and the color
- rushing into her white face. "Good-bye! Why, what do you mean?
- Who's saying good-bye? Where could Freckles go, when he is hurt
- like this, save to the hospital? You needn't say good-bye for that.
- Of course, we will all go with him! You call up the men. We must
- start right away."
-
- "It's no use, Angel," said Freckles. "I'm thinking ivry bone in me
- breast is smashed. You'll have to be letting me go!"
-
- "I will not," said the Angel flatly. "It's no use wasting precious
- time talking about it. You are alive. You are breathing; and no
- matter how badly your bones are broken, what are great surgeons for
- but to fix you up and make you well again? You promise me that
- you'll just grit your teeth and hang on when we hurt you, for we
- must start with you as quickly as it can be done. I don't know what
- has been the matter with me. Here's good time wasted already."
-
- "Oh, Angel!" moaned Freckles, "I can't! You don't know how bad it is.
- I'll die the minute you are for trying to lift me!"
-
- "Of course you will, if you make up your mind to do it," said
- the Angel. "But if you are determined you won't, and set yourself to
- breathing deep and strong, and hang on to me tight, I can get you out.
- Really you must, Freckles, no matter how it hurts, for you did this
- for me, and now I must save you, so you might as well promise."
-
- She bent over him, trying to smile encouragement with her
- fear-stiffened lips.
-
- "You will promise, Freckles?"
-
- Big drops of cold sweat ran together on Freckles' temples.
-
- "Angel, darlin' Angel," he pleaded, taking her hand in his.
- "You ain't understanding, and I can't for the life of me be
- telling you, but indade, it's best to be letting me go.
- This is my chance. Please say good-bye, and let me slip
- off quick!"
-
- He appealed to McLean.
-
- "Dear Boss, you know! You be telling her that, for me, living is
- far worse pain than dying. Tell her you know death is the best
- thing that could ever be happening to me!"
-
- "Merciful Heaven!" burst in the Angel. "I can't endure this delay!"
-
- She caught Freckles' hand to her breast, and bending over him,
- looked deeply into his stricken eyes.
-
- "`Angel, I give you my word of honor that I will keep right
- on breathing.' That's what you are going to promise me," she said.
- "Do you say it?"
-
- Freckles hesitated.
-
- "Freckles!" imploringly commanded the Angel, "YOU DO SAY IT!"
-
- "Yis," gasped Freckles.
-
- The Angel sprang to her feet.
-
- "Then that's all right," she said, with a tinge of her old-
- time briskness. "You just keep breathing away like a steam
- engine, and I will do all the remainder."
-
- The eager men gathered around her.
-
- "It's going to be a tough pull to get Freckles out," she said, "but
- it's our only chance, so listen closely and don't for the lives of
- you fail me in doing quickly what I tell you. There's no time to
- spend falling down over each other; we must have some system.
- You four there get on those wagon horses and ride to the sleeping-tent.
- Get the stoutest cot, a couple of comforts, and a pillow. Ride back
- with them some way to save time. If you meet any other men of the
- gang, send them here to help carry the cot. We won't risk the jolt
- of driving with him. The others clear a path out to the road; and
- Mr. McLean, you take Nellie and ride to town. Tell my father how
- Freckles is hurt and that he risked it to save me. Tell him I'm
- going to take Freckles to Chicago on the noon train, and I want him
- to hold it if we are a little late. If he can't, then have a
- special ready at the station and another on the Pittsburgh at Fort
- Wayne, so we can go straight through. You needn't mind leaving us.
- The Bird Woman will be here soon. We will rest awhile."
-
- She dropped into the muck beside Freckles and began stroking his
- hair and hand. He lay with his face of agony turned to hers, and
- fought to smother the groans that would tell her what he was suffering.
-
- When they stood ready to lift him, the Angel bent over him in a
- passion of tenderness.
-
- "Dear old Limberlost guard, we're going to lift you now," she said.
- "I suspect you will faint from the pain of it, but we will be as
- easy as ever we can, and don't you dare forget your promise!"
-
- A whimsical half-smile touched Freckles' quivering lips.
-
- "Angel, can a man be remembering a promise when he ain't knowing?"
- he asked.
-
- "You can," said the Angel stoutly, "because a promise means so much
- more to you than it does to most men."
-
- A look of strength flashed into Freckles' face at her words.
-
- "I am ready," he said.
-
- With the first touch his eyes closed, a mighty groan was wrenched
- from him, and he lay senseless. The Angel gave Duncan one panic-
- stricken look. Then she set her lips and gathered her forces again.
-
- "I guess that's a good thing," she said. "Maybe he won't feel how
- we are hurting him. Oh boys, are you being quick and gentle?"
-
- She stepped to the side of the cot and bathed Freckles' face.
- Taking his hand in hers, she gave the word to start. She told the
- men to ask every able-bodied man they met to join them so that they
- could change carriers often and make good time.
-
- The Bird Woman insisted upon taking the Angel into the carriage and
- following the cot, but she refused to leave Freckles, and suggested
- that the Bird Woman drive ahead, pack them some clothing, and be at
- the station ready to accompany them to Chicago. All the way the
- Angel walked beside the cot, shading Freckles' face with a branch,
- and holding his hand. At every pause to change carriers she
- moistened his face and lips and watched each breath with
- heart-breaking anxiety.
-
- She scarcely knew when her father joined them, and taking the branch
- from her, slipped an arm around her waist and almost carried her.
- To the city streets and the swarm of curious, staring faces she
- paid no more attention than she had to the trees of the Limberlost.
- When the train came and the gang placed Freckles aboard, big
- Duncan made a place for the Angel beside the cot.
-
- With the best physician to be found, and with the Bird Woman and
- McLean in attendance, the four-hours' run to Chicago began. The Angel
- constantly watched over Freckles; bathed his face, stroked his
- hand, and gently fanned him. Not for an instant would she yield
- her place, or allow anyone else to do anything for him. The Bird
- Woman and McLean regarded her in amazement. There seemed to be no
- end to her resources and courage. The only time she spoke was to
- ask McLean if he were sure the special would be ready on the
- Pittsburgh road. He replied that it was made up and waiting.
-
- At five o'clock Freckles lay stretched on the operating-table of
- Lake View Hospital, while three of the greatest surgeons in Chicago
- bent over him. At their command, McLean picked up the unwilling
- Angel and carried her to the nurses to be bathed, have her bruises
- attended, and to be put to bed.
-
- In a place where it is difficult to surprise people, they were
- astonished women as they removed the Angel's dainty stained and
- torn clothing, drew off hose muck-baked to her limbs, soaked the
- dried loam from her silken hair, and washed the beautiful
- scratched, bruised, dirt-covered body. The Angel fell fast asleep
- long before they had finished, and lay deeply unconscious, while
- the fight for Freckles' life was being waged.
-
- Three days later she was the same Angel as of old, except that
- Freckles was constantly in her thoughts. The anxiety and
- responsibility that she felt for his condition had bred in her a
- touch of womanliness and authority that was new. That morning she
- arose early and hovered near Freckles' door. She had been allowed
- to remain with him constantly, for the nurses and surgeons had
- learned, with his returning consciousness, that for her alone would
- the active, highly strung, pain-racked sufferer be quiet and obey
- orders. When she was dropping from loss of sleep, the threat that
- she would fall ill had to be used to send her to bed. Then by
- telling Freckles that the Angel was asleep and they would waken her
- the moment he moved, they were able to control him for a short time.
-
- The surgeon was with Freckles. The Angel had been told that the
- word he brought that morning would be final, so she curled in a
- window seat, dropped the curtains behind her, and in dire anxiety,
- waited the opening of the door.
-
- Just as it unclosed, McLean came hurrying down the hall and to the
- surgeon, but with one glance at his face he stepped back in dismay;
- while the Angel, who had arisen, sank to the seat again, too dazed
- to come forward. The men faced each other. The Angel, with parted
- lips and frightened eyes, bent forward in tense anxiety.
-
- "I--I thought he was doing nicely?" faltered McLean.
-
- "He bore the operation well," replied the surgeon, "and his wounds
- are not necessarily fatal. I told you that yesterday, but I did not
- tell you that something else probably would kill him; and it will.
- He need not die from the accident, but he will not live the day out."
-
- "But why? What is it?" asked McLean hurriedly. "We all dearly love
- the boy. We have millions among us to do anything that money
- can accomplish. Why must he die, if those broken bones are not
- the cause?"
-
- "That is what I am going to give you the opportunity to tell me,"
- replied the surgeon. "He need not die from the accident, yet he is
- dying as fast as his splendid physical condition will permit, and
- it is because he so evidently prefers death to life. If he were
- full of hope and ambition to live, my work would be easy. If all of
- you love him as you prove you do, and there is unlimited means to
- give him anything he wants, why should he desire death?"
-
- "Is he dying?" demanded McLean.
-
- "He is," said the surgeon. "He will not live this day out, unless
- some strong reaction sets in at once. He is so low, that preferring
- death to life, nature cannot overcome his inertia. If he is to
- live, he must be made to desire life. Now he undoubtedly wishes for
- death, and that it come quickly."
-
- "Then he must die," said McLean.
-
- His broad shoulders shook convulsively. His strong hands opened and
- closed mechanically.
-
- "Does that mean that you know what he desires and cannot, or will
- not, supply it?"
-
- McLean groaned in misery.
-
- "It means," he said desperately, "that I know what he wants, but it
- is as far removed from my power to help him as it would be to give
- him a star. The thing for which he will die, he can never have."
-
- "Then you must prepare for the end very shortly" said the surgeon,
- turning abruptly away.
-
- McLean caught his arm roughly.
