<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<h3>THE VIOLIN</h3></div>
<p>While Amalia lay recovering from the sprained ankle,
which proved to be a serious hurt, Madam Manovska continued
to improve. She took up the duties which had before
occupied Amalia only, and seemed to grow more cheerful.
Still she remained convinced that Larry Kildene
would return with her husband, and her daughter’s anxiety
as to what might be the outcome, when the big man
should arrive alone, deepened.</p>
<p>Harry King guardedly and tenderly watched over the
two women. Every day he carried Amalia out in the sun
to a sheltered place, where she might sit and work at the
fascinating lace with which her fingers seemed to be only
playing, yet which developed into webs of most intricate
design, even while her eyes were not fixed upon it, but were
glancing about at whatever interested her, or up in his face,
as she talked to him impulsively in her fluent, inverted
English.</p>
<p>Amalia was not guarded; she was lavish with her interest
in all he said, and in her quick, responsive, and poetic play
of fancy––ardent and glowing––glad to give out from
her soul its best to this man who had befriended her father
in their utmost need and who had saved her own and her
mother’s life. She knew always when a cloud gathered over
his spirit, and made it her duty to dispel such mists of some
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_268' name='page_268'></SPAN>268</span>
possible sad memory by turning his thoughts to whatever
of beauty she found around them, or in the inspiration of
her own rich nature.</p>
<p>To avoid disquieting her by the studied guardedness of
his manner, Harry employed himself as much of the time
as possible away from the cabin, often in providing game for
the winter. Larry Kildene had instructed him how to
cure and dry the meat and to store it and also how to care
for the skins, but because of the effect of that sight of the
bloody sheep’s pelt on Amalia, he never showed her a poor
little dead creature, or the skin of one. He brought her
mother whatever they required of food, carefully prepared,
and that was all.</p>
<p>He constructed a chair for her and threw over it furs from
Larry Kildene’s store, making it soft and comfortable
thereby. He made also a footstool for the hurt ankle to
rest upon, and found a beautiful lynx skin with which to
cover her feet. The back of the chair he made high, and
hinged it with leather to the seat, arranging it so that by
means of pegs it might be raised or lowered. Without
lumber, and with the most simple tools, he sawed and hewed
the logs, and lacking nails he set it together with pegs, but
what matter? It was comfortable, and in the making of
it he eased his heart by expressing his love without sorrowful
betrayal.</p>
<p>Amalia laughed as she sat in it, one day, close to the open
door, because the air was too pinching cold for her to be out.
She laughed as she put her hands in the soft fur and drew
her fingers through it, and looked up in Harry’s face.</p>
<p>“You are thinking me so foolish, yes, to have about me
the skins of poor little killed beasts? Yet I weeped all
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_269' name='page_269'></SPAN>269</span>
those tears on your coat because to see the other––yes,––hanging
beside the door. It is so we are––is not?”</p>
<p>“I’m glad enough you’re not consistent. It would be a
blot on your character.”</p>
<p>“But for why, Mr. ’Arry?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I couldn’t stand it.”</p>
<p>Again she laughed. “How it is very peculiar––that
reason you give. Not to stand it! Could you then to sit
it?” But Harry only laughed and looked away from her.
She laid her face against the soft fur. “Good little animals––to
give me your life. But some time you would die––perhaps
with sorrow of hunger and age, and the life be for
nothing. This is better.”</p>
<p>“There you’re right. Let me draw you back in the room
and close the door. It will freeze to-night, I’m thinking.”</p>
<p>“Oh, not yet, please! I have yet to see the gloryful
sky of the west. Last evening how it was beautiful! To-night
it will be more lovely to look upon for the long line
of little cloud there on which the red of the sun will burn
like fire in the heaven over the mountain.”</p>
<p>“You must enjoy the beauty, Amalia, and then pray
that there may be no snow. It looks like it, and we want
the snow to hold off until Larry comes back.”</p>
<p>“We pray, always, my mamma and I. She that he come
back quickly, and me––I pray that he come back safely––but
to be soon––it is such terror to me.”</p>
<p>“Larry will find a way out of the difficulty. He will
have an excuse all thought out for your mother. I am more
anxious about the snow with a sunset sky like that, but I
don’t know anything about this region.”</p>
<p>“Mr. ’Arry, so very clever you are in making things, can
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_270' name='page_270'></SPAN>270</span>
you help me to one more thing? I like very much to have
the sticks for lame walking,––what you call––the crutch?
