<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<h3>ALONE ON THE MOUNTAIN</h3></div>
<p>For the first two days of Harry King’s absence Madam
Manovska relapsed into a more profound melancholy, and
the care of her mother took up Amalia’s time and thoughts
so completely as to give her little for indulging her own
anxiety for Harry’s safety. Strangely, she felt no fear
for themselves, although they were thus alone on the mountain
top. She had a sense of security there which she had
never felt in the years since she had been taken from the
convent to share her parents’ wanderings. She made an
earnest effort to divert and arouse her mother and succeeded
until Madam Manovska talked much and volubly in Polish,
and revealed more of the thoughts that possessed her in
the long hours of brooding than she had ever told Amalia
before. It seemed that she confidently expected the return
of the men with her husband, and that the message
she had sent by Larry Kildene would surely bring him. The
thought excited her greatly, and Amalia found it necessary
to keep continual watch lest she wander off down the trail
in the direction they had taken, and be lost.</p>
<p>For a time Amalia tried to prevent Madam Manovska
from dwelling on the past, until she became convinced that
to do so was not well, since it only induced the fits of brooding.
She then decided to encourage her mother to speak
freely of her memories, rather than to keep them locked in
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_253' name='page_253'></SPAN>253</span>
her own mind. It was in one of these intervals of talkativeness
that Amalia learned the cause of that strange cry that
had so pierced her heart and startled her on the trail.</p>
<p>They had gone out for a walk, as the only means of inducing
her mother to sleep was to let her walk in the clear air
until so weary as to bring her to the point of exhaustion.
This time they went farther than Amalia really intended,
and had left the paths immediately about the cabin, and
climbed higher up the mountain. Here there was no trail
and the way was rough indeed, but Madam Manovska
was in one of her most wayward moods and insisted on
going higher and farther.</p>
<p>Her strength was remarkable, but it seemed to be strength
of will rather than of body, for all at once she sank down,
unable to go forward or to return. Amalia led her to the
shade of a great gnarled tree, a species of fir, and made her
lie down on a bed of stiff, coarse moss, and there she pillowed
her mother’s head on her lap. Whether it was something
in the situation in which she found herself or not, her
mother began to tell her of a time about which she had
hitherto kept silent. It was of the long march through heat
and cold, over the wildest ways of the earth to Siberia, at
her husband’s side.</p>
<p>She told how she had persisted in going with him, even
at the cost of dressing in the garb of the exiles from the
prisons and pretending to be one of the condemned. Only
one of the officers knew her secret, who for reasons of humanity––or
for some other feeling––kept silence. She
carried her child in her arms, a boy, five months old, and
was allowed to walk at her husband’s side instead of following
on with the other women. She told how they carried a
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few things on their backs, and how one and another of
the men would take the little one at intervals to help her,
and how long the marches were when the summer was on
the wane and they wished to make as much distance as
possible before they were delayed by storms and snow.</p>
<p>Then she told how the storms came at last, and how her
baby fell ill, and cried and cried––all the time––and how
they walked in deep snow, until one and another fell by the
way and never walked farther. She told how some of the
weaker ones were finally left behind, because they could
get on faster without them, but that the place where they
were left was a terrible one under a cruel man, and that
her child would surely have died there before the winter
was over, and that when she persisted in keeping on with
her husband, they beat her, but at last consented on condition
that she would leave her baby boy. Then how she
appealed to the officer who knew well who she was and that
she was not one of the condemned, but had followed her husband
for love, and to intercede for him when he would have
been ill-treated; and that the man had allowed her to have
her way, but later had demanded as his reward for yielding
to her, that she no longer belong to her husband, but to
him.</p>
<p>Looking off at the far ranges of mountains with steady
gaze, she told of the mountains they had crossed, and the
rushing, terrible rivers; and how, one day, the officer who
had been kind only that he might be more cruel, had determined
to force her to obedience, and how he grew very
angry––so angry that when they had come to a trail that
was well-nigh impassable, winding around the side of a
mountain, where was a fearful rushing river far below them,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_255' name='page_255'></SPAN>255</span>
and her baby cried in her arms for cold and hunger, how he
had snatched the child from her and hurled it over the
precipice into the swift water, and how she had shrieked
and struck him and was crazed and remembered no more
for days, except to call continually on God to send down
curses on that officer’s head. She told how after that they
were held at a certain station for a long time, but that she
was allowed to stay by her husband only because the officer
feared the terrible curses she had asked of God to descend
on that man, that he dared no more touch her.</p>
<p>Then Amalia understood many things better than ever
before, and grew if possible more tender of her mother.
