Collected works of zane.., p.811

Collected Works of Zane Grey, page 811

 

Collected Works of Zane Grey
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  It dawned on Lucy, presently, that the air was cold. It had changed markedly in an hour. Big white stars had appeared over the tips of the pines; the sky was dark blue. The blackness of the night shadows had lighted somewhat or else her eyes had become accustomed to it. Quiet settled over the cabin, broken only by low voices and sounds from the kitchen. It struck Lucy as sad and sombre, this mantle of night descending upon the lonely cabin, yet never before had she felt such peace, such sweet solitude. By straining her ears she caught a dreamy murmur of the stream down in the gorge, and a low mourn of wind in the pines. Where were the coyotes, night hawks; whip-poor-wills, all the noisy creatures she had imagined lived in the wilderness?

  Pound of hoofs and clink of spurs became audible in the lane, approaching the cabin. Lucy heard a laugh she recognised, and low voices, merry, subtle, almost hoarse whisperings. Then the gate creaked, and the musical clink of spurs advanced toward the porch. At last Lucy made out two dark forms. They approached, and one mounted the steps, while the other stopped before Lucy. She conceived an idea that this fellow could see in the dark.

  “Wal, Miss Lucy, here’s your bags without a scratch,” said Sam Johnson’s drawling voice. “Shore I bet you was worried. How’d you find my hoss Buster?”

  “Just fine, thank you,” replied Lucy. “Full of spirit and go. Yet he obeyed promptly. I never had a slip. Now were you not trying to frighten me a little — or was it Mr. Jenks? — telling me he was some kind of a mustang?”

  “Honest, Buster’s gentle with girls,” protested Sam. “Shore he pitches when one of these long-legged Denmeades rake him. But don’t you believe what anyone tells you.”

  “Very well, I won’t. Buster is a dandy little horse.”

  “Wal, then, you’re invited to ride him again,” said Sam, with subtle inflection.

  “Oh, thank you,” replied Lucy. “I — I’ll be pleased — if my work allows me any spare time.”

  “Howdy, Sam!” interposed Allie, from the kitchen door. “Who’re you goin’ to take to the dance?”

  “Wal, I ain’t shore, jest yet,” he returned. “Reckon I know who I’d like to take.”

  “Sadie told me you asked her.”

  “Did she?...Sent her word. But she didn’t send none back,” protested Sam lamely.

  “Sam, take a hunch from me. Don’t try to shenanegin out of it now,” retorted Allie, and retreated into the kitchen.

  Lucy was both relieved and amused at Allie’s grasp of the situation. No doubt Sam had been approaching another invitation.

  Denmeade’s heavy footfall sounded on the porch, accompanied by the soft pad of a dog trotting. “That you, Sam? How’s yore folks?”

  “Tip top,” replied Sam shortly.

  “Get down an’ come in,” drawled Denmeade as the other shuffled restlessly.

  “Reckon I’ll be goin’,” said Sam. “I’ve a packhoss waitin’...Evenin’, Miss Lucy. Shore I hope to see you at the dance.”

  “I hardly think you will,” replied Lucy. “Thank you for fetching my baggage.”

  Sam’s tall form disappeared in the gloom. The gate creaked as if opened and shut with forceful haste. Almost directly followed the sound of hoofs going off into the darkness.

  “Hey, Sam!” called Joe, coming out of the cabin, where he had carried Lucy’s grips.

  “He’s gone,” said his father laconically.

  “Gone! Why, the dinged galoot had somethin’ of mine! Funny, him runnin’ off. He shore was rarin’ to get here. Never saw him make such good time on a trail. What riled him?”

  “Wal, I have an idea,” drawled Denmeade. “Allie give him a dig.”

  “I shore did,” spoke up Allie, from the kitchen, where evidently she heard what was going on outside. “It’s a shame the way he treats Sadie.”

  Lucy began to gather snatches of the complexity of life up here. After all, how like things at home! This girl Sadie had refused to marry Edd Denmeade. There was an intimation that she was attached to Sam Johnson. On his part, Sam had manifested a slight interest in a new-comer to the country.

  Mrs. Denmeade came out of the kitchen carrying a lighted lamp, and she called Lucy to accompany her into the other cabin. She set the lamp on the high jutting shelf of the fire-place.

  “You sleep in here with the children,” she said simply.

