<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<h3>THE BIG MAN’S RETURN</h3></div>
<p>The night was bitter cold after a day of fierce heat.
Three people climbed the long winding trail from the plains
beneath, slowly, carefully, and silently. A huge mountaineer
walked ahead, leading a lean brown horse. Seated
on the horse was a woman with long, pale face, and deeply
sunken dark eyes that looked out from under arched, dark
brows with a steady gaze that never wandered from some
point just ahead of her, not as if they perceived anything
beyond, but more as if they looked backward upon some
terror.</p>
<p>Behind them on a sorrel horse––a horse slenderer and
evidently of better stock than the brown––rode another
woman, also with dark eyes, now heavy lidded from weariness,
and pale skin, but younger and stronger and more
alert to the way they were taking. Her face was built on
different lines: a smooth, delicately modeled oval, wide at
the temples and level of brow, with heavy dark hair growing
low over the sides of the forehead, leaving the center high,
and the arch of the head perfect. Trailing along in the rear
a small mule followed, bearing a pack.</p>
<p>Sometimes the big man walking in front looked back and
spoke a word of encouragement, to which the younger of
the two women replied in low tones, as if the words were
spoken under her breath.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_184' name='page_184'></SPAN>184</span></div>
<p>“We’ll stop and rest awhile now,” he said at last, and led
the horse to one side, where a level space made it possible
for them to dismount and stretch themselves on the ground
to give their weary limbs the needed relaxation.</p>
<p>The younger woman slipped to the ground and led her
horse forward to where the elder sat rigidly stiff, declining
to move.</p>
<p>“It is better we rest, mother. The kind man asks us.”</p>
<p>“Non, Amalia, non. We go on. It is best that we not
wait.”</p>
<p>Then the daughter spoke rapidly in their own tongue,
and the mother bowed her head and allowed herself to be
lifted from the saddle. Her daughter then unrolled her
blanket and, speaking still in her own tongue, with difficulty
persuaded her mother to lie down on the mountain
side, as they were directed, and the girl lay beside her,
covering her tenderly and pillowing her mother’s head on
her arm. The big man led the animals farther on and sat
down with his back against a great rock, and waited.</p>
<p>They lay thus until the mother slept the sleep of exhaustion;
then Amalia rose cautiously, not to awaken her,
and went over to him. Her teeth chattered with the cold,
and she drew a little shawl closer across her chest.</p>
<p>“This is a very hard way––so warm in the day and so
cold in the night. It is not possible that I sleep. The cold
drives me to move.”</p>
<p>“You ought to have put part of that blanket over yourself.
It’s going to be a long pull up the mountain, and you
ought to sleep a little. Walk about a bit to warm yourself
and then try again to sleep.”</p>
<p>“Yes. I try.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_185' name='page_185'></SPAN>185</span></div>
<p>She turned docilely and walked back and forth, then
very quietly crept under the blanket beside her mother.
He watched them a while, and when he deemed she also
must be sleeping, he removed his coat and gently laid it
over the girl. By that time darkness had settled heavily
over the mountain. The horses ceased browsing among
the chaparral and lay down, and the big man stretched himself
for warmth close beside his sorrel horse, on the stony
ground. Thus in the stillness they all slept; at last, over
the mountain top the moon rose.</p>
<p>Higher and higher it crept up in the sky, and the stars
waned before its brilliant whiteness. The big man roused
himself then, and looked at the blanket under which the
two women slept, and with a muttered word of pity began
gathering weeds and brush with which to build a fire. It
should be a very small fire, hidden by chaparral from the
plains below, and would be well stamped out and the charred
place covered with stones and brush when they left it.
Soon he had steeped a pot of coffee and fried some bacon,
then he quickly put out his fire and woke the two women.
The younger sprang up, and, finding his coat over her, took
it to him and thanked him with rapid utterance.</p>
<p>“Oh, you are too kind. I am sorry you have deprive
yourself of your coat to put it over me. That is why I
have been so warm.”</p>
<p>The mother rose and shook out her skirt and glanced
furtively about her. “It is not the morning? It is the
moon. That is well we go early.” She drank the coffee
hurriedly and scarcely tasted the bacon and hard biscuit.
