<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
<h3>HARRY KING LEAVES THE MOUNTAIN</h3></div>
<p>When the two men bade Amalia and her mother good
night and took their way to the fodder shed, the snow was
whirling and drifting around the cabin, and the pathway
was obliterated.</p>
<p>“This’ll be the last storm of the year, I’m thinking,”
said Larry. But the younger man strode on without making
a reply. He bent forward, leaning against the wind, and in
silence trod a path for his friend through the drifted heaps.
At the door of the shed he stood back to let Larry pass.</p>
<p>“I’ll not go in yet. I’ll tramp about in the snow a bit
until––Don’t sit up for me––” He turned swiftly away
into the night, but Larry caught him by the arm and
brought him back.</p>
<p>“Come in with me, lad; I’m lonely. We’ll smoke together,
then we’ll sleep well enough.”</p>
<p>Then Harry went in and built up the fire, throwing on
logs until the shed was flooded with light and the bare
rock wall seemed to leap forward in the brilliance, but he
did not smoke; he paced restlessly about and at last crept
into his bunk and lay with his face to the wall. Larry sat
long before the fire. “It’s the music that’s got in my
blood,” he said. “Katherine could sing and lilt the Scotch
airs like a bird. She had a touch for the instrument, too.”</p>
<p>But Harry could not respond to his friend’s attempted
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_319' name='page_319'></SPAN>319</span>
confidence in the rare mention of his wife’s name. He lay
staring at the rough stone wall close to his face, and it
seemed to him that his future was bounded by a barrier
as implacable and terrible as that. All through the night
he heard the deep tones of Madam Manovska’s voice, and
the visions of the poem passed through his mind. He saw
the strange old man, the murderer, Cain, seated in the
tomb, bowed and remorseful, and in the darkness still the
Eye. But side by side with this somber vision he saw the
interior of the cabin, and Amalia, glowing and warm and
splendid in her rich gown, with the red firelight playing
over her, leaning toward him, her wonderful eyes fixed on
his with a regard at once inscrutable and sympathetic.
It was as if she were looking into his heart, but did not wish
him to know that she saw so deeply.</p>
<p>Towards morning the snow clouds were swept from the
sky, and a late moon shone out clear and cold upon a world
carved crisply out of molten silver. Unable longer to bear
that waking torture, Harry King rose and went out into the
night, leaving his friend quietly sleeping. He stood a
moment listening to Larry’s long, calm breathing; then
buttoning his coat warmly across his chest, he closed the
shed door softly behind him and floundered off into the
drifts, without heeding the direction he was taking, until he
found himself on the brink of the chasm where the river,
sliding smoothly over the rocks high above his head, was
forever tumbling.</p>
<p>There he stood, trembling, but not with cold, nor with
cowardice, nor with fatigue. Sanity had come upon him.
He would do no untoward act to hurt the three people who
would grieve for him. He would bear the hurt of forever
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_320' name='page_320'></SPAN>320</span>
loving in silence, and continue to wait for the open road
that would lead him to prison and disgrace, or maybe a
death of shame. He considered, as often before, all the
arguments that continually fretted him and tore his spirit;
and, as before, he knew the only course to follow was the
hard one which took him back to Amalia, until spring and
the melting of the snows released him––to live near her, to
see her and hear her voice, even touch her hand, and feel
his body grow tense and hard, suffering restraint. If only
for one moment he might let himself go! If but once
again he might touch her lips with his! Ah, God! If he
might say one word of love––only once before leaving her
forever!</p>
<p>Standing there looking out upon the world beneath him
and above him bathed in the immaculate whiteness of the
snow, and the moonlight over all, he perceived how small
an atom in the universe is one lone man, yet how overwhelmingly
great in his power to love. It seemed to him
that his love overtopped the hills and swept to the very
throne of God. He was exalted by it, and in this exaltation
it was that he trembled. Would it lift him up to
triumph over remorse and death?</p>
<p>He turned and plodded back the inevitable way. It
was still night––cold and silver-white. He was filled with
energy born of great renunciation and despair, and could
only calm himself by work. If he could only work until
he dropped, or fight with the elements, it would help him.
He began clearing the snow from the ground around the
cabin and cut the path through to the shed; then he quietly
entered and found Larry still calmly sleeping as if but a
moment had passed. Finally, he secured one of the torches
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_321' name='page_321'></SPAN>321</span>
and made his way through the tunnel to the place where
Larry and he had found the quartz which they had smelted
in the evening.</p>
<p>There he fastened the torch securely in a crevice, and
began to swing his pick and batter recklessly at the overhanging
ledge. Never had he worked so furiously, and the
earth and stone lay all about him and heaped at his feet.