  “Yes — that will be nice,” rejoined Lucy, peering around. Dan was asleep on the floor in a corner, his bed a woolly sheep skin, his covering a rag quilt. Mary and the twins were fast asleep in one of the beds. Lucy stepped close to peer down at them. Liz and Lize lay at the foot, curly fair heads close together. Their faces had been washed and now shone sweet and wan in the lamplight. Their chubby hands were locked. Mary lay at the head of the bed, and her thin face bore a smile as if she were having pleasant dreams.

  “Where — shall I wash?” asked Lucy, with diffidence.

  “You’ll find water, basin, towel out on the porch...Good night. I reckon you’re tired. Hope you sleep good.”

  Lucy bade her hostess good night, and turned musingly to the opening of one of her grips. She could hear the low breathing of the sleepers. Somehow, to be there with them, under such circumstances, touched her deeply. It was for the sake of such as they that she had forsaken personal comfort and better opportunities. Despite a somewhat depressed spirit, Lucy could not regret her action. If only she won their love and taught them fine, clean, wholesome ways with which to meet their hard and unlovely futures! That would transform her sacrifice into a blessing.

  The room was cold. A fire in the big stone fireplace would have been much to her liking. By the time she got ready for bed she was chilled through. Before blowing out the lamp she took a last look at the slumbering children. They seemed so still, so calm, so white and sweet. Lucy trembled for them, in a vague realisation of life. Then, with some difficulty she opened one of the windows. Once in bed, she stretched out in aching relief. That long ride, especially on the horse, had cramped and chafed her. The bed was as cold and hard as ice. There were no sheets. The blankets under her did not do much to soften the feel of what she concluded was a mattress filled with corn husks. It rustled like corn husks, though it might have been coarse straw. The coverings were heavy rag quilts.

  Nevertheless, Lucy had never before been so grateful for a bed. If this bed was good enough for those innocent and happy and unfortunate children, it was good enough for her. Unfortunate! She pondered. She would have to learn as much as she taught.

  She heard heavy boots and the jangle of spurs on the porch, the unrolling of one of the canvas packs, faint voices from the kitchen, and then footsteps over her head in the attic. One of the boys spoke up there. Probably that was where they slept. Lucy now remembered seeing the ladder that led from the middle porch to a wide hole in the ceiling. She wondered where the rest of the Denmeades slept. No doubt she was robbing father and mother of their room and bed.

  Gradually all sounds ceased, except the faint murmur of water and wind, out in the woods. Lucy grew warm and sleepy. Yet so novel and strange were her sensations that she fought off the drowsy spell. She was really there up in the backwoods. She could scarcely credit it. The blackness of the room, the silence, the unfamiliar fragrance of pine and wood smoke, were like unrealities of a dream. She lived over the whole journey and would not have changed any of it. Suddenly the stillness broke to a deep-ringing, long-drawn bay of a hound. It made her flesh creep. How it rang out the truth of her presence in the wild forest, in the hard bed of these lowly pioneers! The home that had failed her was gone for ever. The one person she had loved most — her sister Clara — had failed her. And in the lonely darkness she wept, not as on the night before, childishly and unrestrainedly, but with sorrow for loss and gratefulness for the future that promised so much.

  She would be happy to face the morrow, come what might. It could only bring another kind of strife, that in itself might be good for her soul. With such hope and a prayer that it would be so she fell asleep.

  Chapter IV

  LUCY AWAKENED IN a half-conscious dream that she was in a place unfamiliar to her. Before she opened her eyes she smelled wood smoke. Then she saw that daylight had come, and she was looking at her open window through which blue smoke and sunlight were pouring in. Bewildered, she gazed around this strange room — bare wood and clay walls — big stone fire-place — rude ceiling of poles and shingles. Where was she?

  With a start she raised on her elbow. Then the effort that cost her, the sense of sore muscles, and the rustling of the corn-husk mattress brought flashing to memory her long ride of yesterday and the backwoods home of the Denmeades.

  She was surprised, and somewhat mortified, to see that the children were up and gone. On the moment Lucy heard the patter of their feet outside on the porch and the ringing strokes of an axe on hard wood. Whereupon she essayed to hop out of bed. She managed it all right, but not without awkwardness and pain.

  “Oh, I’m all crippled!” she cried ruefully. “That ride!...And say, it’s Greenland’s icy mountains here.”