She thought how all during that awful time she had been
safe and sheltered in the convent, and her life guarded;
and moreover, she understood why her father had always
treated her mother as if she were higher than the angels
and with the courtesy and gentleness of a knight errant.
He had bowed to her slightest wish, and no wonder her
mother thought that when he received her request to return
to her, and give up his hope, he would surely come to her.</p>
<p>More than ever Amalia feared the days to come if she
could in no way convince her mother that it was not expedient
for her father to return yet. To say again that he
was dead she dared not, even if she could persuade Madam
Manovska to believe it; for it seemed to her in that event
that her mother would give up all interest in life, and die of
a broken heart. But from the first she had not accepted the
thought of her husband’s death, and held stubbornly to the
belief that he had joined Harry King to find help. He had,
indeed, wandered away from them a few hours after the
young man’s departure and had been unable to find his
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_256' name='page_256'></SPAN>256</span>
way back, and, until Larry Kildene came to them, they had
comforted themselves that the two men were together.</p>
<p>Much more Madam Manovska told her daughter that
day, before she slept; and Amalia questioned her more
closely than she had ever done concerning her father’s faith.
Thereafter she sat for a long time on the bank of coarse moss
and pondered, with her mother’s head pillowed on her lap.
The sun reached the hour of noon, and still the mother
slept and the daughter would not waken her.</p>
<p>She took from the small velvet bag she always carried with
her, a crisp cake of corn meal and ate to satisfy her sharp
hunger, for the keen air and the long climb gave her the
appetite belonging to the vigorous health which was hers.
They had climbed that part of the mountain directly behind
the cabin, and from the secluded spot where they sat she
could look down on it and on the paths leading to it;
thankful and happy that at last they were where all was
so safe, no fear of intrusion entered her mind. Even her
first anxiety about the Indians she had dismissed.</p>
<p>Now, as her eyes wandered absently over the far distance
and dropped to the nearer hills, and on down to the cabin
and the patch of cultivated ground, what was her horror
to see three figures stealing with swift, gliding tread toward
the fodder shed from above, where was no trail, only
such rough and wild hillside as that by which she and her
mother had climbed. The men seemed to be carrying something
slung between them on a pole. With long, gliding
steps they walked in single file as she had seen the Indians
walk on the plains.</p>
<p>She drew in her breath sharply and clasped her hands
in supplication. Had those men seen them? Devoutly
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_257' name='page_257'></SPAN>257</span>
she prayed that they might not look up toward the heights
where she and her mother sat. As they continued to descend
she lost sight of them among the pines and the undergrowth
which was more vigorous near the fall, and then
they appeared again and went into the cabin. She thought
they must have been in the fodder shed when she lost sight
of them, and now she waited breathlessly to see them emerge
from the cabin. For an hour she sat thus, straining her
eyes lest she miss seeing them when they came forth, and
fearing lest her mother waken. Then she saw smoke issuing
from the cabin chimney, and her heart stopped its beating.
What! Were they preparing to stay there? How
could her mother endure the cold of the mountain all night?</p>
<p>Then she began to consider how she might protect her
mother after the sun had gone from the cold that would
envelop them. Reasoning that as long as the Indians
stayed in the cabin they could not be seen by them, she
looked about for some projecting ledge under which they
might creep for the night. Gently she lifted her mother’s
head and placed it on her own folded shawl, and, with an
eye ever on the cabin below, she crept further up the side
of the mountain until she found a place where a huge rock,
warmed by the sun, projected far out, and left a hollow
beneath, into which they might creep. Frantically she
tore off twigs of the scrubby pines around them, and made
a fragrant bed of pine needles and moss on which to rest.
