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<h2> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<h3> WATER-SPOUT </h3>
<p>If Mr. Gundry was in one way right, he was equally wrong in the other.
Firm came home quite safe and sound, though smothered with snow and most
hungry; but he thought that he should have staid out all the night,
because he had failed of his errand. Jowler also was full of discontent
and trouble of conscience. He knew, when he kicked up his heels in the
snow, that his duty was to find somebody, and being of Alpine pedigree,
and trained to act up to his ancestry, he now dropped his tail with
failure.</p>
<p>"It comes to the same thing," said Sawyer Gundry; "it is foolish to be so
particular. A thousand better men have sunk through being so pig-headed.
We shall find the rogue toward the end of March, or in April, if the
season suits. Firm, eat your supper and shake yourself."</p>
<p>This was exactly the Sawyer's way—to take things quietly when
convinced that there was no chance to better them. He would always do his
best about the smallest trifle; but after that, be the matter small or
great, he had a smiling face for the end of it.</p>
<p>The winter, with all its weight of sameness and of dreariness, went at
last, and the lovely spring from the soft Pacific found its gradual way to
us. Accustomed as I was to gentler climates and more easy changes, I lost
myself in admiration of this my first Californian spring. The flowers, the
leagues and leagues of flowers, that burst into color and harmony—purple,
yellow, and delicate lilac, woven with bright crimson threads, and fringed
with emerald-green by the banks, and blue by the course of rivers, while
deepened here and there by wooded shelter and cool places, with the
silver-gray of the soft Pacific waning in far distance, and silken vapor
drawing toward the carding forks of the mountain range; and over all the
never-wearying azure of the limpid sky: child as I was, and full of little
worldly troubles on my own account, these grand and noble sights enlarged
me without any thinking.</p>
<p>The wheat and the maize were grown apace, and beans come into full
blossom, and the peaches swinging in the western breeze were almost as
large as walnuts, and all things in their prime of freshness, ere the
yellow dust arrived, when a sudden melting of snow in some gully sent a
strong flood down our Blue River. The saw-mill happened to be hard at
work; and before the gear could be lifted, some damage was done to the
floats by the heavy, impetuous rush of the torrent. Uncle Sam was away,
and so was Firm; from which, perhaps, the mischief grew. However, the
blame was all put on the river, and little more was said of it.</p>
<p>The following morning I went down before even Firm was out-of-doors, under
some touch, perhaps, of natural desire to know things. The stream was as
pure and bright as ever, hastening down its gravel-path of fine granite
just as usual, except that it had more volume and a stronger sense of
freshness. Only the bent of the grasses and the swath of the pendulous
twigs down stream remained to show that there must have been some violence
quite lately.</p>
<p>All Mr. Gundry's strengthening piles and shores were as firm as need be,
and the clear blue water played around them as if they were no constraint
to it. And none but a practiced eye could see that the great wheel had
been wounded, being undershot, and lifted now above the power of the
current, according to the fine old plan of locking the door when the horse
is gone.</p>
<p>When I was looking up and wondering where to find the mischief, Martin,
the foreman, came out and crossed the plank, with his mouth full of
breakfast.</p>
<p>"Show me," I said, with an air, perhaps, of very young importance, "where
and what the damage is. Is there any strain to the iron-work?"</p>
<p>"Lor' a mercy, young missus!" he answered, gruffly, being by no means a
polished man, "where did you ever hear of ironwork? Needles and pins is
enough for you. Now don't you go and make no mischief."</p>
<p>"I have no idea what you mean," I answered. "If you have been careless,
that is no concern of mine."</p>
<p>"Careless, indeed! And the way I works, when others is a-snorin' in their
beds! I might just as well do nort, every bit, and get more thanks and
better wages. That's the way of the world all over. Come Saturday week, I
shall better myself."</p>
<p>"But if it's the way of the world all over, how will you better yourself,
unless you go out of the world altogether!" I put this question to Martin
with the earnest simplicity of the young, meaning no kind of sarcasm, but
knowing that scarcely a week went by without his threatening to "better
himself." And they said that he had done so for seven years or more.</p>
<p>"Don't you be too sharp," he replied, with a grim smile, partly at
himself, perhaps. "If half as I heard about you is true, you'll want all
your sharpness for yourself, Miss Remy. And the Britishers are worse than
we be."</p>
<p>"Well, Martin, I am sure you would help me," I said, "if you saw any
person injuring me. But what is it I am not to tell your master?"</p>
<p>"My master, indeed! Well, you need not tell old Gundry any thing about
what you have seen. It might lead to hard words; and hard words are not
the style of thing I put up with. If any man tries hard words with me, I
knocks him down, up sticks, and makes tracks."</p>
<p>I could not help smiling at the poor man's talk. Sawyer Gundry could have
taken him with one hand and tossed him over the undershot wheel.</p>
<p>"You forget that I have not seen any thing," I said, "and understand
nothing but 'needles and pins.' But, for fear of doing any harm, I will
not even say that I have been down here, unless I am asked about it."</p>
<p>"Miss Remy, you are a good girl, and you shall have the mill some day.