  The plain, substantial woollen garments that she had brought for cold weather were going to be welcome now. Lucy dressed in less time than ever before in her life. Then with soap, towel, comb, and brush she sallied out on the porch and round to the side of the cabin. The children were in the kitchen. An old man sat on a bench. He was thin, grey, with cadaverous cheeks, a pointed chin bristling with stubby beard.

  “Good mawnin’,” he said.

  Lucy greeted him and asked where the water was.

  “I jest fetched some,” he said, pointing to a stand at the end of the porch. “Right pert this mawnin’. I reckon the frost won’t do them peach blossoms no good.”

  Lucy indeed found the water pert. Her ablutions, owing to her impetuosity, turned out to be an ordeal. Evidently the old fellow had watched her with interest, for as she finished her hair and turned back he said with a huge grin, “Rosy cheeks!”

  “Thanks,” replied Lucy brightly. “I’m Lucy Watson. I didn’t meet you last night.”

  “Nope. But I seen you. I’m Lee’s oldest brother. Thar’s four of us brothers hyar in the woods. Uncle Bill the kids call me.”

  Upon her way back to the room she encountered the extremely tall young Denmeade who appeared too bashful to return her greeting. Lucy hurriedly put her things away and made her bed, then presented herself at the kitchen door, to apologise for being late.

  “Reckon you’d be tired, so I wouldn’t let the children call you,” replied Mrs. Denmeade. “Come an’ eat.”

  They were having breakfast in the kitchen. Mary was the only one of the children to answer Lucy’s greeting. Dan did not appear bashful, but his mouth was so full he could not speak. Mrs. Denmeade and Mertie were sitting at the table, while Allie stood beside the big stove. They did not seem stolid or matter-of-fact; they lacked expression of whatever they did feel. Lucy sat down to ham, eggs, biscuits, coffee. “Some of Edd’s honey,” indicated Mrs. Denmeade, with pride, as she placed a pan before her. Lucy was hungry. She enjoyed her breakfast, and as for the honey, she had never tasted anything so delicious, so wild and sweet of flavour.

  After breakfast, Lucy was greatly interested in the brief preparations for school. Dan had to be forced away from the table. He was bareheaded and barefooted. Lucy went out to the gate with him and Mary. Dick was coming up the lane, leading two little grey lop-eared burros and a pony, all saddled. Dan climbed on one burro and Mary the other. Mertie came out carrying small tin buckets, one of which she handed to each of the children. Mary seemed reluctant to leave Lucy, but Dan rode off down the lane, mightily unconcerned. Mertie mounted the pony, and then had her brother hand up books and bucket. She smiled at Lucy. “You must get the boys to lend you a horse, so you can ride down to school with us,” she said.

  “That’ll be fine,” replied Lucy. “But the ride I had yesterday was enough for a while. I’m afraid I’m a tenderfoot.”

  Dick picked up a bucket and a rifle, and made ready to start.

  “Do you walk to school?” queried Lucy, smiling. “Yes’m, I like walkin’,” he replied.

  “Look at his legs,” said Mertie. “Pa says Dick can outwalk any of them, even Edd.”

  “He does look as if he could take long steps,” returned Lucy, laughing.

  “Reckon it’d be nice if you could teach us at home,” said Dick shyly.

  “Yes, it would, and I shall teach you a good deal,” replied Lucy. “But I’m not a regular school teacher.”

  Lucy watched them go down the lane after Dan and was unexpectedly stirred at sight of the little procession. When she turned back up the path, Mrs. Denmeade met her.

  “They’re gone. It was fun to see the little burros,” said Lucy. “How far do they have to ride, and why does Dick carry the gun?”

  “It’s five miles. Woods all the way. An’ Dick doesn’t pack that gun for fun. There’s bears an’ cats. An’ hydrophobia skunks. I’m afraid of them, But when Dick’s with the children I don’t worry.”

  “What in the world are hydrophobia skunks?” queried Lucy.

  “Nothin’ but polecats with hydrophobia,” replied the other. “Lee reckons the skunks get bitten by coyotes that have hydrophobia. It makes the skunks crazy. They come right for you. If you ever run across a pretty white-an’-black cat with a bushy tail — you run!”

  “I will indeed,” declared Lucy. “An ordinary skunk is bad enough. But this kind you tell of must be dreadful.”