Then she woke her mother.</p>
<p>Sane and practical on all subjects but the one, Madam
Manovska roused herself to meet this new difficulty with
the old courage, and climbed with Amalia’s help to their
wild resting place without a word of complaint. There she
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sat looking out over the magnificent scene before her with
her great brooding eyes, and ate the coarse corn cake
Amalia put in her hands.</p>
<p>She talked, always in Polish or in French, of the men
“rouge,” and said she did not wonder they came to so good
a place to rest, and that she would give thanks to the great
God that she and her daughter were on the mountain when
they arrived. She reminded Amalia that if she had consented
to return when her daughter wished, they would
now have been in the cabin with those terrible men, and
said that she had been inspired of God to stay long on the
mountain. Contentedly, then, she munched her cake, and
remarked that water would give comfort in the eating of it,
but she smiled and made the best of the dry food. Then
she prayed that her husband might be detained until the
men were gone.</p>
<p>Amalia gave her mother the water that was left in the
bottle she had brought with her, and lamented that she had
saved so little for her. “It was so bad, not to save more for
my mamma,” she cried, giving the bottle with its lowered
contents into her mother’s hand. “I go to watch, mamma
mine. Soon will I return.”</p>
<p>Amalia went back to her point of vantage, where she
could see all about the cabin and shed. Still the smoke
poured from the chimney, and there was no sign of red men
without. It was a mountain sheep they had carried, slung
between them, and now they dressed and cooked a portion
of it, and were gorging themselves comfortably before the
fire, with many grunts of satisfaction at the finding of the
formidable owner of the premises absent. They were on
their way to Laramie to trade and sell game, and it was
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_259' name='page_259'></SPAN>259</span>
their intention to leave a portion of their mutton with Larry
Kildene; for never did they dare venture near him without
bringing a propitiatory offering.</p>
<p>The sun had set and the cold mists were blowing across
from the fall and closing around the cabin like a veil of
amethystine dye, when Amalia saw them moving about
the cabin door as if preparing to depart. Her heart rose,
and she signaled her mother, but no. They went indoors
again, and she saw them no more. In truth they had disputed
long as to whether it was best to leave before the big
man’s return, or to remain in their comfortable quarters
and start early, before day. It was the conference that
drew them out, and they had made ready to start at a
moment’s notice if he should return in the night. But as
the darkness crept on and Larry Kildene did not appear
they stretched themselves before the fire and slept, and the
two women on the mountain, hungry and cold, crept under
the mother’s cloak and lay long into the night, shivering and
listening, couched on the pine twigs Amalia had spread
under the ledge of rock. At last, clasped in each other’s
arms, they slept, in spite of fear and cold, for very weariness.</p>
<p>Amalia woke next morning to the low murmuring of a
voice. It was her mother, kneeling in the pine needles,
praying at her side. She waited until the prayer was ended,
then she rose and went out from the sheltered hollow where
they lay. “I will look a little, mamma. Wait for me.”</p>
<p>She gazed down on the cabin, but all was still. The amethystine
veil had not lifted, and no smoke came from the
chimney. She crept back to her mother’s side, and they
sat close for warmth, and waited. When the sun rose and
the clouds melted away, all the earth smiled up at them,
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and their fears seemed to melt away with the clouds. Still
they did not venture out where they thought they might be
spied from below, and time passed while they watched
earnestly for the sight of moving figures, and still no smoke
appeared from the cabin.</p>
<p>Higher and higher the sun climbed in the sky, yet they
could not bring themselves to return. Hunger pressed
them, and Amalia begged her mother to let her go a little
nearer to listen, but she would not. So they discussed together
in their own tongue and neither would allow the other
to venture below, and still no smoke issued from the chimney.</p>
<p>At last Amalia started and pressed her hand to her heart.
What did she see far along on the trail toward the desert?
Surely, a man with two animals, climbing toward the turn.
Her eyes danced for gladness as she turned a flushed face
toward her mother.</p>
<p>“Look, mamma! Far on,––no––there! It is––mamma
mine––it is ’Arry King!” The mere sight of him
made her break out in English. “It is that I must go to
him and tell him of the Indian in the cabin before he arrive.
If he come on them there, and they kill him! Oh, let me
go quickly.” At the thought of him, and the danger he
might meet, all her fears of the men “rouge” returned upon
her, and she was gone, passing with incredible swiftness
over the rough way, to try to intercept him before he could
reach the cabin.</p>
<p>But she need not have feared, for the Indians were long
gone. Before daybreak they had passed Harry where he
rested in the deep dusk of the morning, without knowing
he was near. With swift, silent steps they had passed down
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the trail, taking as much of Larry Kildene’s corn as they
could carry, and leaving the bloody pelt of the sheep and
a very meager share of the mutton in exchange. Hungry
and footsore, yet eager and glad to have come home successfully,
Harry King walked forward, leading his good
yellow horse, his eyes fixed on the cabin, and wondering
not a little; for he, too, saw that no smoke was issuing from
the chimney.</p>
<p>He hastened, and all Amalia’s swiftness could not bring
her to him before he reached his goal. He saw first the
bloody pelt hanging beside the door, and his heart stood
still. Those two women never could have done that!
Where were they? He dropped the leading strap, leaving
the weary horses where they stood, and ran forward to
enter the cabin and see the evidence of Indians all about.
There were the clean-picked bones of their feast and the
dirt from their feet on Amalia’s carefully kept floor. The
disorder smote him, and he ran out again in the sun. Looking
this way and that, he called and listened and called
again. Why did no answer reach him? Poor Amalia!
In her haste she had turned her foot and now, fainting with
pain, and with fear for him, she could not find her voice to
reply.</p>
<p>He thought he heard a low cry. Was it she? He ran
again, and now he saw her, high above him, a dark heap on
the ground. Quickly he was by her side, and, kneeling, he
gathered her in his arms. He forgot all but that she was
living and that he held her, and he kissed her white face
and her lips, and said all the tender things in his heart.
He did not know what he was saying. He only knew that
he could feel her heart beat, and that she was opening her
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_262' name='page_262'></SPAN>262</span>
eyes, and that with quivering arms she clasped his neck,
and that her tears wet his cheek, and that, over and over,
her lips were repeating his name.</p>
<p>“’Arry––’Arry King! You are come back. Ah, ’Arry
King, my heart cry with the great gladness they have not
killed you.”</p>
<p>All in the same instant he bethought himself that he
must not caress her thus. Yet filled with a gladness he
could not fathom he still clung to her and still murmured
the words he meant never to speak to her. One thing he
could do. One thing sweet and right to do. He could
carry her to the cabin. How could she reach it else?
His heart leaped that he had at least that right.</p>
<p>“No, ’Arry King. You have walk the long, hard way,
and are very weary.” But still he carried her.</p>
<p>“Put me down, ’Arry King.” Then he obeyed her, and
set her gently down. “I am too great a burden. See,
thus? If you help me a little––it is that I may hop––It
is better, is not?”</p>
<p>She smiled in his face, but he only stooped and lifted her
again in his arms. “You are not a burden, Amalia. Put
your arms around my neck, and lean on me.”</p>
<p>She obeyed him, and he could say no more for the beating
of his heart. Carefully and slowly he made his way, setting
his feet cautiously among the stones that obstructed his
path. Madam Manovska from her heights above saw how
her daughter was being carried, and, guessing the trouble,
snatched up the velvet bag Amalia had dropped in her
haste, flung her cloak about her, and began to thread her
way down, slowly and carefully; for, as she said to herself,
“We must not both break the bones at one time.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_263' name='page_263'></SPAN>263</span></div>
<p>To Harry it seemed no sound was ever sweeter than
Amalia’s low voice as she coaxed him brokenly to set her
down and allow her to walk.</p>
<p>“This is great foolishness, ’Arry King, that you carry me.
Put me down that you rest a little.”</p>
<p>“I can’t, Amalia.”</p>
<p>“You have walk all the long trail––I saw you walk––and
lead those horse, for only to bring our box. How my
heart can thank you is not possible. ’Arry King, you are
so weary––put me down.”</p>
<p>“I can’t, Amalia,” again was all he said. So he held her,
comforting his heart that he had this right, until he drew
near the cabin, and there Amalia saw the pelt of the sheep
hung upon the wall of the cabin, pitifully dangling, bloody
and ragged. Strangely, at the sight quite harmless, yet
gruesome, all her fortitude gave way. With a cry of terror
she hid her face and clung to him.</p>
<p>“No, no. I cannot go there––not near it––no!”</p>
<p>“Oh, you brave, sweet woman! It is only a skin.
Don’t look at it, then. You have been frightened. I see
how you have suffered. Wait. There––no, don’t put
your foot to the ground. Sit on this hillock while I take it
away.”</p>
<p>But she only clung to him the more, and sobbed convulsively.
“I am afraid––’Arry King. Oh, if––if––they
are there still! Those Indian! Do not go there.”</p>
<p>“But they are gone; I have been in and they are not there.
