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<h1><span style="font-size: 173%">Book IV—The Pioneer Woman’s Story</span></h1>
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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">I</span></h2>
<p id="p0832"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Two</span></span> years after I
left Lincoln I completed my academic course at Harvard. Before I
entered the Law School I went home for the summer vacation. On the
night of my arrival <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling and Frances and Sally
came over to greet me. Everything seemed just as it used to be. My
grandparents looked very little older. Frances Harling was married
now, and she and her husband managed the Harling interests in Black
Hawk. When we gathered in grandmother’s parlor, I could hardly
believe that I had been away at all. One subject, however, we avoided
all evening.</p>
<p id="p0833">When I was walking home with Frances, after we had
left <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling at her gate, she said simply,
“You know, of course, about poor Ántonia.”</p>
<p id="p0834">Poor Ántonia! Every one would be saying that
now, I thought bitterly. I replied that
grandmother had written me how Ántonia went away to marry Larry
Donovan at some place where he was working; that he had deserted her,
and that there was now a baby. This was all I knew.</p>
<p id="p0835">“He never married her,” Frances said.
“I have n’t seen her since she came back. She lives at
home, on the farm, and almost never comes to town. She brought the
baby in to show it to mama once. I’m afraid she’s settled
down to be Ambrosch’s drudge for good.”</p>
<p id="p0836">I tried to shut Ántonia out of my mind. I was
bitterly disappointed in her. I could not forgive her for becoming an
object of pity, while Lena Lingard, for whom people had always
foretold trouble, was now the leading dressmaker of Lincoln, much
respected in Black Hawk. Lena gave her heart away when she felt like
it, but she kept her head for her business and had got on in the
world.</p>
<p id="p0837">Just then it was the fashion to speak indulgently of
Lena and severely of Tiny Soderball, who had quietly gone West to try
her fortune the year before. A Black Hawk boy, just back from Seattle,
brought the news that Tiny had not gone to the coast on a venture, as
she had allowed people to think, but with
very definite plans. One of the roving promoters that used to stop at
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener’s hotel owned idle property along the
water-front
in Seattle, and he had offered to set Tiny up in business in one of
his empty buildings. She was now conducting a sailors’
lodging-house. This, every one said, would be the end of Tiny. Even if
she had begun by running a decent place, she could n’t keep it
up; all sailors’ boarding-houses were alike.</p>
<p id="p0838">When I thought about it, I discovered that I had
never known Tiny as well as I knew the other girls. I remembered her
tripping briskly about the dining-room on her high heels, carrying a
big tray full of dishes, glancing rather pertly at the spruce
traveling men, and contemptuously at the scrubby ones—who were
so afraid of her that they did n’t dare to ask for two kinds of
pie. Now it occurred to me that perhaps the sailors, too, might be
afraid of Tiny. How astonished we would have been, as we sat talking
about her on Frances Harling’s front porch, if we could have
known what her future was really to be! Of all the girls and boys who
grew up together in Black Hawk, Tiny Soderball was
to lead the most adventurous life and to achieve the most solid
worldly success.</p>
<p id="p0839">This is what actually happened to Tiny: While she was
running her lodging-house in Seattle, gold was discovered in Alaska.
Miners and sailors came back from the North with wonderful stories and
pouches of gold. Tiny saw it and weighed it in her hands. That daring
which nobody had ever suspected in her, awoke. She sold her business
and set out for Circle City, in company with a carpenter and his wife
whom she had persuaded to go along with her. They reached Skaguay in a
snowstorm, went in dog sledges over the Chilkoot Pass, and shot the
Yukon in flatboats. They reached Circle City on the very day when some
Siwash Indians came into the settlement with the report that there had
been a rich gold strike farther up the river, on a certain Klondike
Creek. Two days later Tiny and her friends, and nearly every one else
in Circle City, started for the Klondike fields on the last steamer
that went up the Yukon before it froze for the winter. That boatload
of people founded Dawson City. Within a few weeks there were fifteen
hundred homeless men in camp. Tiny and the
carpenter’s wife began to cook for them, in a tent. The miners
gave her a lot, and the carpenter put up a log hotel for her. There
she sometimes fed a hundred and fifty men a day. Miners came in on
snowshoes from their placer claims twenty miles away to buy fresh
bread from her, and paid for it in gold.</p>
<p id="p0840">That winter Tiny kept in her hotel a Swede whose legs
had been frozen one night in a storm when he was trying to find his
way back to his cabin. The poor fellow thought it great good fortune
to be cared for by a woman, and a woman who spoke his own tongue. When
he was told that his feet must be amputated, he said he hoped he would
not get well; what could a working-man do in this hard world without
feet? He did, in fact, die from the operation, but not before he had
deeded Tiny Soderball his claim on Hunker Creek. Tiny sold her hotel,
invested half her money in Dawson building lots, and with the rest she
developed her claim. She went off into the wilds and lived on it. She
bought other claims from discouraged miners, traded or sold them on
percentages.</p>
<p id="p0841">After nearly ten years in the Klondike, Tiny
returned, with a considerable fortune,
to live in San Francisco. I met her in Salt Lake City in 1908. She was
a thin, hard-faced woman, very well-dressed, very reserved in manner.
Curiously enough, she reminded me of <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener, for
whom she had worked in Black Hawk so long ago. She told me about some
of the desperate chances she had taken in the gold country, but the
thrill of them was quite gone. She said frankly that nothing
interested her much now but making money. The only two human beings of
whom she spoke with any feeling were the Swede, Johnson, who had given
her his claim, and Lena Lingard. She had persuaded Lena to come to San
Francisco and go into business there.</p>
<p id="p0842">“Lincoln was never any place for her,”
Tiny remarked. “In a town of that size Lena would always be
gossiped about. Frisco’s the right field for her. She has a fine
class of trade. Oh, she’s just the same as she always was!
She’s careless, but she’s level-headed. She’s the
only person I know who never gets any older. It’s fine for me to
have her there; somebody who enjoys things like that. She keeps an eye
on me and won’t let me be shabby. When she thinks I need a new
dress,
she makes it and sends it home—with a bill that’s long
enough, I can tell you!”</p>
<p id="p0843">Tiny limped slightly when she walked. The claim on
Hunker Creek took toll from its possessors. Tiny had been caught in a
sudden turn of weather, like poor Johnson. She lost three toes from
one of those pretty little feet that used to trip about Black Hawk in
pointed slippers and striped stockings. Tiny mentioned this mutilation
quite casually—did n’t seem sensitive about it. She was
satisfied with her success, but not elated. She was like some one in
whom the faculty of becoming interested is worn out.</p>
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