Yes. I have for so long time spoken only the Polish that
I forget me greatly the English. You must talk to me
much, and make me reproof of my mistakes. Do you
know for why I like the crutch? It is that I would go each
day––many times to see the water fall down. Ah, how
that is beautiful! In the sun, or early in the morning, or in
the night, always beautiful!”</p>
<p>“You shall have the crutches, Amalia, and until I get
them made, I will carry you to the fall each day. Come,
I will take you there now. I will wrap these furs around
you, and you shall see the fall in the evening light.”</p>
<p>“No, ’Arry King. To-morrow I will try to ride on the
horse if you will lift me up on him. I will let you do this.
But you may not carry me as you have done. I am now so
strong. You may make me the crutch, yes.” Of all
things he wished her to let him carry her to the fall, but
her refusal was final, and he set about making the crutches
immediately.</p>
<p>Through the evening he worked on them, and at nightfall
the next day he brought them to her. As he came down
from his shed, carrying the crutches proudly, he heard sweet,
quavering tones in the air wafted intermittently. The wind
was still, and through the evening hush the tones strengthened
as he drew nearer the cabin, until they seemed to wrap
him in a net of interwoven cadences and fine-spun threads
of quivering melody––a net of sound, inclosing his spirit
in its intricate mesh of sweetness.</p>
<p>He paused and breathed deeply, and turned this way and
that, as if he would escape but found no way; then he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_271' name='page_271'></SPAN>271</span>
walked slowly on. At the door of the cabin he paused
again. The firelight shone through from underneath, and
a fine thread of golden light sifted through the latch of
the door and fell on the hand that held Amalia’s crutches.
He looked down on the spot of light dancing over his hand
as if he were dazed by it. Very gently he laid the crutches
across the threshold, and for a long time stood without,
listening, his head bowed as if he were praying.</p>
<p>It was her father’s violin, the one she had wept at leaving
behind her. What was she playing? Strange, old-world
melodies they seemed, tossed into the air, now laughing,
now wailing like sorrowing women voices. Oh, the violin
in her hands! Oh, the rapture of hearing it, as her soul
vibrated through it and called to him––called to him!––But
he would not hear the call. He turned sorrowfully
and went down again to the shed and there he lay upon his
face and clasped his hands above his head and whispered
her name. It was as if his heart were beating itself against
prison walls and the clasped hands were stained with blood.</p>
<p>He rose next morning, haggard and pale. The snow was
falling––falling––softly and silently. It fell like lead
upon his heart, so full of anxiety was he for the good friend
who might even then be climbing up the trail. Madam
Manovska observed his drawn face, and thought he suffered
only from anxiety and tried to comfort him. Amalia also
attempted to cover her own anxiety by assurances that the
good St. Christopher who watches over travelers would
protect Larry Kildene, because he knew so well how many
dangers there were, and that he, who had carried the Christ
with all his burden of sorrows could surely keep “Sir Kildene”
even through the snows of winter. In spite of an
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_272' name='page_272'></SPAN>272</span>
inherent and trained disbelief in all supposed legends, especially
as tenets of faith, Harry felt himself comforted by
her talk, yet he could not forbear questioning her as to her
own faith in them.</p>
<p>“Do you truly believe all that, Amalia?”</p>
<p>“All––that––? Of what––Mr. ’Arry?” She seemed
truly mystified.</p>
<p>“I mean those childish legends of the saints you often
quote?”</p>
<p>Amalia laughed. “You think I have learn them of the
good sisters in my convent, and is no truth in them?”</p>
<p>“Why––I guess that’s about it. Did your father believe
them?”</p>
<p>“Maybe no. But my father was ‘devoué’––very––but
he had a very wide thought of God and man––a thought
reaching far out––to––I find it very hard to explain. If
but you understood the French, I could tell you––but for
me, I have my father’s faith and it makes me glad to play
in my heart with these legends––as you call them.”</p>
<p>He gave her a quick, appealing glance, then turned his
gaze away. “Try to explain. Your English is beautiful.”</p>
<p>“If you eat your breakfast, then will I try.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, I will. You say he had faith reaching far out––to
where––to what?”</p>
<p>“He said there would never be rest in all the universe
until we find everywhere God,––living––creating––moving
forever in the––the––all.” She held out her
hands and extended her arms in an encompassing movement
indescribably full of grace.</p>
<p>“You mean he was a pantheist?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, no. That is to you a horror, I see, but it
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_273' name='page_273'></SPAN>273</span>
was not that.” She laughed again, so merrily that Harry
laughed, too. But still he persisted, “Amalia––never
mind what your father thought; tell me your own faith.”</p>
<p>Then she grew grave, “My faith is––just––God. In
the all. Seeing––feeling––knowing––with us––for us––never
away––in the deep night of sorrow––understanding.