I won’t take you into that place until I have made it fit
for you again. Sit here awhile. Amalia Manovska,––I
can’t see you weep.” So tenderly he spoke her name, with
quivering lips, reverently. With all his power he held himself
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and would dare no more. If only once more he might
touch her lips with his––only once in his renunciation––but
no. His conscience forbade him. Memory closed
upon him like a deadening cloud and drenched his hurt
soul with sorrow. He rose from stooping above her and
looked back.</p>
<p>“Your mother is coming. She will be here in a moment
and then I will set that room in order for you, and––”
his voice shook so that he was obliged to pause. He stooped
again to her and spoke softly: “Amalia Manovska, stop
weeping. Your tears fall on my heart.”</p>
<p>“Ah, what have happen, to you––to Amalia––? Those
terrible men ‘rouge’!” cried Madam Manovska, hurrying
forward.</p>
<p>“Oh, Madam, I am glad you have come. The Indians
are gone, never fear. Amalia has hurt her foot. It is
very painful. You will know what to do for her, and I
will leave her while I make things more comfortable in
there.”</p>
<p>He left them and ran to the cabin, and hastily taking
the hideous pelt from the wall, hid it, and then set himself
to cleaning the room and burning the litter of bones and
scraps left from the feast. It was horrible––yes, horrible,
that they should have had such a fright, and alone there.
Soon he went back, and again taking her in his arms, unresisted
now, he laid her on the bunk, then knelt and removed
her worn shoe.</p>
<p>“Little worn shoe! It has walked many a mile, has it
not? Did you think to ask Larry Kildene to bring you
new ones?”</p>
<p>“No, I forgot my feet.” She laughed, and the spell of
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_265' name='page_265'></SPAN>265</span>
tears was broken. The long strain of anxiety and fear and
then the sudden release had been too much. Moreover,
she was faint with hunger. Without explanation Harry
King understood. He looked to the mother for help and
saw that a change had come over her. Roused from her
apathy she was preparing food, and looking from her to
Amalia, they exchanged a glance of mutual relief.</p>
<p>“How it is beautiful to see her!” Amalia spoke low.
“It is my hurt that is good for her mind. I am glad of the
hurt.”</p>
<p>He sat with the shoe in his hand. “Will you let me bind
your ankle, Amalia? It will grow worse unless something
is done quickly.” He spoke humbly, as one beseeching a
favor.</p>
<p>“Now it is already better, you have remove the shoe.”
How he loved her quaint, rapid speech! “Mamma will
bind it, for you have to do for those horse and the mule.
I know––I have seen––to take them to drink and eat,
and take from them the load––the burden. It is the box––for
that have you risk your life, and the gladness we
feel to again have it is––is only one greater––and that is
to have you again with us. Oh, what a sorrow and terror––if
you had not come––I can never make you know.
When I see those Indian come walking after each other so
as they go––my heart cease to beat––and my body become
like the ice––for the fear. When fearing for myself,
it is bad, but when for another it is much––much––more
terrible. So have I found it.”</p>
<p>Her mother came then to attend to her hurt, interrupting
Amalia’s flow of speech, and Harry went out to the animals,
full of care and misgiving. What now could he do? How
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_266' name='page_266'></SPAN>266</span>
endure the days to come with their torture of repression?
How shield her from himself and his love––when she so
freely gave? What middle course was possible, without
making her suffer?</p>
<p>That afternoon all the events of his journey were told
to them as they questioned him keenly, and he learned by
little words and looks exchanged between them how great
had been their anxiety for him, and of their night of terror
on the mountain. But now that it was past and they were
all unhurt except for Amalia’s accident, they made light of
it. He dragged in the box, and before he left them that
night he prepared Larry’s gun, and told Amalia to let nothing
frighten her.</p>
<p>“Don’t leave the bunk, nor put your foot to the ground.
Fire the gun at the slightest disturbance, and I will surely
hear. I have another in the shed. Or I will roll myself
in my blanket, and sleep outside your door. Yes, I
will do that.”</p>
<p>Then the mother turned on him and spoke in her deep
tones: “Go to your bed, ’Arry King, and sleep well. You
have need. We asked of the good God your safety, and
our fear is gone. Good night.”</p>
<p>“Good-night.”</p>
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