-
- "You look here!" he cried in desperation. "You say that as if I
- could do something if I would. I tell you the boy is dear to me
- past expression. I would do anything--spend any sum. You have
- noticed and repeatedly commented on the young girl with me. It is
- that child that he wants! He worships her to adoration, and knowing
- he can never be anything to her, he prefers death to life. In God's
- name, what can I do about it?"
-
- "Barring that missing hand, I never examined a finer man," said the
- surgeon, "and she seemed perfectly devoted to him; why cannot he
- have her?"
-
- "Why?" echoed McLean. "Why? Well, for many reasons! I told you he
- was my son. You probably knew that he was not. A little over a year
- ago I never had seen him. He joined one of my lumber gangs from
- the road. He is a stray, left at one of your homes for the friendless
- here in Chicago. When he grew up the superintendent bound him to a
- brutal man. He ran away and landed in one of my lumber camps. He
- has no name or knowledge of legal birth. The Angel--we have talked
- of her. You see what she is, physically and mentally. She has
- ancestors reaching back to Plymouth Rock, and across the sea for
- generations before that. She is an idolized, petted only child, and
- there is great wealth. Life holds everything for her, nothing for him.
- He sees it more plainly than anyone else could. There is nothing
- for the boy but death, if it is the Angel that is required to save him."
-
- The Angel stood between them.
-
- "Well, I just guess not!" she cried. "If Freckles wants me, all he
- has to do is to say so, and he can have me!"
-
- The amazed men stepped back, staring at her.
-
- "That he will never say," said McLean at last, "and you don't
- understand, Angel. I don't know how you came here. I wouldn't have
- had you hear that for the world, but since you have, dear girl, you
- must be told that it isn't your friendship or your kindness
- Freckles wants; it is your love."
-
- The Angel looked straight into the great surgeon's eyes with her clear,
- steady orbs of blue, and then into McLean's with unwavering frankness.
-
- "Well, I do love him," she said simply.
-
- McLean's arms dropped helplessly.
-
- "You don't understand," he reiterated patiently. "It isn't the love
- of a friend, or a comrade, or a sister, that Freckles wants from
- you; it is the love of a sweetheart. And if to save the life he has
- offered for you, you are thinking of being generous and impulsive
- enough to sacrifice your future--in the absence of your father, it
- will become my plain duty, as the protector in whose hands he has
- placed you, to prevent such rashness. The very words you speak, and
- the manner in which you say them, prove that you are a mere child,
- and have not dreamed what love is."
-
- Then the Angel grew splendid. A rosy flush swept the pallor of fear
- from her face. Her big eyes widened and dilated with intense lights.
- She seemed to leap to the height and the dignity of superb womanhood
- before their wondering gaze.
-
- "I never have had to dream of love," she said proudly. "I never
- have known anything else, in all my life, but to love everyone and
- to have everyone love me. And there never has been anyone so dear
- as Freckles. If you will remember, we have been through a good deal
- together. I do love Freckles, just as I say I do. I don't know
- anything about the love of sweethearts, but I love him with all the
- love in my heart, and I think that will satisfy him."
-
- "Surely it should!" muttered the man of knives and lancets.
-
- McLean reached to take hold of the Angel, but she saw the movement
- and swiftly stepped back.
-
- "As for my father," she continued, "he at once told me what he
- learned from you about Freckles. I've known all you know for
- several weeks. That knowledge didn't change your love for him
- a particle. I think the Bird Woman loved him more. Why should
- you two have all the fine perceptions there are? Can't I see how
- brave, trustworthy, and splendid he is? Can't I see how his soul
- vibrates with his music, his love of beautiful things and the pangs
- of loneliness and heart hunger? Must you two love him with all the
- love there is, and I give him none? My father is never unreasonable.
- He won't expect me not to love Freckles, or not to tell him so,
- if the telling will save him."
-
- She darted past McLean into Freckles' room, closed the door, and
- turned the key.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- Wherein Freckles refuses Love Without Knowledge of Honorable Birth,
- and the Angel Goes in Quest of it
-
- Freckles lay on a flat pillow, his body immovable in a plaster
- cast, his maimed arm, as always, hidden. His greedy gaze fastened
- at once on the Angel's face. She crossed to him with light step and
- bent over him with infinite tenderness. Her heart ached at the
- change in his appearance. He seemed so weak, heart hungry, so
- utterly hopeless, so alone. She could see that the night had been
- one long terror.
-
- For the first time she tried putting herself in Freckles' place.
- What would it mean to have no parents, no home, no name? No name!
- That was the worst of all. That was to be lost--indeed--utterly and
- hopelessly lost. The Angel lifted her hands to her dazed head and
- reeled, as she tried to face that proposition. She dropped on her
- knees beside the bed, slipped her arm under the pillow, and leaning
- over Freckles, set her lips on his forehead. He smiled faintly, but
- his wistful face appeared worse for it. It hurt the Angel to the heart.
-
- "Dear Freckles," she said, "there is a story in your eyes this
- morning, tell me?"
-
- Freckles drew a long, wavering breath.
-
- "Angel," he begged, "be generous! Be thinking of me a little.
- I'm so homesick and worn out, dear Angel, be giving me back me promise.
- Let me go?"
-
- "Why Freckles!" faltered the Angel. "You don't know what you
- are asking. `Let you go!' I cannot! I love you better than
- anyone, Freckles. I think you are the very finest person I ever knew.
- I have our lives all planned. I want you to be educated and learn
- all there is to know about singing, just as soon as you are well enough.
- By the time you have completed your education I will have
- finished college, and then I want," she choked a second, "I want
- you to be my real knight, Freckles, and come to me and tell me that
- you--like me--a little. I have been counting on you for my
- sweetheart from the very first, Freckles. I can't give you up,
- unless you don't like me. But you do like me--just a little--don't
- you, Freckles?"
-
- Freckles lay whiter than the coverlet, his staring eyes on the
- ceiling and his breath wheezing between dry lips. The Angel awaited
- his answer a second, and when none came, she dropped her crimsoning
- face beside him on the pillow and whispered in his ear:
-
- "Freckles, I--I'm trying to make love to you. Oh, can't you help me
- only a little bit? It's awful hard all alone! I don't know how,
- when I really mean it, but Freckles, I love you. I must have you,
- and now I guess--I guess maybe I'd better kiss you next."
-
- She lifted her shamed face and bravely laid her feverish, quivering
- lips on his. Her breath, like clover-bloom, was in his nostrils, and
- her hair touched his face. Then she looked into his eyes with reproach.
-
- "Freckles," she panted, "Freckles! I didn't think it was in you to
- be mean!"
-
- "Mean, Angel! Mean to you?" gasped Freckles.
-
- "Yes," said the Angel. "Downright mean. When I kiss you, if you had
- any mercy at all you'd kiss back, just a little bit."
-
- Freckles' sinewy fist knotted into the coverlet. His chin pointed
- ceilingward while his head rocked on the pillow.
-
- "Oh, Jesus!" burst from him in agony. "You ain't the only one that
- was crucified!"
-
- The Angel caught Freckles' hand and carried it to her breast.
-
- "Freckles!" she wailed in terror, "Freckles! It is a mistake? Is it
- that you don't want me?"
-
- Freckles' head rolled on in wordless suffering.
-
- "Wait a bit, Angel?" he panted at last. "Be giving me a little time!"
-
- The Angel arose with controlled features. She bathed his face,
- straightened his hair, and held water to his lips. It seemed a long
- time before he reached toward her. Instantly she knelt again,
- carried his hand to her breast, and leaned her cheek upon it.
-
- "Tell me, Freckles," she whispered softly.
-
- "If I can," said Freckles in agony. "It's just this. Angels are
- from above. Outcasts are from below. You've a sound body and you're
- beautifulest of all. You have everything that loving, careful
- raising and money can give you. I have so much less than nothing
- that I don't suppose I had any right to be born. It's a sure
- thing--nobody wanted me afterward, so of course, they didn't
- before. Some of them should have been telling you long ago."
-
- "If that's all you have to say, Freckles, I've known that quite a
- while," said the Angel stoutly. "Mr. McLean told my father, and he
- told me. That only makes me love you more, to pay for all you've missed."
-
- "Then I'm wondering at you," said Freckles in a voice of awe.
- "Can't you see that if you were willing and your father would come
- and offer you to me, I couldn't be touching the soles of your feet,
- in love--me, whose people brawled over me, cut off me hand, and
- throwed me away to freeze and to die! Me, who has no name just as
- much because I've no RIGHT to any, as because I don't know it.
- When I was little, I planned to find me father and mother when I
- grew up. Now I know me mother deserted me, and me father was maybe a
- thief and surely a liar. The pity for me suffering and the watching
- over me have gone to your head, dear Angel, and it's me must be
- thinking for you. If you could be forgetting me lost hand, where I
- was raised, and that I had no name to give you, and if you would be
- taking me as I am, some day people such as mine must be, might come
- upon you. I used to pray ivery night and morning and many times the
- day to see me mother. Now I only pray to die quickly and never risk
- the sight of her. 'Tain't no ways possible, Angel! It's a wildness
- of your dear head. Oh, do for mercy sake, kiss me once more and be
- letting me go!"
-
- "Not for a minute!" cried the Angel. "Not for a minute, if those
- are all the reasons you have. It's you who are wild in your head,
- but I can understand just how it happened. Being shut in that Home
- most of your life, and seeing children every day whose parents did
- neglect and desert them, makes you sure yours did the same; and yet
- there are so many other things that could have happened so much
- more easily than that. There are thousands of young couples who
- come to this country and start a family with none of their
- relatives here. Chicago is a big, wicked city, and grown people
- could disappear in many ways, and who would there ever be to find
- to whom their little children belonged? The minute my father told
- me how you felt, I began to study this thing over, and I've made up
- my mind you are dead wrong. I meant to ask my father or the Bird
- Woman to talk to you before you went away to school, but as matters
- are right now I guess I'll just do it myself. It's all so plain
- to me. Oh, if I could only make you see!"