“It is no toilet we have here to make. So we go more
quickly. So is good.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_186' name='page_186'></SPAN>186</span></div>
<p>“But you must eat the food, mother. You will be
stronger for the long, hard ride. You have not here to
hurry. No one follows us here.”</p>
<p>“Your father may be already by the camp, Amalia––to
bring us help––yes. But of those men ‘rouge’––if
they follow and rob us––”</p>
<p>The two women spoke English out of deference to the big
man, and only dropped into their own language or into
fluent French when necessity compelled them, or they
thought themselves alone.</p>
<p>“Ah, but those red men, mother, they do not come here,
so the kind man told us, for now they are also kind. Sit
here and eat the biscuit. I will ask him.”</p>
<p>She went over to where he stood by the animals, pouring
a very little water from the cans carried by the pack
mule for each one. “They’ll have to hold out on this
for the day, but they may only have half of it now,” he
said.</p>
<p>“What shall I do?” Amalia looked with wide, distressed
eyes in his face. “She believes it yet, that my father lives
and has gone to the camp for help. She thinks we go to
him,––to the camp. How can I tell her? I cannot––I
dare not.”</p>
<p>“Let her think what satisfies her most. We can tell her
as much as is best for her to know, a little at a time, and
there will be plenty of time to do it in. We’ll be snowed up
on this mountain all winter.” The young woman did not
reply, but stood perfectly still, gazing off into the moonlit
wilderness. “When people get locoed this way, the only
thing is to humor them and give them a chance to rest
satisfied in something––no matter what, much,––only so
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_187' name='page_187'></SPAN>187</span>
they are not hectored. No mind can get well when it is
being hectored.”</p>
<p>“Hectored? That is to mean––tortured? Yes, I
understand. It is that we not suffer the mind to be tortured?”</p>
<p>“About that, yes.”</p>
<p>“Thank you. I try to comfort her. But it is to lie to
her? It is not a sin, when it is for the healing?”</p>
<p>“I’m not authority on that, Miss, but I know lying’s a
blessing sometimes.”</p>
<p>“If I could make her see the marvelous beauty of this way
we go, but she will not look. Me, I can hardly breathe for
the wonder––yet––I do not forget my father is dead.”</p>
<p>“I’m starting you off now, because it will not be so hard
on either you or the horses to travel by night, as long as
it is light enough to see the way. Then when the sun comes
out hot, we can lie by a bit, as we did yesterday.”</p>
<p>“Then is no fear of the red men we met on the plains?”</p>
<p>“They’re not likely to follow us up here––not at this
season, and now the railroad’s going through, they’re attracted
by that.”</p>
<p>“Do they never come to you, at your home?”</p>
<p>“Not often. They think I’m a sort of white ‘medicine
man’––kind of a hoodoo, and leave me alone.”</p>
<p>She looked at him with mystification in her eyes, but did
not ask what he meant, and returned to her mother.</p>
<p>“I have eaten. Now we go, is not?”</p>
<p>“Yes, mother. The kind man says we go on, and the
red men will not follow us.”</p>
<p>“Good. I have afraid of the men ‘rouge.’ Your father
knows not fear; only I know it.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_188' name='page_188'></SPAN>188</span></div>
<p>Soon they were mounted and traveling up the trail as
before, the little pack mule following in the rear. No
breeze stirred to make the frosty air bite more keenly, and
the women rode in comparative comfort, with their hands
wrapped in their shawls to keep them warm. They did
not try to converse, or only uttered a word now and then in
their own tongue. Amalia’s spirit was enrapt in the beauty
around and above and below her, so that she could not have
spoken more than the merest word for a reply had she tried.</p>
<p>The moonlight brought all the immediate surroundings
into sharp relief, and the distant hills in receding gradations
seemed to be created out of molten silver touched with
palest gold. Above, the vault of the heavens was almost
black, and the stars were few, but clear. Even the stones
that impeded the horses’ feet seemed to be made of silver.