Deeper and deeper he fought and cut into the solid wall,
until, grimed with sweat and dirt, he sank exhausted upon
the pile of quartz he had loosened. Then he shoveled it
to one side and began again dealing erratic blows with his
spent strength, until the ledge hung dangerously over him.
As it was, he reeled and swayed and struck again, and
staggered back to gather strength for another blow, leaning
on his pick, and this saved him from death; for, during
the instant’s pause, the whole mass fell crashing in front of
him, and he went down with it, stunned and bleeding, but
not crushed.</p>
<p>Larry Kildene breakfasted and worked about the cabin
and the shed half the day before he began to wonder at the
young man’s absence. He fell to grumbling that Harry
had not fed and groomed his horse, and did the work himself.
Noon came, and Amalia looked in his face anxiously
as he entered and Harry not with him.</p>
<p>“How is it that Mr. ’Arry have not arrive all this day?”</p>
<p>“Oh, he’s mooning somewhere. Off on a tramp I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Has he then his gun? No?”</p>
<p>“No, but he’s been about. He cleared away all the
snow, and I saw he had been over to the fall.” Amalia
turned pale as the shrewd old man’s eyes rested on her.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_322' name='page_322'></SPAN>322</span>
“He came back early, though, for I saw footprints both
ways.”</p>
<p>“I hope he comes soon, for we have the good soup to-day,
of the kind Mr. ’Arry so well likes.”</p>
<p>But he did not come soon, and it was with much misgiving
that Larry set out to search for him. Finding no
trails leading anywhere except the twice trodden one to
the fall, he naturally turned into the mine and followed
along the path, torch in hand, hallooing jovially as he
went, but his voice only returned to him, reverberating
hollowly. Then, remembering the ledge where they had
last worked, and how he had meant to put in props before
cutting away any more, he ran forward, certain of calamity,
and found his young friend lying where he had fallen, the
blood still oozing from a cut above the temple, where it had
clotted.</p>
<p>For a moment Larry stood aghast, thinking him dead, but
quickly seeing the fresh blood, he lifted the limp body and
bound up the wound, and then Harry opened his eyes and
smiled in Larry’s face. The big man in his joy could do
nothing but storm and scold.</p>
<p>“Didn’t I tell ye to do no more here until we’d the props
in? I’m thinking you’re a fool, and that’s what you are.
If I didn’t tell ye we needed them here, you could have seen
it for yourself––and here you’ve cut away all underneath.
What did you do it for? I say!” Tenderly he gathered
Harry in his arms and lifted him from the débris and
loosened rock. “Now! Are you hurt anywhere else?
Don’t try to stand. Bear on me. I say, bear on me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, put me down and let me walk. I’m not hurt.
Just a cut. How long have you been here?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_323' name='page_323'></SPAN>323</span></div>
<p>“Walk! I say! Yes, walk! Put your arm here,
across my shoulder, so. You can walk as well as a week-old
baby. You’ve lost blood enough to kill a man.” So
Larry carried him in spite of himself, and laid him in his
bunk. There he stood, panting, and looking down on him.
“You’re heavier by a few pounds than when I toted you
down that trail last fall.”</p>
<p>“This is all foolishness. I could have made it myself––on
foot,” said Harry, ungratefully, but he smiled up in the
older man’s face a compensating smile.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. You can lie there and grin now. And you’ll
continue to lie there until I let you up. It’s no more
lessons with Amalia and no more violin and poetry for you,
for one while, young man.”</p>
<p>“Thank God. It will help me over the time until the
trail is open.” Larry stood staring foolishly on the drawn
face and quivering, sensitive lips.</p>
<p>“You’re hungry, that’s what you are,” he said conclusively.</p>
<p>“Guess I am. I’m wretchedly sorry to make you all this
trouble, but––she mustn’t come in here––you’ll bring me
a bite to eat––yes, I’m hungry. That’s what ails me.”
He drew a grimy hand across his eyes and felt the bandage.
“Why––you’ve done me up! I must have had quite a
cut.”</p>
<p>“I’ll wash your face and get your coat off, and your boots,
and make you fit to look at, and then––”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to see her––or her mother––either. I’m
just––I’m a bit faint––I’ll eat if––you’ll fetch me a bite.”</p>
<p>Quickly Larry removed his outer clothing and mended
the fire and then left him carefully wrapped in blankets
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_324' name='page_324'></SPAN>324</span>
and settled in his bunk. When he returned, he found him
light-headed and moaning and talking incoherently. Only
a few words could he understand, and these remained in his
memory.</p>
<p>“When I’m dead––when I’m dead, I say.” And then,
“Not yet. I can’t tell him yet.––I can’t tell him the truth.