  “Wal, Miss Lucy, this is wash-day for us,” said Mrs. Denmeade. “An’ we never seem to have time enough to do all the work. But I want to help you get started. Now if you’ll tell me—”

  “Mrs. Denmeade, don’t you worry one minute,” interrupted Lucy. “I’m here to help you. And I shall lend a hand whenever I can. As for my work, all I want is your permission to plan for what I think necessary — to buy things and make things for the house.”

  “Reckon I’m glad to agree on anythin’ you want,” replied Mrs. Denmeade. “Just call on me, an’ Lee or the boys.”

  As they walked up the patch to the cabin Lucy was telling Mrs. Denmeade how it had been the decision of the welfare board to endeavour to teach the people living in remote districts to make things that would further easier and better living.

  Denmeade, coming from the fields, apparently, met them and could not help but hear something of what Lucy said. It brought the broad grin to his weather-beaten face.

  “Wife,” he said, as he surveyed Lucy from head to foot, “this hyar city girl has got sense. An’ she looks like she might grow into a strappin’ fine young woman. ‘To work with their hands,’ she says. She’s hit it plumb. That’s all we ever done in our lives. That’s why we never learned new tricks...All the same, if Miss Lucy teaches us somethin’, we can do the same for her.”

  “I certainly expect you to,” said Lucy gladly. “I’d like to learn to take care of a horse, chop wood, and line bees.”

  Denmeade let out a hearty laugh.

  “Wal, now, listen to her,” he ejaculated. “Take care, young woman, an’ don’t let my boy Edd hear you say you want to line bees. ‘Cause if you do he’ll shore take you. An’ say, mebbe hangin’ to that long legged boy when he’s on a bee line, mebbe it ain’t work!”

  “All the same, I shall ask him to take Mertie and me sometime,” declared Lucy.

  “You couldn’t hire Mertie to tramp up an’ down these woods all day for anythin’, let alone bees,” replied Mrs. Denmeade with scorn. “Mertie sews clothes for herself or me all day, an’ shore she dances all night. But she’s not like the rest of the Denmeades. I reckon Dick would be the best one to go with you an’ Edd.”

  “Wal, how’d you like to help me an’ Uncle Bill plough to-day?” asked Denmeade quizzingly.

  “Plough! Oh, that would be a little too much for me just yet!” laughed Lucy. “Why, that ride yesterday knocked me out! I’m stiff and sore this morning.”

  “Shore. That’s no easy trail to anyone new to hosses,” said Denmeade.

  “Mr. Denmeade, I’d like to accept the loan of that tent the school-teacher offered,” rejoined Lucy. “I think I could make myself very comfortable and I would not be depriving you and your wife of your room.”

  “Shore. Anythin’ you like. Reckon the boys could make a tent tight enough to keep out bugs, snakes, dogs, wild cats, lions an’ bears — an’ mebbe hydrophobia skunks.”

  “Goodness!...Mr. Denmeade, you’re teasing me,” exclaimed Lucy.

  “Wal, reckon I was,” he replied. “Fact is, though, it ain’t a bad idee. Summer is comin’ an’ the weather will soon get fine fer sleepin’ outdoors. I seen the way Jenks had his tent fixed. Reckon me an’ the boys can do it. But to-day we want to get through ploughin’ before the rain...See them clouds comin’ up out of the south-west? That means storm. Mebbe to-night or to-morrow or next day — but storm shore an’ sartin.”

  “I hope Edd gets in before the rain,” said Mrs. Denmeade. “Mertie would be sick if her new dress got spoiled.”

  “Ahuh! I reckon,” returned Denmeade gruffly. Then as Lucy mounted the steps to the porch he said to her, “You have the run of the place now, Miss Lucy, an’ you can call on me or the boys any time.”

  “Who’s the best carpenter?” queried Lucy.

  “Wal, I reckon Dick is shore handy with tools,” replied Denmeade. “An’ he has time before an’ after school. But tools is all-fired scarce about hyar.”

  “Can we buy them at Cedar Ridge?”

  “Shore. An’ I reckon someone will be ridin’ down after the dance.”

  Lucy did not need to spend much more time looking around the cabins, inside or outside. The possessions of the Denmeades were so few that a glance had sufficed to enumerate them. Manifestly also their wants were few. But the comfort and health of a home did not depend upon how little was necessary. The children of pioneers should have some of the conveniences of civilisation. Lucy did not under-estimate the problem on her hands.

 

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