In the far wilderness––hearing. In the terror
and remorse of the heart––when we weep for sin––loving.
It is only one thing in all the world to learn, and that is to
learn all things, just to reach out the mind, and touch
God––to find his love in the heart and so always live in
the perfect music of God. That is the wonderful harmony––and
melody––and growth––of each little soul––and
of all peoples, all worlds,––Oh, it is the universe of love
God gives to us.”</p>
<p>For a while they were silent, and Madam Manovska began
to move about the cabin, setting the things in order.
She did not seem to have taken any interest in their talk.
Harry rose to go, but first he looked in Amalia’s eyes.</p>
<p>“The perfect Music of God?” He said the words slowly
and questioningly.</p>
<p>“You understand my meaning?”</p>
<p>“I can’t say. Do you?”</p>
<p>She quickly snatched up her violin which lay within
reach of her arm. “I can better show you.” She drew a
long chord, then from it wandered into a melody, sweet and
delicate; then she drew other chords, and on into other
melodies, all related; then she began to talk again. “It is
only on two strings I am playing––for hear? the others
are now souls out of the music of God––listen––” she
drew her bow across the discordant strings. “How that is
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_274' name='page_274'></SPAN>274</span>
terrible! So God creates great and beautiful laws––”
she went back into the harmony and perfect melody, and
played on, now changing to the discordant strain, and back,
as she talked––“and gives to all people power to understand,
but not through weakness––but through longing and
searching with big earnestness of purpose, and much desire.
Who has no care and desire for the music of God, strikes
always those wrong notes, and all suffer as our ears suffer
with the bad sounds. So it is, through long desiring, and
living, always a little and a little more perceiving, reaching
out the hand to touch in love our brothers and sisters on the
earth,––always with patience learning to find in our own
souls the note that strikes in harmony with the great thought
of God––and thus we understand and live in the music of
God. Ah, it is hard for me to say it––but it is as if our
souls are given wings––wings––that reach––from the
gold of the sun––even to the earth at our feet, and we
float upon that great harmony of love like upon a wonderful
upbearing sea, and never can we sink, and ever all is well––for
we live in the thought of God.”</p>
<p>“Amalia––Amalia––How about sin, and the one who––kills––and
the ones who hate––and the little children
brought into the world in sin––” Harry’s voice trembled,
and he bowed his head in his hands.</p>
<p>“Never is anything lost. They are the ones who have
not yet learned––they have not found the key to God’s
music. Those who find must quickly help and give and
teach the little children––the little children find so easily
the key––but to all the strings making horrible discord on
the earth––we dare not shut our ears and hide––so do the
sweet, good sisters in the convent. They do their little to
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_275' name='page_275'></SPAN>275</span>
teach the little children, but it is always to shut their ears.
But the Christ went out in the world, not with hands over
his ears, but outreached to his brothers and sisters on the
earth. But my father––my father! He turned away
from the church, because he saw they had not found the true
key to God’s music––or I mean they kept it always hid,
and covered with much––how shall I say––with much
drapery––and golden coverings, that the truth––that is
the key––was lost to sight. It was for this my father
quarreled with––all that he thought not the truth. He
believed to set his people free both from the world’s oppression
and from their own ignorance, and give to them a truth
uncovered. Oh, it set his old friends in great discord more
than ever––for they could not make thus God’s music.
And so they rose up and threw him in prison, and all the
terrible things came upon him––of the world. My mother
must have been very able through love to drag him free
from them, even if they did pursue. It was the conflict of
discord he felt all his life, and now he is free.”</p>
<p>Suddenly the mother’s deep tones sounded through the
cabin with a finality that made them both start. “Yes.
Now he is free––and yet will he bring them to––know.
We wait for him here. No more must he go to Poland. It
is not the will of God.”</p>
<p>Still Harry was not satisfied. “But if you think all these
great thoughts––and you do––I can’t see how you can
quote those legends as if you thought them true.”</p>
<p>“I quote them, yes, because I love them, and their poetry.