It’s too cruel.” And again the refrain: “When I’m dead––when
I’m dead.” But when Larry bent over him and
spoke, Harry looked sanely in his eyes and smiled again.</p>
<p>“Ah, that’s good,” he said, sipping the soup. “I’ll be
myself again to-morrow, and save you all this trouble.
You know I must have accomplished a good deal, to break
off that ledge, and the gold fairly leaped out on me as I
worked.”</p>
<p>“Did you see it?”</p>
<p>“No, but I knew it––I felt it. Shake my clothes and
see if they aren’t full of it.”</p>
<p>“Was that what put you in such a frenzy and made a
fool of you?”</p>
<p>“Yes––no––no. It––it––wasn’t that.”</p>
<p>“You know you were a fool, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“If telling me of it makes me know it––yes.”</p>
<p>“Eat a little more. Here are beans and venison. You
must eat to make up the loss. Why, man, I found you in
a pool of blood.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ll make it up. I’ll make it up all too soon. I’m
not to die so easily.”</p>
<p>“You’ll not make it up as soon as you think, young man.
You may lose a quart of blood in a minute, but it takes
weeks to get it again,” and Harry King found his friend was
right.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_325' name='page_325'></SPAN>325</span></div>
<p>That was the last snow of winter, as Larry had predicted,
and when Harry crawled out in the sun, the earth smelled of
spring, and the waterfall thundered in its downward plunge,
augmented by the melting snows of the still higher mountains.
The noise of it was ever in their ears, and the sound
seemed fraught with a buoyant impulse and inspiration––the
whirl and rush of a tremendous force, giving a sense of
superhuman power. Even after he was really able to walk
about and help himself, Harry would not allow himself to
see Amalia. He forbade Larry to tell them how much
he was improved, and still taxed his friend to bring him
up his meals, and sit by him, telling him the tales of his
life.</p>
<p>“I’ll wait on you here no longer, boy,” said Larry, at
last. “What in life are you hiding in this shed for? The
women think it strange of you––the mother does, anyway,––you
may never quite know what her daughter thinks
unless she wishes you to know, but I’m sure she thinks
strange of you. She ought to.”</p>
<p>“I know. I’m perfectly well and strong. The trail’s
open now, and I’ll go––I’ll go back––where I came from.
You’ve been good to me––I can’t say any more––now.”</p>
<p>“Smoke a pipe, lad, smoke a pipe.”</p>
<p>Harry took a pipe and laughed. “You’re better than
any pipe, but I’ll smoke it, and I’ll go down, yes, I must,
and bid them good-by.”</p>
<p>“And will you have nothing to tell me, lad, before you
go?”</p>
<p>“Not yet. After I’ve made my peace with the world––with
the law––I’ll have a letter sent you––telling all I
know. You’ll forgive me. You see, when I look back––I
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_326' name='page_326'></SPAN>326</span>
wish to see your face––as I see it now––not––not
changed towards me.”</p>
<p>“My face is not one to change toward you––you who
have repented whatever you’ve done that’s wrong.”</p>
<p>That evening Harry King went down to the cabin and
sat with his three friends and ate with them, and told
them he was to depart on the morrow. They chatted and
laughed and put restraint away from them, and all walked
together to watch the sunset from a crag above the cabin.
As they returned Madam Manovska walked at Harry’s
side, and as she bade him good night she said in her broken
English:––</p>
<p>“You think not to return––no? But I say to you––in
my soul I know it––yet will you return––we no more
to be here––perhaps––but you––yes. You will return.”</p>
<p>They stood a moment before the cabin, and the firelight
streamed through the open door and fell on Amalia’s face.
Harry took the mother’s hand as he parted from them, but
he looked in Amalia’s eyes.</p>
<p>In the morning he appeared with his kit strapped on his
back equipped for walking. The women protested that
he should not go thus, but he said he could not take Goldbug
and leave him below. “He is yours, Amalia. Don’t
beat him. He’s a good horse––he saved my life––or
tried to.”</p>
<p>“You know well it is my custom to beat animals. It is
better you take him, or I beat him severely.”</p>
<p>“I know it. But you see, I can’t take him. Ride him
for me, and––don’t let him forget me. Good-by!”</p>
<p>He waved his hand and walked lightly away, and all
stood in the doorway watching him. At the top of a slight
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_327' name='page_327'></SPAN>327</span>
rise he turned again and waved his hand, and was lost to
their sight. Then Larry went back to the shed and sat
by the fire and smoked a lonely pipe, and the mother began
busily to weave at her lace in the cabin, closing the door, for
the morning air was chilly, and Amalia––for a moment
she stood at the cabin door, her hand pressed to her heart,
her head bowed as if in despair. Then she entered the cabin,
caught up her silken shawl, and went out.</p>
<p>Throwing the shawl over her head she ran along the trail
Harry had taken, until she was out of breath, then she
paused, and looked back, hesitating, quivering. Should
she go on? Should she return?</p>
<p>“I will go but a little––little way. Maybe he stops a
moment, if only to––to––think a little,” and she went
on, hurrying, then moving more slowly. She thought she
might at least catch one more fleeting glimpse of him as he
turned the bend in the trail, but she did not. “Ah, he is
so quickly gone!” she sighed, but still walked on.</p>
<p>Yes, so quickly gone, but he had stopped as she thought,
to think a little, beyond the bend, there where he had waited
the long night in the snow for Larry Kildene, there where
he had sat like Elijah of old, despairing, under the juniper
tree. He felt weary and old and worn. He thought his
youth had gone from him forever, but what matter?
