<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<h3>A PECULIAR POSITION</h3></div>
<p>“Well, young man, we find ourselves in what I call a
peculiar position.”</p>
<p>A smile that would have been sardonic, were it not for a
few lines around the corners of his eyes which belied any
sinister suspicion, spread grimly across the big man’s face
as he stood looking down on Harry King in the dusk of the
unlighted shed. The younger man rose quickly from the
fodder where he had slept heavily after the fatigues of
the past day and night, and stood respectfully looking into
the big man’s face.</p>
<p>“I––I––realize the situation. I thought about it
after I turned in here––before you came down––or up––to
this––ahem––bedroom. I can take myself off,
sir. And if there were any way––of relieving you of––the––whole––embarrassment,––I––I––would
do so.”</p>
<p>“Everything’s quiet down at the cabin. I’ve been there
and looked about a bit. They had need of sleep. You go
back to your bunk, and I’ll take mine, and we’ll talk the
thing over before we see them again. As for your taking
yourself off, that remains to be seen. I’m not crabbed,
that’s not the secret of my life alone,––though you might
think it. I––ahem––ahem.” The big man cleared his
throat and stretched his spare frame full length on the
fodder where he had slept. With his elbow on the bed of
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_199' name='page_199'></SPAN>199</span>
corn stalks he lifted his head on his hand and gazed at Harry
King, not dreamily as when he first saw him, but with covert
keenness.</p>
<p>“Lie down in your place––a bit––lie down. We’ll
talk until we’ve arrived at a conclusion, and it may be a
long talk, so we may as well be comfortable.”</p>
<p>Harry King went back to his own bunk and lay
prone, his forehead resting on his folded arms and his face
hidden. “Very well, sir; I’ll do my best. We have to
accept each other for the best there is in us, I take it.
You’ve saved my life and the life of those two women, and
we all owe you our grat––”</p>
<p>“Go to, go to. It’s not of that I’m wishing to speak.
Let’s begin at the beginning, or, as near the beginning as
we can. I’ve been standing here looking at you while
you were sleeping,––and last night––I mean early this
morning when I came up here, I––with a torch I studied
your face well and long. A man betrays his true nature
when he is sleeping. The lines of what he has been
thinking and feeling show then when he cannot disguise
them by smiles or words. I’m old enough to be your
father––yes––so it might have been––and with your
permission I’ll talk to you straight.”</p>
<p>Harry King lifted his head and looked at the other, then
resumed his former position. “Thank you,” was all he
said.</p>
<p>“You’ve been well bred. You’re in trouble. I ask you
what is your true name and what you have done?”</p>
<p>The young man did not speak. He lay still as if he had
heard nothing, but the other saw his hands clinch into
knotted fists and the muscles of his arms grow rigid. His
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_200' name='page_200'></SPAN>200</span>
heart beat heavily and the blood roared in his ears. At
last he lifted his head and looked back at the big man and
spoke monotonously.</p>
<p>“I gave you my name––all the name I have.” His
face was white in the dim light and the lids drew close over
his gray eyes.</p>
<p>“You prefer to lie to me? I ask in good faith.”</p>
<p>“All the name I have is the one I gave you, Harry King.”</p>
<p>“And you will hold to the lie?” They looked steadily
into each other’s eyes. The young man nodded. “And
there was more I asked of you.”</p>
<p>Then the young man turned away from the keen eyes
that had held him and sat up in the fodder and clasped his
knees with his hands and looked straight out before him,
regarding nothing––nothing but his own thoughts. A
strange expression crept over his face,––was it fear––or
was it an inward terror? Suddenly he put out his hand
with a frantic gesture toward the darkest corner of the
place, “It’s there,” he cried in a voice scarcely above a
whisper, then hid his eyes and moaned. At the sight, the
big man’s face softened.</p>
<p>“Lad, lad, ye’re in trouble. I saved your body as it
hung over the cliff––and the Lord only knows how ye
were saved. I took ye home and laid ye in my own bunk,––and
looked on your face––and there my heart cried on
the Lord for the first time in many years. I had forsworn
the company of men, and of all women,––and the faith of
my fathers had died in me,––but there, as I looked on your
face––the lost years came back. And now––ye’re only
Harry King. Only Harry King.”</p>
<p>“That’s all.” The young man’s lips set tightly and the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_201' name='page_201'></SPAN>201</span>
cords of his neck stood out. Nothing was lost to the eyes
that watched him so intently.</p>
<p>“I had a son––once. I held him in my arms––for an
hour––and then left him forever. You have a face that
reminds me of one––one I hated––and it minds me of
one I––I––loved,––of one I loved better than I loved
life.”</p>
<p>Then Harry King turned and gazed in the big man’s