-
- She buried her face in the pillow and presently lifted it, transfigured.
-
- "Now I have it!" she cried. "Oh, dear heart! I can make it
- so plain! Freckles, can you imagine you see the old Limberlost trail?
- Well when we followed it, you know there were places where ugly,
- prickly thistles overgrew the path, and you went ahead with your
- club and bent them back to keep them from stinging through my clothing.
- Other places there were big shining pools where lovely, snow-white
- lilies grew, and you waded in and gathered them for me. Oh dear
- heart, don't you see? It's this! Everywhere the wind carried
- that thistledown, other thistles sprang up and grew prickles;
- and wherever those lily seeds sank to the mire, the pure white
- of other lilies bloomed. But, Freckles, there was never a
- place anywhere in the Limberlost, or in the whole world, where the
- thistledown floated and sprang up and blossomed into white lilies!
- Thistles grow from thistles, and lilies from other lilies.
- Dear Freckles, think hard! You must see it! You are a lily,
- straight through. You never, never could have drifted from the
- thistle-patch.
-
- "Where did you find the courage to go into the Limberlost and face
- its terrors? You inherited it from the blood of a brave father,
- dear heart. Where did you get the pluck to hold for over a year a
- job that few men would have taken at all? You got it from a plucky
- mother, you bravest of boys. You attacked single-handed a man
- almost twice your size, and fought as a demon, merely at the
- suggestion that you be deceptive and dishonest. Could your mother
- or your father have been untruthful? Here you are, so hungry and
- starved that you are dying for love. Where did you get all that
- capacity for loving? You didn't inherit it from hardened, heartless
- people, who would disfigure you and purposely leave you to die,
- that's one sure thing. You once told me of saving your big bullfrog
- from a rattlesnake. You knew you risked a horrible death when you
- did it. Yet you will spend miserable years torturing yourself with
- the idea that your own mother might have cut off that hand. Shame on
- you, Freckles! Your mother would have done this----"
-
- The Angel deliberately turned back the cover, slipped up the
- sleeve, and laid her lips on the scars.
-
- "Freckles! Wake up!" she cried, almost shaking him. "Come to
- your senses! Be a thinking, reasoning man! You have brooded too much,
- and been all your life too much alone. It's all as plain as plain
- can be to me. You must see it! Like breeds like in this world!
- You must be some sort of a reproduction of your parents, and I am not
- afraid to vouch for them, not for a minute!
-
- "And then, too, if more proof is needed, here it is: Mr. McLean
- says that you never once have failed in tact and courtesy. He says
- that you are the most perfect gentleman he ever knew, and he has
- traveled the world over. How does it happen, Freckles? No one at
- that Home taught you. Hundreds of men couldn't be taught, even in
- a school of etiquette; so it must be instinctive with you. If it
- is, why, that means that it is born in you, and a direct
- inheritance from a race of men that have been gentlemen for ages,
- and couldn't be anything else.
-
- "Then there's your singing. I don't believe there ever was a mortal
- with a sweeter voice than yours, and while that doesn't prove
- anything, there is a point that does. The little training you had
- from that choirmaster won't account for the wonderful accent and
- ease with which you sing. Somewhere in your close blood is a
- marvelously trained vocalist; we every one of us believe that, Freckles.
-
- "Why does my father refer to you constantly as being of fine
- perceptions and honor? Because you are, Freckles. Why does the Bird
- Woman leave her precious work and come here to help look after you?
- I never heard of her losing any time over anyone else. It's because
- she loves you. And why does Mr. McLean turn all of his valuable
- business over to hired men and watch you personally? And why is he
- hunting excuses every day to spend money on you? My father says
- McLean is full Scotch-close with a dollar. He is a hard-headed
- business man, Freckles, and he is doing it because he finds you
- worthy of it. Worthy of all we all can do and more than we know how
- to do, dear heart! Freckles, are you listening to me? Oh! won't you
- see it? Won't you believe it?"
-
- "Oh, Angel!" chattered the bewildered Freckles, "are you truly
- maning it? Could it be?"
-
- "Of course it could," flashed the Angel, "because it just is!"
-
- "But you can't prove it," wailed Freckles. "It ain't giving me a
- name, or me honor!"
-
- "Freckles," said the Angel sternly, "you are unreasonable! Why, I
- did prove every word I said! Everything proves it! You look here!
- If you knew for sure that I could give you a name and your honor,
- and prove to you that your mother did love you, why, then, would
- you just go to breathing like perpetual motion and hang on for dear
- life and get well?"
-
- A bright light shone in Freckles' eyes.
-
- "If I knew that, Angel," he said solemnly, "you couldn't be killing
- me if you felled the biggest tree in the Limberlost smash on me!"
-
- "Then you go right to work," said the Angel, "and before night I'll
- prove one thing to you: I can show you easily enough how much your
- mother loved you. That will be the first step, and then the
- remainder will all come. If my father and Mr. McLean are so anxious
- to spend some money, I'll give them a chance. I don't see why we
- haven't comprehended how you felt and so have been at work weeks ago.
- We've been awfully selfish. We've all been so comfortable, we never
- stopped to think what other people were suffering before our eyes.
- None of us has understood. I'll hire the finest detective in
- Chicago, and we'll go to work together. This is nothing compared
- with things people do find out. We'll go at it, beak and claw, and
- we'll show you a thing or two."
-
- Freckles caught her sleeve.
-
- "Me mother, Angel! Me mother!" he marveled hoarsely. "Did you say
- you could be finding out today if me mother loved me? How? Oh, Angel!
- Nothing matters, IF ONLY ME MOTHER DIDN'T DO IT!"
-
- "Then you rest easy," said the Angel, with large confidence.
- "Your mother didn't do it! Mothers of sons such as you don't do things
- like that. I'll go to work at once and prove it to you. The first
- thing to do is to go to that Home where you were and get the
- clothes you wore the night you were left there. I know that they
- are required to save those things carefully. We can find out almost
- all there is to know about your mother from them. Did you ever see them?"
-
- "Yis," he replied.
-
- "Freckles! Were they white?" she cried.
-
- "Maybe they were once. They're all yellow with laying, and brown
- with blood-stains now" said Freckles, the old note of bitterness
- creeping in. "You can't be telling anything at all by them, Angel!"
-
- "Well, but I just can!" said the Angel positively. "I can see from
- the quality what kind of goods your mother could afford to buy.
- I can see from the cut whether she had good taste. I can see from
- the care she took in making them how much she loved and wanted you."
-
- "But how? Angel, tell me how!" implored Freckles with trembling eagerness.
-
- "Why, easily enough," said the Angel. "I thought you'd understand.
- People that can afford anything at all, always buy white for little
- new babies--linen and lace, and the very finest things to be had.
- There's a young woman living near us who cut up her wedding clothes
- to have fine things for her baby. Mothers who love and want their
- babies don't buy little rough, ready-made things, and they don't
- run up what they make on an old sewing machine. They make fine
- seams, and tucks, and put on lace and trimming by hand. They sit and
- stitch, and stitch--little, even stitches, every one just as careful.
- Their eyes shine and their faces glow. When they have to quit to
- do something else, they look sorry, and fold up their work
- so particularly. There isn't much worth knowing about your mother
- that those little clothes won't tell. I can see her putting the
- little stitches into them and smiling with shining eyes over
- your coming. Freckles, I'll wager you a dollar those little clothes
- of yours are just alive with the dearest, tiny handmade stitches."
-
- A new light dawned in Freckles' eyes. A tinge of warm color swept
- into his face. Renewed strength was noticeable in his grip of her hands.
-
- "Oh Angel! Will you go now? Will you be hurrying?" he cried.
-
- "Right away," said the Angel. "I won't stop for a thing, and I'll
- hurry with all my might."
-
- She smoothed his pillow, straightened the cover, gave him one
- steady look in the eyes, and went quietly from the room.
-
- Outside the door, McLean and the surgeon anxiously awaited her.
- McLean caught her shoulders.
-
- "Angel, what have you done?" he demanded.
-
- The Angel smiled defiance into his eyes.
-
- "`What have I done?'" she repeated. "I've tried to save Freckles."
-
- "What will your father say?" groaned McLean.
-
- "It strikes me," said the Angel, "that what Freckles said would be
- to the point."
-
- "Freckles!" exclaimed McLean. "What could he say?"
-
- "He seemed to be able to say several things," answered the
- Angel sweetly. "I fancy the one that concerns you most at present
- was, that if my father should offer me to him he would not have me."
-
- "And no one knows why better than I do," cried McLean. "Every day
- he must astonish me with some new fineness."
-
- He turned to the surgeon. "Save him!" he commanded. "Save him!"
- he implored. "He is too fine to be sacrificed."
-
- "His salvation lies here," said the surgeon, stroking the Angel's
- sunshiny hair, "and I can read in the face of her that she knows
- how she is going to work it out. Don't trouble for the boy.
- She will save him!"
-
- The Angel laughingly sped down the hall, and into the street, just
- as she was.
-
- "I have come," she said to the matron of the Home, "to ask if you
- will allow me to examine, or, better yet, to take with me, the
- little clothes that a boy you called Freckles, discharged last
- fall, wore the night he was left here."
-
- The woman looked at her in greater astonishment than the occasion demanded.
-
- "Well, I'd be glad to let you see them," she said at last, "but the
- fact is we haven't them. I do hope we haven't made some mistake.
- I was thoroughly convinced, and so was the superintendent. We let his
- people take those things away yesterday. Who are you, and what do
- you want with them?"