Through all beauty––all sweetness––all strength––God
brings to us his thought. This I believe. I believe the
saints lived and were holy and good, loving the great
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_276' name='page_276'></SPAN>276</span>
brotherhood. Why may not they be given the work of
love still to do? It is all in the music of God, that they
live, and make happy, and why should I believe that it is
now taken from them to do good? Much that I think lies
deep in my heart, and I cannot tell it in words.”</p>
<p>“Nor can I. But my thoughts––” For an instant
Amalia, looking at him, saw in his face the same look of
inward fear––or rather of despair that had appalled Larry,
but it went as quickly as it appeared, and she wondered
afterward if she had really seen it, or if it was a strange
trick of the firelight in the windowless cabin.</p>
<p>“And your thoughts, Mr. ’Arry?”</p>
<p>“They are not to be told.” Again he rose to go, and stood
and looked down on her, smiling. “I see you have already
tried the crutches.”</p>
<p>“Yes. I found them in the snow, before the door. How
I got there? I did hop. It was as if the good angels
had come in the night. I wake and something make me
all glad––and I go to the door to look at the whiteness, and
then I am sorry, because of Sir Kildene, then I see before
me––while that I stand on one foot, and hop––hop––hop––so,
I see the crutch lie in the snow. Oh, Mr. ’Arry,
now so pale you are! It is that you have worked in the
night to make them––Is not? That is sorrowful to me.
But now will I do for you pleasant things, because I can
move to do them on these, where before I must always sit still––still––Ah,
how that is hard to do! One good thing comes
to me of this hurt. It makes the old shoes to last longer.
How is it never to wear out shoes? Never to walk in them.”</p>
<p>Harry laughed. “We’ll have to make you some
moccasins.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_277' name='page_277'></SPAN>277</span></div>
<p>“And what is moccasins? Ah, yes, the Indian shoe. I
like them well, so soft they must be, and so pretty with the
beads. I have seen once such shoes on one little Indian
child. Her mother made them.”</p>
<p>Then Harry made her try the crutches to be sure they
were quite right, and, seeing that they were a little too long,
he measured them with care, and carried them back to the
shed, and there he shortened them and polished them with
sand and a piece of flint, until he succeeded in making a
very workmanlike job of them.</p>
<p>At noon he brought them back, and stood in the doorway
a moment beside her, looking out through the whiteness
upon the transformed world. In spite of what that snow
might mean to Larry Kildene, and through him to them, of
calamity, maybe death, a certain elation possessed Harry.
His body was braced to unusual energy by the keen, pure
air, and his spirit enthralled and lifted to unconscious adoration
by the vast mystery of a beauty, subtle and ethereal
in its hushed eloquence. From the zenith through whiteness
to whiteness the flakes sifted from the sky like a
filmy bride’s veil thrown over the blue of the farthest and
highest peaks, and swaying soft folds of lucent whiteness
upon the earth––the trees––and upon the cabin, and as
they stood there, closing them in together––the very center
of mystery, their own souls. Again the passion swept
through him, to gather her in his arms, and he held himself
sternly and stiffly against it, and would have said something
simple and common to break the spell, but he only
faltered and looked down on his hands spread out before
her, and what he said was: “Do you see blood on them?”</p>
<p>“Ah, no. Did you hurt your hand to cause blood on
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_278' name='page_278'></SPAN>278</span>
them, and to make those crutch for me?” she cried in
consternation.</p>
<p>“No, no. It’s nothing. I have not hurt my hand. See,
there’s no blood on the crutches.” He glanced at them as
she leaned her weight on them there at his side, with a
feeling of relief. It seemed as if they must show a stain,
yet why should it be blood? “Come in. It’s too cold
for you to stand in the door with no shawl. I mean to put
enough wood in here to last you the rest of the day––and
go––”</p>
<p>“Mr. ’Arry! Not to leave us? No, it is no need you go––for
why?”</p>
<p>Her terror touched him. “No, I would not go again and
leave you and your mother alone––not to save my soul.
As you say, there is no need––as long as it is so still and the
clouds are thin the snow will do little harm. It would be the
driving, fine snow and the drifts that would delay him.”</p>
<p>“Yes, snow as we have it in the terrible Russia. I know
such snow well,” said Madam Manovska.</p>
<p>They went in and closed the door, and sat down to eat.
The meal was lighted only by the dancing flames from the
hearth, and their faces glowed in the fitful light. Always
the meals were conducted with a certain stately ceremony
which made the lack of dishes, other than the shaped slabs
of wood sawn from the ends of logs––odd make-shifts
invented by Harry, seem merely an accident of the moment,
while the bits of lace-edged linen that Amalia provided from
their little store seemed quite in harmony with the air of
grace and gentleness that surrounded the two women. It
was as if they were using a service of silver and Sevres, and
to have missed the graciousness of their ministrations, now
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_279' name='page_279'></SPAN>279</span>
that he had lived for a little while with them, would have
been sorrow indeed.</p>
<p>He even forgot that he was clothed in rags, and wore them
as if they were the faultless garments of a prince. It was
only when he was alone that he looked down on them and
sighed. One day he had come to the cabin to ask if he
might take for a little while a needle and thread, but when he
got there, the conversation wandered to discussion of the
writers and the tragedies of the various nations and of their
poets, and the needle and thread were forgotten.</p>
<p>To-day, as the snow fell, it reminded Amalia of his need,
and she begged him to stay with them a little to see what
the box he had rescued for them contained. He yielded,
and, taking up the violin, he held it a moment to his chin as
if he would play, then laid it down again without drawing
the bow across it.</p>
<p>“Ah, Mr. ’Arry, it is that you play,” cried Amalia, in
delight. “I know it. No man takes in his hand the violin
thus, if he do not play.”</p>
<p>“I had a friend once who played. No, I can’t.” He
turned away from it sadly, and she gently laid it back in its
box, and caught up a piece of heavy material.</p>
<p>“Look. It is a little of this left. It is for you. My
mother has much skill to make garments. Let us sew for
you the blouse.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I’ll do that gladly. I have no other way to keep
myself decent before you.”</p>
<p>“What would you have? All must serve or we die.”
Madam Manovska spoke, “It is well, Sir ’Arry King, you
carry your head like one prince, for I will make of you one
peasant in this blouse.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_280' name='page_280'></SPAN>280</span></div>
<p>The two women laughed and measured him, and conferred
volubly together in their own tongue, and he went out from
their presence feeling that no prince had ever been so
honored. They took also from their store warm socks of
wool and gave him. Sadly he needed them, as he realized
when he stepped out from their door, and the soft snow
closed around his feet, chilling them with the cold.</p>
<p>As he looked up in the sky he saw the clouds were breaking,
and the sun glowed through them like a great pale gold
moon, even though the flakes continued to veil thinly the
distance. His heart lightened and he went back to the
cabin to tell them the good news, and to ask them to pray
for clear skies to-morrow. Having been reared in a rigidly
puritanic school of thought, the time was, when first he knew
them, that the freedom with which Amalia spoke of the
Deity, and of the Christ, and the saints, and her prayers,
fell strangely upon his unaccustomed ears. He was reserved
religiously, and seemed to think any mention of such
topics should be made with bated breath, and the utmost
solemnity. Often it had been in his mind to ask her concerning
her beliefs, but his shyness on such themes had prevented.</p>
<p>Now that he had asked her he still wondered. He was
used to feel that no one could be really devout, and yet
speak so freely. Why––he could not have told. But now
he began to understand, yet it was but a beginning. Could
it be that she belonged to no church? Was it some sect of
which he had never heard to which they belonged? If so,
it must be a true faith, or it never could have upheld them
through all their wanderings and afflictions, and, as he
pondered, he found himself filled with a measure of the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_281' name='page_281'></SPAN>281</span>
same trustful peace. During their flight across the plains
together he had come to rest in them, and when his heart
was too heavy to dare address the Deity in his own words,
it was balm to his hurt spirit to hear them at their devotions
as if thus God were drawn nearer him.</p>
<p>This time, whether he might lay it to their prayers or no,
his hopes were fulfilled. The evening brought a clear sunset,
and during the next day the snow melted and soon was
gone, and a breeze sprang up and the clouds drifted away,
and for several days thereafter the weather continued clear
and dry.</p>
<p>Now often he brought his horse to the door, and lifted
Amalia to the saddle and walked at her side, fearing
she might rest her foot too firmly in the stirrup and so lose
control of the horse in her pain. Always their way took
them to the falls. And always he listened while Amalia
talked. He allowed himself only the most meager liberty of
expression. Distant and cold his manner often seemed to
her, but intuitively she respected his moods, if moods they
might be called: she suspected not.</p>
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