eyes, and as he gazed, the withdrawn, inward look left his
own. He still sat clasping his knees. “I can more easily
tell you what I have done than I can tell you my name. I
have sworn never to utter it again.” He was weeping,
but he hid his tears for very shame of them.</p>
<p>The older man shook his head. “I’ve known sorrow,
boy, but the lesson of it, never. Men say there is a thing
to be learned from sorrow, but to me it has brought only
rebellion and bitterness. So I’ve missed the good of it
because it came upon me through arrogance and injustice––not
my own. So now I say to you––if it was at the
expense of your soul I saved your life, it were better I had
let you go down. Lad,––you’ve brought me a softness,––it’s
like what a man feels for a woman. I’m glad it’s come
back to me. It is good to feel. I’d make a son of you,––but––for
the truth’s sake tell me a bit more.”</p>
<p>“I had a friend and I killed him. I was angry and killed
him. I have left my name in his grave.” Harry King
rose and walked away and stood shivering in the entrance
of the shed. Then he came back and spoke humbly. “Do
with me what you will, but call me Harry King. I have
nothing on earth but the clothes on my body, and they are
in rags. If you have work for me to do, let me do it,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_202' name='page_202'></SPAN>202</span>
in mercy. If not, let me go back to the plains and die
there.”</p>
<p>“How long ago was this?”</p>
<p>“More––more than two years ago––yes, three––perhaps.”</p>
<p>“And where have you been?”</p>
<p>“Knocking about––hiding. For a while I had work on
the road they are building––”</p>
<p>“Road? What road?”</p>
<p>“The new railroad across the continent.”</p>
<p>“Where, young man, where?”</p>
<p>“From Chicago on. They got it as far as Cheyenne, but
that was the very place of all others where they would be
apt to hunt for me. I got news of a detective hanging about
the camp, and I was sure he had come there to track me.
I had my wages and my clothes, and when I found they had
traced me there, I spent all I had for my horse and took my
pack and struck out over the plains.” He paused and
wiped the cold drops from his forehead, then lifted his head
with gathered courage. “One day,––I found these people,
nigh starving for both water and food, and without strength
to go where they could be provided for. They, too, were
refugees, I learned, and so I cast my lot with theirs, and
served them as best I could.”</p>
<p>“And now they have fallen to the two of us to provide
for. You say, give you work? I’ve lived here these twenty
years and found work for no man but myself. I’ve found
plenty of that––just to keep alive, part of the time. It’s
bad here in the winter––if the stores give out. Tell me
what you know of these women.”</p>
<p>“Where is the man?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_203' name='page_203'></SPAN>203</span></div>
<p>“Dead. I found him dead before I reached them. I
left him lying where I found him, and pushed on––got
there just in time. He wasn’t three hours away from them
as a man walks. I made them as comfortable as I could
and saw that no Indians were about, nor had been, they said;
so I ventured back and made a grave for him as best I
could, and told the daughter only, for the old lady seemed
out of her head. I don’t know what we can do with her if
she gets worse. I don’t know.” As the big man talked he
noticed the younger one growing calmer and listening
intently.</p>
<p>“Before I buried him I searched him and found a few
papers––just letters in a strange language, and from the
feeling of his coat I judged others were hid––sewed in it,
so I fetched it back to her––the young one. You thought
I was long gone, and there was where you made the blunder.
How did you suppose I came by the pack mule and the
other horse?”</p>
<p>“When I saw them, I knew you must have gone to Higgins’
Camp and back, but how could I know it before?
You might have been in need of me, and of food.”</p>
<p>“We’ll say no more of it. Those men at the camp are
beasts. I bought those animals and paid gold for them.
They wanted to know where I got the gold. I told them
where they’d never get it. They asked me ten prices for
those beasts, and then tried to keep me there until they
could clean me out and get hold of my knowledge. But I
skipped away in the night when they were all drunk and
asleep. Then I had to make a long detour to put them off
the track if they should try to follow me, and all that took
time.”</p>
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<p>The big man paused to fill and light his pipe. “And
what next?” asked Harry King.</p>
<p>“Except for enough food and water to last us up the trail
you came, I packed nothing back to the wagon, and so had
room to bring a few of their things up here, and there may
be some of your own among them––they said something
about it. We hauled the wagon as far as a good place to
hide it, in a wash, could be found, and we covered it––and
our tracks. But there was nothing
left in it but a few of their utensils, unless the box they did
not open contained something. It was left in the wagon.
That was the best I could do with only the help of the young
woman, and she was too weak to do much. It may lie
there untouched for ten years unless a rain scoops it out,
and that’s not likely.</p>
<p>“I showed the young woman as we came along where her
father lay, and as we came to a halt a bit farther on, she
went back, while her mother slept, and knelt there praying
for an hour. I doubt any good it did him, but it comforted
her heart. It’s a good religion for a woman, where she does
not have to think things out for herself, but takes a priest’s
word for it all. And now they’re here, and you’re here, and
my home is invaded, and my peace is gone, and may the
Lord help me––I can’t.”</p>
<p>Harry King looked at him a moment in silence. “Nor
can I––help––but to take myself off.”</p>
<p>“Take yourself off! And leave me alone with two
women? I who have foresworn them forever! How do
you know but that they may each be possessed by seven
devils? But there! It isn’t so bad. As long as they
stay you’ll stay. It was through you they are here, and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_205' name='page_205'></SPAN>205</span>
close on to winter,––and if it was summer, it would be as
bad to send them away where they would have no place
to stay and no way to live. Lad, the world’s hard on
women. I’ve seen much.”</p>
<p>Harry King went again and stood in the open entrance of
the shed and waited. The big man saw that he had succeeded
in taking the other’s mind off himself, and had led
him to think of others, and now he followed up the advantage
toward confidence that he had thus gained. He
also came to the entrance and laid his kindly hand on the
younger man’s shoulder, and there in the pale light of that
cloudy fall morning, standing in the cool, invigorating air,
with the sound of falling water in their ears, the two men
made a compact, and the end was this.</p>
<p>“Harry King, if you’ll be my son, I’ll be your father.
My boy would be about your age––if he lives,––but if he
does, he has been taught to look down on me––on the
very thought of me.” He cast a wistful glance at the
young man’s face as he spoke. “From the time I held him
in my arms, a day-old baby, I’ve never seen him, and it
may be he has never heard of me. He was in good hands
and was given over for good reasons, to one who hated my
name and my race––and me. For love of his mother I
did this. It was all I could do for her; I would have gone
down into the grave for her.</p>
<p>“I, too, have been a wanderer over the face of the earth.
At first I lived in India––in China––anywhere to be as
far on the other side of the earth from her grave and my
boy, as I vowed I would, but I’ve kept the memory of her
sweet in my heart. You need not fear I’ll ask again for
your name. Until you choose to give it I will respect
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your wish,––and for the rest––speak of it when you
must––but not before. I have no more to ask. You’ve
been well bred, as I said, and that’s enough for me. You’re
more than of age––I can see that––but it’s my opinion
you need a father. Will you take me?”</p>
<p>The young man drew in his breath sharply through
quivering lips, and made answer with averted head:
“Cain! Cain and the curse of Cain! Can I allow another
to share it?”</p>
<p>“Another shares it and you have no choice.”</p>
<p>“I will be more than a son. Sons hurt their fathers and
accept all from them and give little. You lifted me out of
the abyss and brought me back to life. You took on yourself
the burden laid on me, to save those who trusted me,
knowing nothing of my crime,––and now you drag my
very soul from hell. I will do more than be your son––I
will give you the life you saved. Who are you?”</p>
<p>Then the big man gave his name, making no reciprocal
demand. What mattered a name? It was the man, by
whatever name, he wanted.</p>
<p>“I am an Irishman by birth, and my name is Larry
Kildene. If you’ll go to a little county not so far from
Dublin, but to the north, you’ll find my people.”</p>
<p>He was looking away toward the top of the mountain
as he spoke, and was seeing his grandfather’s house as he had
seen it when a boy, and so he did not see the countenance
of the young man at his side. Had he done so, he would
not have missed knowing what the young man from that
moment knew, and from that moment, out of the love now
awakened in his heart for the big man, carefully concealed,
giving thanks that he had not told his name.</p>
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<p>For a long minute they stood thus looking away from
each other, while Harry King, by a mighty effort, gained
control of his features, and his voice. Then although white
to the lips, he spoke quietly: “Harry King––the murderer––be
the son of Larry Kildene––Larry Kildene––I––to
slink away in the hills––forever to hide––”</p>
<p>“No more of that. I’ll show you a new life. Give me
your hand, Harry King.” And the young man extended
both hands in a silence through which no words could have
been heard.</p>
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<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XVII_ADOPTING_A_FAMILY' id='CHAPTER_XVII_ADOPTING_A_FAMILY'></SPAN>
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