-
- The Angel stood dazed and speechless, staring at the matron.
-
- "There couldn't have been a mistake," continued the matron, seeing
- the Angel's distress. "Freckles was here when I took charge, ten
- years ago. These people had it all proved that he belonged to them.
- They had him traced to where he ran away in Illinois last fall, and
- there they completely lost track of him. I'm sorry you seem so
- disappointed, but it is all right. The man is his uncle, and as
- like the boy as he possibly could be. He is almost killed to go
- back without him. If you know where Freckles is, they'd give big
- money to find out."
-
- The Angel laid a hand along each cheek to steady her chattering teeth.
-
- "Who are they?" she stammered. "Where are they going?"
-
- "They are Irish folks, miss," said the matron. "They have been in
- Chicago and over the country for the past three months, hunting him
- everywhere. They have given up, and are starting home today. They----"
-
- "Did they leave an address? Where could I find them?" interrupted
- the Angel.
-
- "They left a card, and I notice the morning paper has the man's
- picture and is full of them. They've advertised a great deal in the
- city papers. It's a wonder you haven't seen something."
-
- "Trains don't run right. We never get Chicago papers," said
- the Angel. "Please give me that card quickly. They may escape me.
- I simply must catch them!"
-
- The matron hurried to the secretary and came back with a card.
-
- "Their addresses are there," she said. "Both in Chicago and at
- their home. They made them full and plain, and I was to cable at
- once if I got the least clue of him at any time. If they've left
- the city, you can stop them in New York. You're sure to catch them
- before they sail--if you hurry."
-
- The matron caught up a paper and thrust it into the Angel's hand as
- she ran to the street.
-
- The Angel glanced at the card. The Chicago address was Suite
- Eleven, Auditorium. She laid her hand on her driver's sleeve and
- looked into his eyes.
-
- "There is a fast-driving limit?" she asked.
-
- "Yes, miss."
-
- "Will you crowd it all you can without danger of arrest? I will
- pay well. I must catch some people!"
-
- Then she smiled at him. The hospital, an Orphans' Home, and the
- Auditorium seemed a queer combination to that driver, but the Angel
- was always and everywhere the Angel, and her methods were strictly
- her own.
-
- "I will take you there as quickly as any man could with a team," he
- said promptly.
-
- The Angel clung to the card and paper, and as best she could in the
- lurching, swaying cab, read the addresses over.
-
- "O'More, Suite Eleven, Auditorium."
-
- "`O'More,'" she repeated. "Seems to fit Freckles to a dot. Wonder if
- that could be his name? `Suite Eleven' means that you are pretty
- well fixed. Suites in the Auditorium come high."
-
- Then she turned the card and read on its reverse, Lord Maxwell
- O'More, M. P., Killvany Place, County Clare, Ireland.
-
- The Angel sat on the edge of the seat, bracing her feet against the
- one opposite, as the cab pitched and swung around corners and
- past vehicles. She mechanically fingered the pasteboard and stared
- straight ahead. Then she drew a deep breath and read the card again.
-
- "A Lord-man!" she groaned despairingly. "A Lord-man! Bet my
- hoecake's scorched! Here I've gone and pledged my word to Freckles
- I'd find him some decent relatives, that he could be proud of, and
- now there isn't a chance out of a dozen that he'll have to be
- ashamed of them after all. It's too mean!"
-
- The tears of vexation rolled down the tired, nerve-racked Angel's cheeks.
-
- "This isn't going to do," she said, resolutely wiping her eyes with
- the palm of her hand and gulping down the nervous spasm in her throat.
- "I must read this paper before I meet Lord O'More."
-
- She blinked back the tears and spreading the paper on her knee, read:
- "After three months' fruitless search, Lord O'More gives up the
- quest of his lost nephew, and leaves Chicago today for his home
- in Ireland."
-
- She read on, and realized every word. The likeness settled any doubt.
- It was Freckles over again, only older and well dressed.
-
- "Well, I must catch you if I can," muttered the Angel. "But when I
- do, if you are a gentleman in name only, you shan't have Freckles;
- that's flat. You're not his father and he is twenty. Anyway, if the
- law will give him to you for one year, you can't spoil him, because
- nobody could, and," she added, brightening, "he'll probably do you
- a lot of good. Freckles and I both must study years yet, and you
- should be something that will save him. I guess it will come out
- all right. At least, I don't believe you can take him away if I say no."
-
- "Thank you; and wait, no matter how long," she said to her driver.
-
- Catching up the paper, she hurried to the desk and laid down Lord
- O'More's card.
-
- "Has my uncle started yet?" she asked sweetly.
-
- The surprised clerk stepped back on a bellboy, and covertly kicked
- him for being in the way.
-
- "His lordship is in his room," he said, with a low bow.
-
- "All right," said the Angel, picking up the card. "I thought he
- might have started. I'll see him."
-
- The clerk shoved the bellboy toward the Angel.
-
- "Show her ladyship to the elevator and Lord O'More's suite," he
- said, bowing double.
-
- "Aw, thanks," said the Angel with a slight nod, as she turned away.
-
- "I'm not sure," she muttered to herself as the elevator sped
- upward, "whether it's the Irish or the English who say:
- `Aw, thanks,' but it's probable he isn't either; and anyway,
- I just had to do something to counteract that `All right.'
- How stupid of me!"
-
- At the bellboy's tap, the door swung open and the liveried servant
- thrust a cardtray before the Angel. The opening of the door created
- a current that swayed a curtain aside, and in an adjoining room,
- lounging in a big chair, with a paper in his hand, sat a man who
- was, beyond question, of Freckles' blood and race.
-
- With perfect control the Angel dropped Lord O'More's card in the
- tray, stepped past his servant, and stood before his lordship.
-
- "Good morning," she said with tense politeness.
-
- Lord O'More said nothing. He carelessly glanced her over with
- amused curiosity, until her color began to deepen and her blood to
- run hotly.
-
- "Well, my dear," he said at last, "how can I serve you?"
-
- Instantly the Angel became indignant. She had been so shielded
- in the midst of almost entire freedom, owing to the circumstances
- of her life, that the words and the look appeared to her as
- almost insulting. She lifted her head with a proud gesture.
-
- "I am not your `dear,'" she said with slow distinctness. "There
- isn't a thing in the world you can do for me. I came here to see if
- I could do something--a very great something--for you; but if I
- don't like you, I won't do it!"
-
- Then Lord O'More did stare. Suddenly he broke into a ringing laugh.
- Without a change of attitude or expression, the Angel stood looking
- steadily at him.
-
- There was a silken rustle, then a beautiful woman with cheeks of
- satiny pink, dark hair, and eyes of pure Irish blue, moved to Lord
- O'More's side, and catching his arm, shook him impatiently.
-
- "Terence! Have you lost your senses?" she cried. "Didn't you
- understand what the child said? Look at her face! See what she has!"
-
- Lord O'More opened his eyes widely and sat up. He did look at the
- Angel's face intently, and suddenly found it so good that it was
- difficult to follow the next injunction. He arose instantly.
-
- "I beg your pardon," he said. "The fact is, I am leaving Chicago
- sorely disappointed. It makes me bitter and reckless. I thought you
- one more of those queer, useless people who have thrust themselves
- on me constantly, and I was careless. Forgive me, and tell me why
- you came."
-
- "I will if I like you," said the Angel stoutly, "and if I don't, I won't!"
-
- "But I began all wrong, and now I don't know how to make you like
- me," said his lordship, with sincere penitence in his tone.
-
- The Angel found herself yielding to his voice. He spoke in a soft,
- mellow, smoothly flowing Irish tone, and although his speech was
- perfectly correct, it was so rounded, and accented, and the
- sentences so turned, that it was Freckles over again. Still, it was
- a matter of the very greatest importance, and she must be sure; so
- she looked into the beautiful woman's face.
-
- "Are you his wife?" she asked.
-
- "Yes," said the woman, "I am his wife."
-
- "Well," said the Angel judicially, "the Bird Woman says no one in
- the whole world knows all a man's bignesses and all his
- littlenesses as his wife does. What you think of him should do
- for me. Do you like him?"
-
- The question was so earnestly asked that it met with equal earnestness.
- The dark head moved caressingly against Lord O'More's sleeve.
-
- "Better than anyone in the whole world," said Lady O'More promptly.
-
- The Angel mused a second, and then her legal tinge came to the fore again.
-
- "Yes, but have you anyone you could like better, if he wasn't all
- right?" she persisted.
-
- "I have three of his sons, two little daughters, a father, mother,
- and several brothers and sisters," came the quick reply.
-
- "And you like him best?" persisted the Angel with finality.
-
- "I love him so much that I would give up every one of them with dry
- eyes if by so doing I could save him," cried Lord O'More's wife.
-
- "Oh!" cried the Angel. "Oh, my!"
-
- She lifted her clear eyes to Lord O'More's and shook her head.
-
- "She never, never could do that!" she said. "But it's a mighty big
- thing to your credit that she THINKS she could. I guess I'll tell
- you why I came."
-
- She laid down the paper, and touched the portrait.
-
- "When you were only a boy, did people call you Freckles?" she asked.
-
- "Dozens of good fellows all over Ireland and the Continent are
- doing it today," answered Lord O'More.
-
- The Angel's face wore her most beautiful smile.
-
- "I was sure of it," she said winningly. "That's what we call him,
- and he is so like you, I doubt if any one of those three boys of
- yours are more so. But it's been twenty years. Seems to me you've
- been a long time coming!"
-
- Lord O'More caught the Angel's wrists and his wife slipped her arms
- around her.
-
- "Steady, my girl!" said the man's voice hoarsely. "Don't make me
- think you've brought word of the boy at this last hour, unless you
- know surely."