Lord, don't your little great eyes see the job they are a-doin' of? The
finest stroke in all Californy, when the stubborn old chap takes to
quartz-crushing."</p>
<p>All this was beyond me, and I told him so, and we parted good friends,
while he shook his long head and went home to feed many pappooses. For the
strangest thing of all things was, though I never at that time thought of
it, that there was not any one about this place whom any one could help
liking. Martin took as long as any body to be liked, until one understood
him; but after that he was one of the best, in many ways that can not be
described. Also there was a pair of negroes, simply and sweetly
delightful. They worked all day and they sang all night, though I had not
the pleasure of hearing them; and the more Suan Isco despised them—because
they were black, and she was only brown—the more they made up to
her, not at all because she governed the supply of victuals. It was
childish to have such ideas, though Suan herself could never get rid of
them. The truth, as I came to know afterward, was that a large,
free-hearted, and determined man was at the head of every thing. Martin
was the only one who ever grumbled, and he had established a long right to
do so by never himself being grumbled at.</p>
<p>"I'll be bound that poor fellow is in a sad way," Mr. Gundry said at
breakfast-time. "He knows how much he is to blame, and I fear that he
won't eat a bit for the day. Martin is a most conscientious man. He will
offer to give up his berth, although it would be his simple ruin."</p>
<p>I was wise enough not to say a word, though Firm looked at me keenly. He
knew that I had been down at the mill, and expected me to say something.</p>
<p>"We all must have our little mistakes," continued Sawyer Gundry; "but I
never like to push a man when he feels it. I shall not say a syllable to
Martin; and, Ephraim, you will do the like. When a fellow sticks well to
his work like Martin, never blame him for a mere accident."</p>
<p>Firm, according to his habit, made no answer when he did not quite agree.
In talking with his own age he might have argued, but he did not argue
with his grandfather.</p>
<p>"I shall just go down and put it right myself. Martin is a poor hand at
repairing. Firm, you go up the gulch, and see if the fresh has hurt the
hurdles. Missy, you may come with me, if you please, and sketch me at work
in the mill-wheel. You have drawn that wheel such a sight of times, you
must know every feather of it better than the man who made it."</p>
<p>"Uncle Sam, you are too bad," I said. "I have never got it right, and I
never shall."</p>
<p>I did not dare as yet to think what really proved to be true in the end—that
I could not draw the wheel correctly because itself was incorrect. In
spite of all Mr. Gundry's skill and labor and ingenuity, the wheel was no
true circle. The error began in the hub itself, and increased, of course,
with the distance; but still it worked very well, like many other things
that are not perfect.</p>
<p>Having no idea of this as yet, and doubting nothing except my own
perception of "perspective," I sat down once more in my favorite spot, and
waited for the master to appear as an active figure in the midst of it.
The air was particularly bright and clear, even for that pure climate, and
I could even see the blue-winged flies darting in and out of the oozy
floats. But half-way up the mountains a white cloud was hanging, a cloud
that kept on changing shape. I only observed it as a thing to put in for
my background, because I was fond of trying to tone and touch up my
sketches with French chalks.</p>
<p>Presently I heard a harsh metallic sound and creaking of machinery. The
bites, or clamps, or whatever they are called, were being put on, to keep
the wheel from revolving with the Sawyer's weight. Martin, the foreman,
was grumbling and growling, according to his habit, and peering through
the slot, or channel of stone, in which the axle worked, and the cheery
voice of Mr. Gundry was putting down his objections. Being much too large
to pass through the slot, Mr. Gundry came round the corner of the
building, with a heavy leathern bag of tools strapped round his neck, and
his canvas breeches girt above his knees. But the foreman staid inside to
hand him the needful material into the wheel.</p>
<p>The Sawyer waded merrily down the shallow blue water, for he was always
like a boy when he was at work, and he waved his little skull-cap to me,
and swung himself up into the wheel, as if he were nearer seventeen than
seventy. And presently I could only see his legs and arms as he fell to
work. Therefore I also fell to work, with my best attempts at penciling,
having been carefully taught enough of drawing to know that I could not
draw. And perhaps I caught from the old man's presence and the sound of
his activity that strong desire to do my best which he seemed to impart to
every one.</p>
<p>At any rate, I was so engrossed that I scarcely observed the changing
light, except as a hindrance to my work and a trouble to my distance, till
suddenly some great drops fell upon my paper and upon my hat, and a rush
of dark wind almost swept me from the log upon which I sat. Then again all
was a perfect calm, and the young leaves over the stream hung heavily on
their tender foot-stalks, and the points of the breeze-swept grass turned
back, and the ruffle of all things smoothed itself. But there seemed to be
a sense of fear in the waiting silence of earth and air.</p>
<p>This deep, unnatural stillness scared me, and I made up my mind to run
away. But the hammer of the Sawyer sounded as I had never heard it sound.
He was much too hard at work to pay any heed to sky or stream, and the
fall of his strokes was dead and hollow, as if the place resented them.</p>
<p>"Come away, come away," I cried, as I ran and stood on the opposite bank
to him; "there is something quite wrong in the weather, I am sure. I
entreat you to come away at once, Uncle Sam. Every thing is so strange and
odd."</p>
<p>"Why, what's to do now?" asked the Sawyer, coming to my side of the wheel
and looking at me, with his spectacles tilted up, and his apron wedged in
a piece of timber, and his solid figure resting in the impossibility of
hurry. "Missy, don't you make a noise out there. You can't have your own
way always."</p>
<p>"Oh, Uncle Sam, don't talk like that. I am in such a fright about you. Do
come out and look at the mountains."</p>
<p>"I have seen the mountains often enough, and I am up to every trick of
them. There may be a corn or two of rain; no more. My sea-weed was like
tinder. There can't be no heavy storm when it is like that. Don't you make
pretense, missy, to know what is beyond you."</p>
<p>Uncle Sam was so seldom cross that I always felt that he had a right to be
so. And he gave me one of his noble smiles to make up for the sharpness of
his words, and then back he went to his work again. So I hoped that I was
altogether wrong, till a bolt of lightning, like a blue dagger, fell at my
very feet, and a crash of thunder shook the earth and stunned me. These
opened the sluice of the heavens, and before I could call out I was
drenched with rain. Clinging to a bush, I saw the valley lashed with
cloudy blasts, and a whirling mass of spiral darkness rushing like a giant
toward me. And the hissing and tossing and roaring mixed whatever was in
sight together.</p>
<p>Such terror fell upon me at first that I could not look, and could
scarcely think, but cowered beneath the blaze of lightning as a singed
moth drops and shivers. And a storm of wind struck me from my hold, so
that I fell upon the wet earth. Every moment I expected to be killed, for
I never could be brave in a thunder-storm, and had not been told much in
France of God's protection around me. And the darts of lightning hissed
and crossed like a blue and red web over me. So I laid hold of a little
bent of weed, and twisted it round my dabbled wrist, and tried to pray to
the Virgin, although I had often been told it was vanity.</p>
<p>Then suddenly wiping my eyes, I beheld a thing which entirely changed me.
A vast, broad wall of brown water, nearly as high as the mill itself,
rushed down with a crest of foam from the mountains. It seemed to fill up
all the valley and to swallow up all the trees; a whole host of animals
fled before it, and birds, like a volley of bullets, flew by. I lost not a
moment in running away, and climbing a rock and hiding. It was base,
ungrateful, and a nasty thing to do; but I did it almost without thinking.
And if I had staid to cry out, what good could I have done—only to
be swept away?</p>
<p>Now, as far as I can remember any thing out of so much horror, I must have
peeped over the summit of my rock when the head of the deluge struck the
mill. But whether I saw it, or whether I knew it by any more summary
process, such as outruns the eyes sometimes, is more than I dare presume
to say. Whichever way I learned it, it was thus:</p>
<p>A solid mass of water, much bigger than the mill itself, burst on it,
dashed it to atoms, leaped off with it, and spun away the great wheel
anyhow, like the hoop of a child sent trundling. I heard no scream or
shriek; and, indeed, the bellow of a lion would have been a mere whisper
in the wild roar of the elements. Only, where the mill had been, there was
nothing except a black streak and a boil in the deluge. Then scores of
torn-up trees swept over, as a bush-harrow jumps on the clods of the
field; and the unrelenting flood cast its wrath, and shone quietly in the
lightning.</p>
<p>"Oh, Uncle Sam! Uncle Sam!" I cried. But there was not a sign to be seen
of him; and I thought of his gentle, good, obstinate ways, and my heart
was almost broken. "What a brute—what a wretch I am!" I kept saying,
as if I could have helped it; and my fear of the lightning was gone, and I
stood and raved with scorn and amazement.</p>
<p>In this misery of confusion it was impossible to think, and instinct alone
could have driven my despair to a desperate venture. With my soaked
clothes sticking between my legs, I ran as hard as they would go, by a
short-cut over a field of corn, to a spot where the very last bluff or
headland jutted into the river. This was a good mile below the mill
according to the bends of channel, but only a furlong or so from the rock
upon which I had taken refuge. However, the flood was there before me, and
the wall of water dashed on to the plains, with a brindled comb behind it.</p>
<p>Behind it also came all the ruin of the mill that had any floatage, and
bodies of bears and great hogs and cattle, some of them alive, but the
most part dead. A grand black bull tossed back his horns, and looked at me
beseechingly: he had frightened me often in quiet days, but now I was
truly grieved for him. And then on a wattle of brush-wood I saw the form
of a man—the Sawyer.</p>
<p>His white hair draggled in the wild brown flood, and the hollow of his
arms was heaped with froth, and his knotted legs hung helpless. Senseless
he lay on his back, and sometimes the wash of the waves went over him. His
face was livid, but his brave eyes open, and a heavy weight hung round his
neck. I had no time to think, and deserve no praise, for I knew not what I
did. But just as an eddy swept him near me, I made a desperate leap at
him, and clutched at something that tore my hands, and then I went under
the water. My senses, however, were not yet gone, and my weight on the
wattle stopped it, and I came up gurgling, and flung one arm round a fat,
woolly sheep going by me. The sheep was water-logged, and could scarcely
keep his own poor head from drowning, and he turned his mild eyes and
looked at me, but I could not spare him. He struck for the shore in
forlorn hope, and he towed us in some little.</p>
<p>It is no good for me to pretend to say how things were managed for us, for
of course I could do nothing. But the sheep must have piloted us to a
tree, whose branches swept the torrent. Here I let him go, and caught fast
hold; and Uncle Sam's raft must have stuck there also, for what could my
weak arm have done? I remember only to have felt the ground at last, as
the flood was exhausted; and good people came and found him and me,
stretched side by side, upon rubbish and mud.</p>
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