The depths below them seemed as vast and black as the
vault above, except for the silver bath of light that touched
the tops of the gigantic trees at the bottom of the cañon
around which they were climbing.</p>
<p>The silence of this vastness was as fraught with mystery
as the scene, and was broken only by the scrambling of the
horses over the stones and their heavy breathing. Thus
throughout the rest of the night they wended steadily upward,
only pausing now and then to allow the animals to
breathe, and then on. At last a thing occurred to break
the stillness and strike terror to Amalia’s heart. It had
occurred once the day before when the silence was most
profound. A piercing cry rent the air, that began in a
scream of terror and ended in a long-drawn wail of despair.</p>
<p>Amalia slipped from her horse and stumbled over the
rough ground to her mother’s side and poured forth a stream
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_189' name='page_189'></SPAN>189</span>
of words in her own tongue, and clasped her arms about the
rigid form that did not bend toward her, but only sat staring
into the white night as if her eye perceived a sight from
which she could not turn away.</p>
<p>“Look at me, mother. Oh, try to make her look at me!”
The big man lifted her from the horse, and she relaxed into
trembling. “There, it is gone now. Walk with me,
mother;” and the two walked for a while, holding hands,
and Amalia talked unceasingly in low, soothing tones.</p>
<p>After a little time longer the moon paled and the stars
disappeared, and soon the sky became overspread with the
changing coloring and the splendor of dawn. Then the
sun rose out of the glory, but still they kept on their way
until the heat began to overcome them. Then they halted
where some pines and high rocks made a shelter, but this
time the big man did not build a fire. He gave them a little
coffee which he had saved for them from what he had
steeped during the night, and they ate and rested, and
the mother fell quickly into the sleep of exhaustion, as
before.</p>
<p>Thus during the middle of the day they rested, Amalia
and the big man sometimes sleeping and sometimes conversing
quietly.</p>
<p>“I don’t know why mother does this. I never knew her
to until yesterday. Father never used to let her look
straight ahead of her as she does now. She has always been
very brave and strong. She has done wonderful things––but
I was not there. When troubles came on my father,
I was put in a convent––I know now it was to keep me
from harm. I did not know then why I was sent away
from them, for my father was not of the religion of the good
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_190' name='page_190'></SPAN>190</span>
sisters at the convent,––but now I know––it was to save
me.”</p>
<p>“Why did troubles come on your father?”</p>
<p>“What he did I do not know, but I am very sure it was
nothing wrong. In my country sometimes men have to
break the law to do right; my mother has told me so. He
was in prison a long time when I was living in the convent,
sheltered and cared for,––and mother––mother was working
all alone to get him out––all alone suffering.”</p>
<p>“How could they keep you there if she had to work so
hard?”</p>
<p>“My father had a friend. He was not of our country,
and he was most kind and good. I think he was of Scotland––or
maybe of Ireland; I was so little I do not know.
He saved for my mother some of her money so the government
did not get it. I think my mother gave it to him,
once––before the trouble came. Maybe she knew it
would come,––anyway, so it was. I do not know if he was
Irish, or of Scotland––but he must have been a good man.”</p>
<p>“Been? Is he dead?”</p>
<p>“Yes. It was of a fever he died. My mother told me.
He gave us his name, and to my father his papers to leave
our country, for he knew he would die, or my father never
could have got out of the country. I never saw him but
once. When I saw you, I thought of him. He was grand
and good, as are you. My mother came for me at the convent
in Paris, and in the night we went to my father, and
in the morning we went to the great ship. We said McBride,
and all was well. If we had said Manovska when we
took the ship, we would have been sent back and my father
would have been killed. In the prison we would have
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_191' name='page_191'></SPAN>191</span>
died. It was hard to get on the ship, but when we got to
this country, nobody cared who got off.”</p>
<p>“How long ago was that?”</p>
<p>“It was at the time of your great war we came. My
mother wore the dress of our peasant women, and I did the
same.”</p>
<p>“And were you quite safe in this country?”</p>
<p>“For a long time we lived very quietly, and we thought
we were. But after a time some one came, and father took
him in, and then others came, and went away again, and
came again––I don’t know why––they did not tell me,––but
this I know. Some one had a great enmity against my
father, and at last mother took me in the night to a strange
place where we knew no one, and then we went to another
place––and to still another. It was very wearisome.”</p>
<p>“What was your father’s business?”</p>
<p>“My father had no business. He was what you call a
nobleman. He had very much land, but he was generous
and gave it nearly all away to his poor people. My father
was very learned and studied much. He made much
music––very beautiful––not for money––never for that.
Only after we came to this country did he so, to live. Once
he played in a great orchestra. It was then those men found
him and came so often that he had again to go away and
hide. I think they brought him papers––very important––to
be sacredly guarded until a right time should come
to reveal them.”</p>
<p>“And you have no knowledge why he was followed and
persecuted?”</p>
<p>“I was so little at the beginning I do not know. If it
was that in his religion he was different,––or if he was trying
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_192' name='page_192'></SPAN>192</span>
to change in the government the laws,––for we are not
of Russia,––I know that when he gave away his land, the
other noblemen were very angry with him, and at the court––where
my father was sent by his people for reasons––there
was a prince,––I think it was about my mother he
hated my father so,––but for what––that I never heard.
But he had my father imprisoned, and there in the prison
they––What was that word,––hectored? Yes. In the
prison they hectored him greatly––so greatly that never
more was he straight. It was very sad.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think we would say hectored, for that. I think
we would say tortured.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. I see. To hector is of the mind, but torture
is of the body. It is that I mean––for they were very
terrible to him. My mother was there, and they made her
look at it to bring him the more quickly to tell for her sake
what he would not for his own. I think when she looks
long before her at nothing, she is seeing again the tortures
of my father, and so she cries out in that terrible way. I
think so.”</p>
<p>“What were they trying to get out of him?”</p>
<p>Amalia looked up in his face with a puzzled expression for
a moment. “Get––out––of––him?” she asked.</p>
<p>“I mean, what did they want him to tell?”</p>
<p>“Ah, that I know not. It was never told. If they could
find him, I think they would try again to learn of him something
which he only can tell. I think if they could find my
mother, they would now try to learn from her what my
father knew, but her lips are like the grave. At that time
he had told her nothing, but since then––when we were far
out in the wilderness––I do not know. I hope my mother
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_193' name='page_193'></SPAN>193</span>
will never be found. Is it a very secret place to which we
go?”</p>
<p>“I might call it that––yes. I’ve lived there for twenty
years and no white man has found me yet, until the young
man, Harry King, was pitched over the edge of eternity
and only saved by a––well––a chance––likely.”</p>
<p>The young woman gazed at him wide-eyed, and drew in
her breath. “You saved him.”</p>
<p>“If he obeyed me––I did.”</p>
<p>“And all the twenty years were you alone?”</p>
<p>“I always had a horse.”</p>
<p>“But for a companion––had you never one?”</p>
<p>“Never.”</p>
<p>“Are you, too, a good man who has done a deed against
the law of your land?”</p>
<p>The big man looked off a moment, then down at her with
a little smile playing about his lips. “I never did a deed
against the law of any land that I know of, but as for the
good part––that’s another thing. I may be fairly good as
goodness goes.”</p>
<p>“Goodnessgoes!” She repeated after him as if it were
one word from which she was trying to extract a meaning.
“Was it then to flee from the wicked world that you lived
all the twenty years thus alone?”</p>
<p>“Hardly that, either. To tell the truth, it may be only a
habit with me.”</p>
<p>“Will you forgive me that I asked? It was only that to
me it has been terrible to live always in hiding and fear. I
love people, and desire greatly to have kind people near me,––but
of the world where my father and mother lived, and
at the court––and of the nobles, of all these I am afraid.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_194' name='page_194'></SPAN>194</span></div>
<p>“Yes, yes. I fancy you were.” A grim look settled
about his mouth, although his eyes twinkled kindly. He
marveled to think how trustingly they accompanied him
into this wilderness––but then––poor babes! What
else could they do? “You’ll be safe from all the courts
and nobles in the world where I’m taking
you.”</p>
<p>“That is why my eyes do not weep for my father. He is
now gone where none can find him but God. It is very
terrible that a good man should always hide––hide and
live in fear––always––even from his own kinsmen. I understand
some of the sorrows of the world.”</p>
<p>“You’ll forget it all up there.”</p>
<p>“I will try if my mother recovers.” She drew in her
breath with a little quivering catch.</p>
<p>“We’ll wake her now, and start on. It won’t do to
waste daylight any longer.” Secretly he was afraid that
they might be followed by Indians, and was sorry he had
made the fire in the night, but he reasoned that he could
never have brought them on without such refreshment.
Women are different from men. He could eat raw bacon
and hard-tack and go without coffee, when necessary, but to
ask women to do so was quite another thing.</p>
<p>For long hours now they traveled on, even after the moon
had set, in the darkness. It was just before the dawn, where
the trail wound and doubled on itself, that the sorrel horse
was startled by a small rolling stone that had been loosened
on the trail above them. Instantly the big man halted
where they were.</p>
<p>“Are you brave enough to wait here a bit by your
mother’s horse while I go on? That stone did not loosen
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_195' name='page_195'></SPAN>195</span>
itself. It may be nothing but some little beast,––if it
were a bear, the horses would have made a fuss.”</p>
<p>He mounted the sorrel and went forward, leaving her
standing on the trail, holding the leading strap of her
mother’s horse, which tossed its head and stepped about
restlessly, trying to follow. She petted and soothed the
animal and talked in low tones to her mother. Then with
beating heart she listened. Two men’s voices came down
to her––one, the big man’s––and the other––yes, she
had heard it before.</p>
<p>“It is ’Arry King, mother. Surely he has come down to
meet us,” she said joyfully. She would have hurried on,
but bethought herself she would better wait as she had been
directed. Soon the big man returned, looking displeased
and grim.</p>
<p>“Young chap couldn’t wait. He gave me his promise,
but he didn’t keep it.”</p>
<p>“It was ’Arry King?” He made no reply, and they
resumed their way as before. “It was long to wait, and
nothing to do,” she pleaded, divining his mood.</p>
<p>“I had good reasons, Miss. No matter. I sent him
back. No need of him here. We’ll make it before
morning now, and he will have the cabin warm and hot
coffee for us, if you can stand to go on for a goodish long
pull.”</p>
<p>A goodish long pull it surely was, in the darkness, but the
women bore up with courage, and their guide led them
safely. The horse Amalia rode, being his own horse, knew
the way well.</p>
<p>“Don’t try to guide him; he’ll take you quite safely,”
he called back to her. “Let the reins hang.” And in the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_196' name='page_196'></SPAN>196</span>
dusk of early morning they safely turned the curve where
Harry King had fallen, never knowing the danger.</p>
<p>Harry King, standing in the doorway of the cabin, with
the firelight bright behind him, saw them winding down the
trail and hurried forward. They were almost stupefied
with fatigue. He lifted the mother in his arms without a
word and carried her into the cabin and laid her in the
bunk, which he had prepared to receive her. He greeted
Amalia with a quiet word as the big man led her in, and
went out to the horses, relieved them of their burdens, and
led them away to the shed by the spring. Soon the big
man joined him, and began rubbing down the animals.</p>
<p>“I will do this. You must rest,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“I need none of your help,” he said, not surlily, as the
words might sound, but colorlessly.</p>
<p>“I needed yours when I came here––or you saved me and
brought me here, and now whatever you wish I’ll do, but
for to-night you must take my help. I’m not apologizing
for what I did, because I thought it right, but––”</p>
<p>“Peace, man, peace. I’ve lived a long time with no man
to gainsay me. I’ll take what comes now and thank the
Lord it’s no worse. We’ll leave the cabin to the women,
after I see that they have no fright about it, and we’ll sleep
in the fodder. There have been worse beds.”</p>
<p>“I have coffee on the hearth, hot, and corn dodgers––such
as we used to make in the army. I’ve made them
often before.”</p>
<p>“Turn the beasts free; there isn’t room for them all in
the shed, and I’ll go get a bite and join you soon.”</p>
<p>So Harry King did not return to the cabin that night,
much as he desired to see Amalia again, but lay down on
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_197' name='page_197'></SPAN>197</span>
the fodder and tried to sleep. His heart throbbed gladly
at the thought of her safety. He had not dared to inquire
after her father. Although he had seen so little of the big
man he understood his mood, and having received such great
kindness at his hands, he was truly sorry at the invasion
of his peace. Undoubtedly he did not like to have a family,
gathered from the Lord only knew where, suddenly
quartered on him for none knew how long.</p>
<p>The cabin was only meant for a hermit of a man, and
little suited to women and their needs. A mixed household
required more rooms. He tried to think the matter
through and to plan, but the effort brought drowsiness, and
before the big man returned he was asleep.</p>
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