-
- "It's all right," said the Angel. "We have him, and there's no
- chance of a mistake. If I hadn't gone to that Home for his little
- clothes, and heard of you and been hunting you, and had met you on
- the street, or anywhere, I would have stopped you and asked you who
- you were, just because you are so like him. It's all right. I can
- tell you where Freckles is; but whether you deserve to know--that's
- another matter!"
-
- Lord O'More did not hear her. He dropped in his chair, and covering
- his face, burst into those terrible sobs that shake and rend a
- strong man. Lady O'More hovered over him, weeping.
-
- "Umph! Looks pretty fair for Freckles," muttered the Angel.
- "Lots of things can be explained; now perhaps they can explain this."
-
- They did explain so satisfactorily that in a few minutes the Angel
- was on her feet, hurrying Lord and Lady O'More to reach the hospital.
- "You said Freckles' old nurse knew his mother's picture instantly,"
- said the Angel. "I want that picture and the bundle of little clothes."
-
- Lady O'More gave them into her hands.
-
- The likeness was a large miniature, painted on ivory, with a frame
- of beaten gold. Surrounded by masses of dark hair was a delicately
- cut face. In the upper part of it there was no trace of Freckles,
- but the lips curving in a smile were his very own. The Angel gazed
- at it steadily. Then with a quivering breath she laid the portrait
- aside and reached both hands to Lord O'More.
-
- "That will save Freckles' life and insure his happiness," she
- said positively. "Thank you, oh thank you for coming!"
-
- She opened the bundle of yellow and brown linen and gave only a
- glance at the texture and work. Then she gathered the little
- clothes and the picture to her heart and led the way to the cab.
-
- Ushering Lord and Lady O'More into the reception room, she said to
- McLean, "Please go call up my father and ask him to come on the
- first train."
-
- She closed the door after him.
-
- "These are Freckles' people," she said to the Bird Woman. "You can
- find out about each other; I'm going to him."
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- Wherein Freckles Finds His Birthright and the Angel Loses Her Heart
-
- The nurse left the room quietly, as the Angel entered, carrying the
- bundle and picture. When they were alone, she turned to Freckles
- and saw that the crisis was indeed at hand.
-
- That she had good word to give him was his salvation, for despite
- the heavy plaster jacket that held his body immovable, his head was
- lifted from the pillow. Both arms reached for her. His lips and
- cheeks flamed, while his eyes flashed with excitement.
-
- "Angel," he panted. "Oh Angel! Did you find them? Are they white?
- Are the little stitches there? OH ANGEL! DID ME MOTHER LOVE ME?"
-
- The words seemed to leap from his burning lips. The Angel dropped
- the bundle on the bed and laid the picture face down across his knees.
- She gently pushed his head to the pillow and caught his arms in a
- firm grasp.
-
- "Yes, dear heart," she said with fullest assurance. "No little
- clothes were ever whiter. I never in all my life saw such dainty,
- fine, little stitches; and as for loving you, no boy's mother ever
- loved him more!"
-
- A nervous trembling seized Freckles.
-
- "Sure? Are you sure?" he urged with clicking teeth.
-
- "I know," said the Angel firmly. "And Freckles, while you rest and
- be glad, I want to tell you a story. When you feel stronger we will
- look at the clothes together. They are here. They are all right.
- But while I was at the Home getting them, I heard of some people
- that were hunting a lost boy. I went to see them, and what they
- told me was all so exactly like what might have happened to you that
- I must tell you. Then you'll understand that things could be very
- different from what you always have tortured yourself with thinking.
- Are you strong enough to listen? May I tell you?"
-
- "Maybe 'twasn't me mother! Maybe someone else made those little stitches!"
-
- "Now, goosie, don't you begin that," said the Angel, "because I
- know that it was!"
-
- "Know!" cried Freckles, his head springing from the pillow. "Know!
- How can you know?"
-
- The Angel gently soothed him back.
-
- "Why, because nobody else would ever sit and do it the way it
- is done. That's how I know," she said emphatically. "Now you
- listen while I tell you about this lost boy and his people, who
- have hunted for months and can't find him."
-
- Freckles lay quietly under her touch, but he did not hear a word
- that she was saying until his roving eyes rested on her face; he
- immediately noticed a remarkable thing. For the first time she was
- talking to him and avoiding his eyes. That was not like the Angel
- at all. It was the delight of hearing her speak that she looked one
- squarely in the face and with perfect frankness. There were no side
- glances and down-drooping eyes when the Angel talked; she was
- business straight through. Instantly Freckles' wandering thoughts
- fastened on her words.
-
- "--and he was a sour, grumpy, old man," she was saying. "He always
- had been spoiled, because he was an only son, so he had a title,
- and a big estate. He would have just his way, no matter about his
- sweet little wife, or his boys, or anyone. So when his elder son
- fell in love with a beautiful girl having a title, the very girl of
- all the world his father wanted him to, and added a big adjoining
- estate to his, why, that pleased him mightily.
-
- "Then he went and ordered his younger son to marry a poky kind of
- a girl, that no one liked, to add another big estate on the other
- side, and that was different. That was all the world different,
- because the elder son had been in love all his life with the girl
- he married, and, oh, Freckles, it's no wonder, for I saw her!
- She's a beauty and she has the sweetest way.
-
- "But that poor younger son, he had been in love with the village
- vicar's daughter all his life. That's no wonder either, for she was
- more beautiful yet. She could sing as the angels, but she hadn't a
- cent. She loved him to death, too, if he was bony and freckled and
- red-haired--I don't mean that! They didn't say what color his hair
- was, but his father's must have been the reddest ever, for when he
- found out about them, and it wasn't anything so terrible, HE JUST CAVED!
-
- "The old man went to see the girl--the pretty one with no money, of
- course--and he hurt her feelings until she ran away. She went to
- London and began studying music. Soon she grew to be a fine singer,
- so she joined a company and came to this country.
-
- "When the younger son found that she had left London, he followed her.
- When she got here all alone, and afraid, and saw him coming to her,
- why, she was so glad she up and married him, just like anybody
- else would have done. He didn't want her to travel with the troupe,
- so when they reached Chicago they thought that would be a good
- place, and they stopped, while he hunted work. It was slow
- business, because he never had been taught to do a useful thing,
- and he didn't even know how to hunt work, least of all to do it
- when he found it; so pretty soon things were going wrong. But if he
- couldn't find work, she could always sing, so she sang at night,
- and made little things in the daytime. He didn't like her to sing
- in public, and he wouldn't allow her when he could HELP himself;
- but winter came, it was very cold, and fire was expensive.
- Rents went up, and they had to move farther out to cheaper and
- cheaper places; and you were coming--I mean, the boy that is lost
- was coming--and they were almost distracted. Then the man wrote and
- told his father all about it; and his father sent the letter back
- unopened with a line telling him never to write again. When the
- baby came, there was very little left to pawn for food and a
- doctor, and nothing at all for a nurse; so an old neighbor woman
- went in and took care of the young mother and the little baby,
- because she was so sorry for them. By that time they were away in
- the suburbs on the top floor of a little wooden house, among a lot
- of big factories, and it kept growing colder, with less to eat.
- Then the man grew desperate and he went just to find something to
- eat and the woman was desperate, too. She got up, left the old
- woman to take care of her baby, and went into the city to sing for
- some money. The woman became so cold she put the baby in bed and
- went home. Then a boiler blew up in a big factory beside the little
- house and set it on fire. A piece of iron was pitched across and
- broke through the roof. It came down smash, and cut just one little
- hand off the poor baby. It screamed and screamed; and the fire kept
- coming closer and closer.
-
- "The old woman ran out with the other people and saw what had happened.
- She knew there wasn't going to be time to wait for firemen or
- anything, so she ran into the building. She could hear the baby
- screaming, and she couldn't stand that; so she worked her way to it.
- There it was, all hurt and bleeding. Then she was almost scared
- to death over thinking what its mother would do to her for
- going away and leaving it, so she ran to a Home for little
- friendless babies, that was close, and banged on the door. Then she
- hid across the street until the baby was taken in, and then she ran
- back to see if her own house was burning. The big factory and the
- little house and a lot of others were all gone. The people there
- told her that the beautiful lady came back and ran into the house
- to find her baby. She had just gone in when her husband came, and
- he went in after her, and the house fell over both of them."
-
- Freckles lay rigidly, with his eyes on the Angel's face, while she
- talked rapidly to the ceiling.
-
- "Then the old woman was sick about that poor little baby. She was
- afraid to tell them at the Home, because she knew she never should
- have left it, but she wrote a letter and sent it to where the
- beautiful woman, when she was ill, had said her husband's people lived.
- She told all about the little baby that she could remember:
- when it was born, how it was named for the man's elder brother,
- that its hand had been cut off in the fire, and where she had put
- it to be doctored and taken care of. She told them that its mother
- and father were both burned, and she begged and implored them to
- come after it.
-
- "You'd think that would have melted a heart of ice, but that old
- man hadn't any heart to melt, for he got that letter and read it.
- He hid it away among his papers and never told a soul. A few months
- ago he died. When his elder son went to settle his business, he
- found the letter almost the first thing. He dropped everything, and
- came, with his wife, to hunt that baby, because he always had loved
- his brother dearly, and wanted him back. He had hunted for him all
- he dared all these years, but when he got here you were gone--I
- mean the baby was gone, and I had to tell you, Freckles, for you
- see, it might have happened to you like that just as easy as to
- that other lost boy."
-
- Freckles reached up and turned the Angel's face until he compelled
- her eyes to meet his.
-
- "Angel," he asked quietly, "why don't you look at me when you are
- telling about that lost boy?"
-
- "I--I didn't know I wasn't," faltered the Angel.
-
- "It seems to me," said Freckles, his breath beginning to come in
- sharp wheezes, "that you got us rather mixed, and it ain't like you
- to be mixing things till one can't be knowing. If they were telling
- you so much, did they say which hand was for being off that lost boy?"
-
- The Angel's eyes escaped again.
-
- "It--it was the same as yours," she ventured, barely breathing in
- her fear.
-
- Still Freckles lay rigid and whiter than the coverlet.
-
- "Would that boy be as old as me?" he asked.
-
- "Yes," said the Angel faintly.
-
- "Angel," said Freckles at last, catching her wrist, "are you trying
- to tell me that there is somebody hunting a boy that you're
- thinking might be me? Are you belavin' you've found me relations?"
-
- Then the Angel's eyes came home. The time had come. She pinioned
- Freckles' arms to his sides and bent above him.
-
- "How strong are you, dear heart?" she breathed. "How brave are you?
- Can you bear it? Dare I tell you that?"
-
- "No!" gasped Freckles. "Not if you're sure! I can't bear it!
- I'll die if you do!"
-
- The day had been one unremitting strain with the Angel.
- Nerve tension was drawn to the finest thread. It snapped suddenly.
-
- "Die!" she flamed. "Die, if I tell you that! You said this morning
- that you would die if you DIDN'T know your name, and if your people
- were honorable. Now I've gone and found you a name that stands for
- ages of honor, a mother who loved you enough to go into the fire
- and die for you, and the nicest kind of relatives, and you turn
- round and say you'll die over that! YOU JUST TRY DYING AND YOU'LL
- GET A GOOD SLAP!"
-
- The Angel stood glaring at him. One second Freckles lay paralyzed
- and dumb with astonishment. The next the Irish in his soul arose
- above everything. A laugh burst from him. The terrified Angel
- caught him in her arms and tried to stifle the sound. She implored
- and commanded. When he was too worn to utter another sound, his
- eyes laughed silently.
-
- After a long time, when he was quiet and rested, the Angel
- commenced talking to him gently, and this time her big eyes, humid
- with tenderness and mellow with happiness, seemed as if they could
- not leave his face.
-
- "Dear Freckles," she was saying, "across your knees there is the
- face of the mother who went into the fire for you, and I know the
- name--old and full of honor--to which you were born. Dear heart,
- which will you have first?"
-
- Freckles was very tired; the big drops of perspiration ran together
- on his temples; but the watching Angel caught the words his lips
- formed, "Me mother!"
-
- She lifted the lovely pictured face and set it in the nook of his arm.
- Freckles caught her hand and drew her beside him, and together
- they gazed at the picture while the tears slid over their cheeks.
-
- "Me mother! Oh, me mother! Can you ever be forgiving me? Oh, me
- beautiful little mother!" chanted Freckles over and over in exalted
- wonder, until he was so completely exhausted that his lips refused
- to form the question in his weary eyes.
-
- "Wait!" cried the Angel with inborn refinement, for she could no
- more answer that question than he could ask. "Wait, I will write it!"
-
- She hurried to the table, caught up the nurse's pencil, and on the
- back of a prescription tablet scrawled it: "Terence Maxwell O'More,
- Dunderry House, County Clare, Ireland."
-
- Before she had finished came Freckles' voice: "Angel, are you hurrying?"
-
- "Yes," said the Angel; "I am. But there is a good deal of it. I have
- to put in your house and country, so that you will feel located."
-
- "Me house?" marveled Freckles.
-
- "Of course," said the Angel. "Your uncle says your grandmother left
- your father her dower house and estate, because she knew his father
- would cut him off. You get that, and all your share of your
- grandfather's property besides. It is all set off for you and
- waiting. Lord O'More told me so. I suspect you are richer than
- McLean, Freckles."
-
- She closed his fingers over the slip and straightened his hair.
-
- "Now you are all right, dear Limberlost guard," she said. "You go
- to sleep and don't think of a thing but just pure joy, joy, joy!
- I'll keep your people until you wake up. You are too tired to see
- anyone else just now!"
-
- Freckles caught her skirt as she turned from him.
-
- "I'll go to sleep in five minutes," he said, "if you will be doing
- just one thing more for me. Send for your father! Oh, Angel, send
- for him quick! How will I ever be waiting until he comes?"
-
- One instant the Angel stood looking at him. The next a crimson wave
- darkly stained her lovely face. Her chin began a spasmodic
- quivering and the tears sprang into her eyes. Her hands caught at
- her chest as if she were stifling. Freckles' grasp on her tightened
- until he drew her beside him. He slipped his arm around her and
- drew her face to his pillow.
-
- "Don't, Angel; for the love of mercy don't be doing that,"
- he implored. "I can't be bearing it. Tell me. You must tell me."
-
- The Angel shook her head.
-
- "That ain't fair, Angel," said Freckles. "You made me tell you
- when it was like tearing the heart raw from me breast. And you was
- for making everything heaven--just heaven and nothing else for me.
- If I'm so much more now than I was an hour ago, maybe I can be
- thinking of some way to fix things. You will be telling me?" he
- coaxed, moving his cheek against her hair.
-
- The Angel's head moved in negation. Freckles did a moment of
- intent thinking.
-
- "Maybe I can be guessing," he whispered. "Will you be giving me
- three chances?"
-
- There was the faintest possible assent.
-
- "You didn't want me to be knowing me name," guessed Freckles.
-
- The Angel's head sprang from the pillow and her tear-stained face
- flamed with outraged indignation.
-
- "Why, I did too!" she cried angrily.
-
- "One gone," said Freckles calmly. "You didn't want me to have
- relatives, a home, and money."
-
- "I did!" exclaimed the Angel. "Didn't I go myself, all alone, into
- the city, and find them when I was afraid as death? I did too!"
-
- "Two gone," said Freckles. "You didn't want the beautifulest girl
- in the world to be telling me.----"
-
- Down went the Angel's face and a heavy sob shook her. Freckles'
- clasp tightened around her shoulders, while his face, in its
- conflicting emotions, was a study. He was so stunned and bewildered
- by the miracle that had been performed in bringing to light his
- name and relatives that he had no strength left for elaborate
- mental processes. Despite all it meant to him to know his name at
- last, and that he was of honorable birth--knowledge without which
- life was an eternal disgrace and burden the one thing that was
- hammering in Freckles' heart and beating in his brain, past any
- attempted expression, was the fact that, while nameless and
- possibly born in shame, the Angel had told him that she loved him.
- He could find no word with which to begin to voice the rapture of
- his heart over that. But if she regretted it--if it had been a
- thing done out of her pity for his condition, or her feeling of
- responsibility, if it killed him after all, there was only one
- thing left to do. Not for McLean, not for the Bird Woman, not for
- the Duncans would Freckles have done it--but for the Angel--if it
- would make her happy--he would do anything.
-
- "Angel," whispered Freckles, with his lips against her hair, "you
- haven't learned your history book very well, or else you've forgotten."
-
- "Forgotten what?" sobbed the Angel.
-
- "Forgotten about the real knight, Ladybird," breathed Freckles.
- "Don't you know that, if anything happened that made his lady
- sorry, a real knight just simply couldn't be remembering it? Angel,
- darling little Swamp Angel, you be listening to me. There was one
- night on the trail, one solemn, grand, white night, that there
- wasn't ever any other like before or since, when the dear Boss put
- his arm around me and told me that he loved me; but if you care,
- Angel, if you don't want it that way, why, I ain't remembering that
- anyone else ever did--not in me whole life."
-
- The Angel lifted her head and looked into the depths of Freckles'
- honest gray eyes, and they met hers unwaveringly; but the pain in
- them was pitiful.
-
- "Do you mean," she demanded, "that you don't remember that a
- brazen, forward girl told you, when you hadn't asked her, that
- she"--the Angel choked on it a second, but she gave a gulp and
- brought it out bravely--"that she loved you?"
-
- "No!" cried Freckles. "No! I don't remember anything of the kind!"
-
- But all the songbirds of his soul burst into melody over that one
- little clause: "When you hadn't asked her."
-
- "But you will," said the Angel. "You may live to be an old, old
- man, and then you will."
-
- "I will not!" cried Freckles. "How can you think it, Angel?"
-
- "You won't even LOOK as if you remember?"
-
- "I will not!" persisted Freckles. "I'll be swearing to it if you
- want me to. If you wasn't too tired to think this thing out
- straight, you'd be seeing that I couldn't--that I just simply
- couldn't! I'd rather give it all up now and go into eternity alone,
- without ever seeing a soul of me same blood, or me home, or hearing
- another man call me by the name I was born to, than to remember
- anything that would be hurting you, Angel. I should think you'd be
- understanding that it ain't no ways possible for me to do it."
-
- The Angel's tear-stained face flashed into dazzling beauty.
- A half-hysterical little laugh broke from her heart and bubbled over
- her lips.
-
- "Oh, Freckles, forgive me!" she cried. "I've been through so much
- that I'm scarcely myself, or I wouldn't be here bothering you when you
- should be sleeping. Of course you couldn't! I knew it all the time!
- I was just scared! I was forgetting that you were you! You're too
- good a knight to remember a thing like that. Of course you are!
- And when you don't remember, why, then it's the same as if it
- never happened. I was almost killed because I'd gone and spoiled
- everything, but now it will be all right. Now you can go on and do
- things like other men, and I can have some flowers, and letters,
- and my sweetheart coming, and when you are SURE, why, then YOU can tell
- ME things, can't you? Oh, Freckles, I'm so glad! Oh, I'm so happy!
- It's dear of you not to remember, Freckles; perfectly dear!
- It's no wonder I love you so. The wonder would be if I did not.
- Oh, I should like to know how I'm ever going to make you understand
- how much I love you!"
-
- Pillow and all, she caught him to her breast one long second; then
- she was gone.
-
- Freckles lay dazed with astonishment. At last his amazed eyes
- searched the room for something approaching the human to which he
- could appeal, and falling on his mother's portrait, he set it
- before him.
-
- "For the love of life! Me little mother," he panted, "did you
- hear that? Did you hear it! Tell me, am I living, or am I dead and
- all heaven come true this minute? Did you hear it?"
-
- He shook the frame in his impatience at receiving no answer.
-
- "You are only a pictured face," he said at last, "and of course you
- can't talk; but the soul of you must be somewhere, and surely in this
- hour you are close enough to be hearing. Tell me, did you hear that?
- I can't ever be telling a living soul; but darling little mother,
- who gave your life for mine, I can always be talking of it
- to you! Every day we'll talk it over and try to understand the
- miracle of it. Tell me, are all women like that? Were you like me
- Swamp Angel? If you were, then I'm understanding why me father
- followed across the ocean and went into the fire."
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- Wherein Freckles returns to the Limberlost, and Lord O'More Sails
- for Ireland Without Him
-
- Freckles' voice ceased, his eyes closed, and his head rolled back
- from exhaustion. Later in the day he insisted on seeing Lord and
- Lady O'More, but he fainted before the resemblance of another man
- to him, and gave all of his friends a terrible fright.
-
- The next morning, the Man of Affairs, with a heart filled with
- misgivings, undertook the interview on which Freckles insisted.
- His fears were without cause. Freckles was the soul of honor
- and simplicity.
-
- "Have they been telling you what's come to me?" he asked without
- even waiting for a greeting.
-
- "Yes," said the Angel's father.
-
- "Do you think you have the very worst of it clear to your understanding?"
-
- Under Freckles' earnest eyes the Man of Affairs answered soberly:
- "I think I have, Mr. O'More."
-
- That was the first time Freckles heard his name from the lips
- of another. One second he lay overcome; the next, tears filled his
- eyes, and he reached out his hand. Then the Angel's father understood,
- and he clasped that hand and held it in a strong, firm grasp.
-
- "Terence, my boy," he said, "let me do the talking. I came here
- with the understanding that you wanted to ask me for my only child.
- I should like, at the proper time, to regard her marriage, if she
- has found the man she desires to marry, not as losing all I have,
- but as gaining a man on whom I can depend to love as a son and to
- take charge of my affairs for her when I retire from business.
- Bend all of your energies toward rapid recovery, and from this hour
- understand that my daughter and my home are yours."
-
- "You're not forgetting this?"
-
- Freckles lifted his right arm.
-
- "Terence, I'm sorrier than I have words to express about that,"
- said the Man of Affairs. "It's a damnable pity! But if it's for me
- to choose whether I give all I have left in this world to a man
- lacking a hand, or to one of these gambling, tippling, immoral
- spendthrifts of today, with both hands and feet off their souls,
- and a rotten spot in the core, I choose you; and it seems that my
- daughter does the same. Put what is left you of that right arm to
- the best uses you can in this world, and never again mention or
- feel that it is defective so long as you live. Good day, sir!"
-
- "One minute more," said Freckles. "Yesterday the Angel was telling
- me that there was money coming to me from two sources. She said
- that me grandmother had left me father all of her fortune and her
- house, because she knew that his father would be cutting him off,
- and also that me uncle had set aside for me what would be me
- father's interest in his father's estate.
-
- "Whatever the sum is that me grandmother left me father, because
- she loved him and wanted him to be having it, that I'll be taking.
- 'Twas hers from her father, and she had the right to be giving it
- as she chose. Anything from the man that knowingly left me father
- and me mother to go cold and hungry, and into the fire in misery,
- when just a little would have made life so beautiful to them, and
- saved me this crippled body--money that he willed from me when he
- knew I was living, of his blood and on charity among strangers, I
- don't touch, not if I freeze, starve, and burn too! If there ain't
- enough besides that, and I can't be earning enough to fix things
- for the Angel----"
-
- "We are not discussing money!" burst in the Man of Affairs.
- "We don't want any blood-money! We have all we need without it.
- If you don't feel right and easy over it, don't you touch a cent
- of any of it."
-
- "It's right I should have what me grandmother intinded for me
- father, and I want it," said Freckles, "but I'd die before I'd
- touch a cent of me grandfather's money!"
-
-
- "Now," said the Angel, "we are all going home. We have done all we
- can for Freckles. His people are here. He should know them. They are
- very anxious to become acquainted with him. We'll resign him to them.
- When he is well, why, then he will be perfectly free to go to
- Ireland or come to the Limberlost, just as he chooses. We will go
- at once."
-
- McLean held out for a week, and then he could endure it no longer.
- He was heart hungry for Freckles. Communing with himself in the
- long, soundful nights of the swamp, he had learned to his
- astonishment that for the past year his heart had been circling the
- Limberlost with Freckles. He began to wish that he had not left him.
- Perhaps the boy--his boy by first right, after all--was being neglected.
- If the Boss had been a nervous old woman, he scarcely could have
- imagined more things that might be going wrong.
-
- He started for Chicago, loaded with a big box of goldenrod, asters,
- fringed gentians, and crimson leaves, that the Angel carefully had
- gathered from Freckles' room, and a little, long slender package.
- He traveled with biting, stinging jealousy in his heart. He would
- not admit it even to himself, but he was unable to remain longer
- away from Freckles and leave him to the care of Lord O'More.
-
- In a few minutes' talk, while McLean awaited admission to Freckles'
- room, his lordship had chatted genially of Freckles' rapid
- recovery, of his delight that he was unspotted by his early
- surroundings, and his desire to visit the Limberlost with Freckles
- before they sailed; he expressed the hope that he could prevail
- upon the Angel's father to place her in his wife's care and have
- her education finished in Paris. He said they were anxious to do
- all they could to help bind Freckles' arrangements with the Angel,
- as both he and Lady O'More regarded her as the most promising girl
- they knew, and one who could be fitted to fill the high position in
- which Freckles would place her.
-
- Every word he uttered was pungent with bitterness to McLean. The
- swamp had lost its flavor without Freckles; and yet, as Lord O'More
- talked, McLean fervently wished himself in the heart of it. As he
- entered Freckles' room he almost lost his breath. Everything was changed.
-
- Freckles lay beside a window where he could follow Lake Michigan's
- blue until the horizon dipped into it. He could see big soft
- clouds, white-capped waves, shimmering sails, and puffing steamers
- trailing billowing banners of lavender and gray across the sky.
- Gulls and curlews wheeled over the water and dipped their wings in
- the foam. The room was filled with every luxury that taste and
- money could introduce.
-
- All the tan and sunburn had been washed from Freckles' face in
- sweats of agony. It was a smooth, even white, its brown rift
- scarcely showing. What the nurses and Lady O'More had done to
- Freckles' hair McLean could not guess, but it was the most
- beautiful that he ever had seen. Fine as floss, bright in color,
- waving and crisp, it fell around the white face.
-
- They had gotten his arms into and his chest covered with a finely
- embroidered, pale-blue silk shirt, with soft, white tie at the throat.
- Among the many changes that had taken place during his absence,
- the fact that Freckles was most attractive and barely escaped
- being handsome remained almost unnoticed by the Boss, so great
- was his astonishment at seeing both cuffs turned back and the
- right arm in view. Freckles was using the maimed arm that
- previously he always had hidden.
-
- "Oh Lord, sir, but I'm glad to see you!" cried Freckles, almost
- rolling from the bed as he reached toward McLean. "Tell me quick,
- is the Angel well and happy? Can me Little Chicken spread six feet
- of wing and sail to his mother? How's me new father, the Bird
- Woman, Duncans, and Nellie--darling little high-stepping Nelie?
- Me Aunt Alice is going to choose the hat just as soon as I'm mended
- enough to be going with her. How are all the gang? Have they found
- any more good trees? I've been thinking a lot, sir. I believe I can
- find others near that last one. Me Aunt Alice thinks maybe I can,
- and Uncle Terence says it's likely. Golly, but they're nice,
- ilegant people. I tell you I'm proud to be same blood with them!
- Come closer, quick! I was going to do this yesterday, and somehow
- I just felt that you'd surely be coming today and I waited.
- I'm selecting the Angel's ring stone. The ring she ordered for me
- is finished and they sent it to keep me company. See? It's an
- emerald--just me color, Lord O'More says."
-
- Freckles flourished his hand.
-
- "Ain't that fine? Never took so much comfort with anything in
- me life. Every color of the old swamp is in it. I asked the Angel
- to have a little shamrock leaf cut on it, so every time I saw it I'd
- be thinking of the `love, truth, and valor' of that song she was
- teaching me. Ain't that a beautiful song? Some of these days I'm
- going to make it echo. I'm a little afraid to be doing it with me
- voice yet, but me heart's tuning away on it every blessed hour.
- Will you be looking at these now?"
-
- Freckles tilted a tray of unset stones from Peacock's that would
- have ransomed several valuable kings. He held them toward McLean,
- stirring them with his right arm.
-
- "I tell you I'm glad to see you, sir" he said. "I tried to tell me
- uncle what I wanted, but this ain't for him to be mixed up in,
- anyway, and I don't think I made it clear to him. I couldn't seem
- to say the words I wanted. I can be telling you, sir."
-
- McLean's heart began to thump as a lover's.
-
- "Go on, Freckles," he said assuringly.
-
- "It's this," said Freckles. "I told him that I would pay only three
- hundred dollars for the Angel's stone. I'm thinking that with what
- he has laid up for me, and the bigness of things that the Angel did
- for me, it seems like a stingy little sum to him. I know he thinks
- I should be giving much more, but I feel as if I just had to be
- buying that stone with money I earned meself; and that is all I
- have saved of me wages. I don't mind paying for the muff, or the
- drexing table, or Mrs. Duncan's things, from that other money, and
- later the Angel can have every last cent of me grandmother's, if
- she'll take it; but just now--oh, sir, can't you see that I have to
- be buying this stone with what I have in the bank? I'm feeling that
- I couldn't do any other way, and don't you think the Angel would
- rather have the best stone I can buy with the money I earned meself
- than a finer one paid for with other money?"
-
- "In other words, Freckles," said the Boss in a husky voice, "you
- don't want to buy the Angel's ring with money. You want to give for
- it your first awful fear of the swamp. You want to pay for it with
- the loneliness and heart hunger you have suffered there, with last
- winter's freezing on the line and this summer's burning in the sun.
- You want it to stand to her for every hour in which you risked your
- life to fulfill your contract honorably. You want the price of that
- stone to be the fears that have chilled your heart--the sweat and
- blood of your body."
-
- Freckles' eyes were filled with tears and his face quivering with feeling.
-
- "Dear Mr. McLean," he said, reaching with a caress over the Boss's
- black hair and his cheek. "Dear Boss, that's why I've wanted you so.
- I knew you would know. Now you will be looking at these? I don't
- want emeralds, because that's what she gave me."
-
- He pushed the green stones into a little heap of rejected ones.
- Then he singled out all the pearls.
-
- "Ain't they pretty things?" he said. "I'll be getting her some of
- those later. They are like lily faces, turtle-head flowers,
- dewdrops in the shade or moonlight; but they haven't the life in
- them that I want in the stone I give to the Angel right now."
-
- Freckles heaped the pearls with the emeralds. He studied the
- diamonds a long time.
-
- "These things are so fascinating like they almost tempt one, though
- they ain't quite the proper thing," he said. "I've always dearly
- loved to be watching yours, sir. I must get her some of these big
- ones, too, some day. They're like the Limberlost in January, when
- it's all ice-coated, and the sun is in the west and shines through
- and makes all you can see of the whole world look like fire and
- ice; but fire and ice ain't like the Angel."
-
- The diamonds joined the emeralds and pearls. There was left a
- little red heap, and Freckles' fingers touched it with a new
- tenderness. His eyes were flashing.
-
- "I'm thinking here's me Angel's stone," he exulted. "The
- Limberlost, and me with it, grew in mine; but it's going to bloom,
- and her with it, in this! There's the red of the wild poppies, the
- cardinal-flowers, and the little bunch of crushed foxfire that we
- found where she put it to save me. There's the light of the
- campfire, and the sun setting over Sleepy Snake Creek. There's the
- red of the blood we were willing to give for each other. It's like
- her lips, and like the drops that dried on her beautiful arm that
- first day, and I'm thinking it must be like the brave, tender,
- clean, red heart of her."
-
- Freckles lifted the ruby to his lips and handed it to McLean.
-
- "I'll be signing me cheque and you have it set," he said. "I want
- you to draw me money and pay for it with those very same dollars, sir."
-
- Again the heart of McLean took hope.
-
- "Freckles, may I ask you something?" he said.
-
- "Why, sure," said Freckles. "There's nothing you would be asking
- that it wouldn't be giving me joy to be telling you."
-
- McLean's eyes traveled to Freckles' right arm with which he was
- moving the jewels.
-
- "Oh, that!" cried Freckles with a laugh. "You're wanting to know
- where all the bitterness is gone? Well sir, 'twas carried from me
- soul, heart, and body on the lips of an Angel. Seems that hurt was
- necessary in the beginning to make today come true. The wound had
- always been raw, but the Angel was healing it. If she doesn't care,
- I don't. Me dear new father doesn't, nor me aunt and uncle, and you
- never did. Why should I be fretting all me life about what can't
- be helped. The real truth is, that since what happened to it last
- week, I'm so everlastingly proud of it I catch meself sticking it
- out on display a bit."
-
- Freckles looked the Boss in the eyes and began to laugh.
-
- "Well thank heaven!" said McLean.
-
- "Now it's me turn," said Freckles. "I don't know as I ought to be
- asking you, and yet I can't see a reason good enough to keep me
- from it. It's a thing I've had on me mind every hour since I've had
- time to straighten things out a little. May I be asking you a question?"
-
- McLean reached over and took Freckles' hand. His voice was shaken
- with feeling as he replied: "Freckles, you almost hurt me. Will you
- never learn how much you are to me--how happy you make me in coming
- to me with anything, no matter what?"
-
- "Then it's this," said Freckles, gripping the hand of McLean strongly.
- "If this accident, and all that's come to me since, had never
- happened, where was it you had planned to send me to school?
- What was it you meant for me to do?"
-
- "Why, Freckles," answered McLean, "I'm scarcely prepared to
- state definitely. My ideas were rather hazy. I thought we would
- make a beginning and see which way things went. I figured on taking
- you to Grand Rapids first, and putting you in the care of my mother.
- I had an idea it would be best to secure a private tutor to coach you
- for a year or two, until you were ready to enter Ann Arbor or the
- Chicago University in good shape. Then I thought we'd finish in
- this country at Yale or Harvard, and end with Oxford, to get a
- good, all-round flavor."
-
- "Is that all?" asked Freckles.
-
- "No; that's leaving the music out," said McLean. "I intended to
- have your voice tested by some master, and if you really were
- endowed for a career as a great musician, and had inclinations that
- way, I wished to have you drop some of the college work and make
- music your chief study. Finally, I wanted us to take a trip through
- Europe and clear around the circle together"
-
- "And then what?" queried Freckles breathlessly.
-
- "Why, then," said McLean, "you know that my heart is hopelessly in
- the woods. I never will quit the timber business while there is
- timber to handle and breath in my body. I thought if you didn't
- make a profession of music, and had any inclination my way, we
- would stretch the partnership one more and take you into the firm,
- placing your work with me. Those plans may sound jumbled in the
- telling, but they have grown steadily on me, Freckles, as you have
- grown dear to me."
-
- Freckles lifted anxious and eager eyes to McLean.
-
- "You told me once on the trail, and again when we thought that I
- was dying, that you loved me. Do these things that have come to me
- make any difference in any way with your feeing toward me?"
-
- "None," said McLean. "How could they, Freckles? Nothing could make
- me love you more, and you never will do anything that will make me
- love you less."
-
- "Glory be to God!" cried Freckles. "Glory to the Almighty! Hurry
- and be telling your mother I'm coming! Just as soon as I can get on
- me feet I'll be taking that ring to me Angel, and then I'll go to
- Grand Rapids and be making me start just as you planned, only that
- I can be paying me own way. When I'm educated enough, we'll
- all--the Angel and her father, the Bird Woman, you, and me--all of
- us will go together and see me house and me relations and be taking
- that trip. When we get back, we'll add O'More to the Lumber
- Company, and golly, sir, but we'll make things hum! Good land, sir!
- Don't do that! Why, Mr. McLean, dear Boss, dear father, don't be
- doing that! What is it?"
-
- "Nothing, nothing!" boomed McLean's deep bass; "nothing at all!"
-
- He abruptly turned, and hurried to the window.
-
- "This is a mighty fine view," he said. "Lake's beautiful
- this morning. No wonder Chicago people are so proud of their city's
- location on its shore. But, Freckles, what is Lord O'More going to
- say to this?"
-
- "I don't know," said Freckles. "I am going to be cut deep if he
- cares, for he's been more than good to me, and Lady Alice is next
- to me Angel. He's made me feel me blood and race me own possession.
- She's talked to me by the hour of me father and mother and
- me grandmother. She's made them all that real I can lay claim to them
- and feel that they are mine. I'm very sorry to be hurting them, if
- it will, but it can't be changed. Nobody ever puts the width of the
- ocean between me and the Angel. From here to the Limberlost is all
- I can be bearing peaceable. I want the education, and then I want
- to work and live here in the country where I was born, and where
- the ashes of me father and mother rest.
-
- "I'll be glad to see Ireland, and glad especial to see those little
- people who are my kin, but I ain't ever staying long. All me heart
- is the Angel's, and the Limberlost is calling every minute.
- You're thinking, sir, that when I look from that window I see the
- beautiful water, ain't you? I'm not.
-
- "I see soft, slow clouds oozing across the blue, me big black
- chickens hanging up there, and a great feather softly sliding down.
- I see mighty trees, swinging vines, bright flowers, and always
- masses of the wild roses, with the wild rose face of me Ladybird
- looking through. I see the swale rocking, smell the sweetness of
- the blooming things, and the damp, mucky odor of the swamp; and I
- hear me birds sing, me squirrels bark, the rattlers hiss, and the
- step of Wessner or Black Jack coming; and whether it's the things
- that I loved or the things that I feared, it's all a part of the day.
-
- "Me heart's all me Swamp Angel's, and me love is all hers, and I
- have her and the swamp so confused in me mind I never can be
- separating them. When I look at her, I see blue sky, the sun
- rifting through the leaves and pink and red flowers; and when I
- look at the Limberlost I see a pink face with blue eyes, gold hair,
- and red lips, and, it's the truth, sir, they're mixed till they're
- one to me!
-
- "I'm afraid it will be hurting some, but I have the feeing that I
- can be making my dear people understand, so that they will be
- willing to let me come back home. Send Lady O'More to put these
- flowers God made in the place of these glass-house ilegancies, and
- please be cutting the string of this little package the Angel's
- sent me."
-
- As Freckles held up the package, the lights of the Limberlost
- flashed from the emerald on his finger. On the cover was printed:
- "To the Limberlost Guard!" Under it was a big, crisp, iridescent
- black feather.
-
-
-