What was youth without hope? Youth, love, life, all
were to be relinquished. He closed his eyes to the wonder
of the hills and the beauty before him, yet he knew they
were there with their marvelous appeal, and he sat with
bowed head.</p>
<p>“’Arry! ’Arry King!” He raised his head, and there before
him were all that he had relinquished––youth, love, life.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_328' name='page_328'></SPAN>328</span></div>
<p>He ran and caught her to him, as one who is drowning
catches at life.</p>
<p>“You have leave me so coldly, ’Arry King.” He pressed
her cheek to his. “You did not even speak to me a little.”
He kissed her lips. “You have break my heart.” He held
her closer to his own. “Why have you been so cold––like––like
the ice––to leave me so hard––like––like––”</p>
<p>“To save you from just this, Amalia. To save you from
the touch of my hand––this is the crime I have fought
against.”</p>
<p>“No. To love is not crime.”</p>
<p>“To dare to love––with the curse on my head that I feel
as Cain felt it––is crime. In the Eye he saw it always––as
I––I––see it. To touch you––it is like bringing the
crime and curse on you, and through your beautiful love
making you suffer for it. See, Amalia? It was all I could
do to go out of your life and say nothing.” His voice trembled
and his hand quivered as it rested on her hair. “I sat
here to fight it. My heart––my heart that I have not yet
learned to conquer––was pulling me back to you. I was
faint and old. I could walk no farther until the fight was
won. Oh, Amalia––Amalia! Leave me alone, with the
curse on my head! It is not yours.”</p>
<p>“No, and it is not yours. You have repent. I do not
believe that poem my mother is thinking so great. It is
the terror of the ancient ones, but to-day, no more. Take
this. It is for you I bring it. I have wear it always on my
bosom, wear it now on yours.”</p>
<p>She quickly unclasped from her neck a threadlike chain
of gold, and drew from her bosom a small ivory crucifix,
to which it was attached. Reaching up, she clasped it
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_329' name='page_329'></SPAN>329</span>
around his neck, and thrust the cross in his bosom. Then,
thinking he meant to protest, she seized his hands and held
them, and her words came with the impetuous rush of her
thoughts.</p>
<p>“No charm will help, Amalia. I killed my friend.”</p>
<p>“Ah, no, ’Arry King! Take this of me. It is not as you
think for one charm I give it. No. It is for the love of
Christ––that you remember and think of it. For that I
wear it. For that I give it to you. If you have repent, and
have the Christ in your heart, so are you high––lifted above
the sin, and if they take you––if they put the iron on your
hands––Ah, I know, it is there you go to give yourself up,––if
they keep you forever in the prison, still forever are
you free. If they put you to the death to be satisfied of the
law, then quickly are you alive in Paradise with Christ.
Listen, it is for the love that you give yourself up––for
the sorrowfulness in your heart that you have killed your
friend? Is not? Yes. So is good. See. Look to the
hills, the high mountains, all far around us? They are
beautiful. They are yours. God gives you. And the
sky––so clear––and the bright sun and the spring life
and the singing of the birds? All are yours––God gives.
And the love in your heart––for me? God gives, yes, and
for the one you have hurt? Yes. God gives it. And for
the Christ who so loves you? Yes. So is the love the
great life of God in you. It is yours. Listen. Go with
the love in your heart––for me,––it will not hurt. It will
be sweet to me. I carry no curse for you, as you say. It
is gone. If I see you again in this world––as may be––is
joy––great joy. If I see you no more here, yet in
Paradise I will see you, and there also it will be joy,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_330' name='page_330'></SPAN>330</span>
for it is the love that is all of life, and all of eternity, and
lives––lives!”</p>
<p>Again he held her to his heart in a long embrace, and, when
at last he walked down the trail into the desert, he still felt
her tears on his cheek, her kisses on his lips, and her heart
against his own.</p>
<hr class='pb' />
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_331' name='page_331'></SPAN>331</span></div>
<h2>BOOK THREE</h2>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_LITTLE_SCHOOLTEACHER' id='CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_LITTLE_SCHOOLTEACHER'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />