<SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN><hr />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span><br/>
<h3>CHAPTER XII.<span class="totoc"><SPAN href="#toc">ToC</SPAN></span></h3>
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<ANTIMG border="0" src="images/image08.png" width-obs="100%" alt="CHAPTER XII." /></div>
<p>As the boy, whom Seth called Charlie, grew older, Seth cast about in
his mind for some story to tell him which should serve to protect both
Celia and himself.</p>
<p>Celia was not to blame for leaving him. He had long ago come to that
conclusion. He was a failure, as she had said. Women as a rule do not
care for failures, though there are some few who do.</p>
<p>They love men who succeed.</p>
<p>In personal appearance, aside from some angularities, considerable
gauntness, and much sunburn, Seth told himself that he was not
different from other men. It was not palpable to the casual observer
that as men went he was a failure, but Seth realized the truth of
Celia's judgment.</p>
<p>He had failed doubly. In the effort to provide her a home, and to
imbue her with his belief in the Magic City. Since she had gone home
he had sent her next <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span>to no money. He had none to send. Perhaps that
was why she did not write. He never knew. Putting himself in her
place, he concluded she was right. A delicate little woman, far away
from a great failure of a husband who could not provide for her, ought
to let him go without letters.</p>
<p>And so thinking, he seldom hung about the post-office waiting for the
mail. He trained himself to expect nothing.</p>
<p>Yes. It had been impossible for him to send her money.</p>
<p>Disaster had followed disaster and he had been barely able to keep
himself and the boy alive.</p>
<p>He was a failure of the most deplorable sort, but the boy did not know
it. He did not even guess it. The standing monument of his failure in
life to Celia was the dugout. In the eyes of the boy it was no failure
at all. Born in it he had no idea of the luxury of a house and the
luxuries we wot not of we miss not.</p>
<p>He was used to lizards on the roof, to say nothing of other creeping
things within the house which are generally regarded as obnoxious,
roaches, ants, mice. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>He rather liked them than otherwise, regarding
them as his private possessions.</p>
<p>Besides, hadn't he Cyclona?</p>
<p>And as for the winds of which Celia complained so bitterly, he loved
them. His ears had never been out of the sound of them and they were
very gentle winds sometimes, tender and loving with their own child
born on the desert. They lulled him. They cradled him. They were sweet
as Cyclona's voice singing him to sleep.</p>
<p>In another State, where they failed to blow, it would in all
probability have been necessary to entice a cyclone into his
neighborhood to induce him to slumber.</p>
<p>Accustomed to the infinite tenderness of his father's care from the
first, the boy loved him. Seth determined that if it were possible,
this state of affairs should continue. If it were necessary to invent
a story to fit the case, he would be as other men, or even better in
the eyes of the child, until there came a time when he must learn the
truth.</p>
<p>Perhaps the time would never come. If he could by any manner of means
keep up the delusion until the Wise Men came out of the East and built
the Magic City, <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>he would be a failure no longer. He would be an
instantaneous success.</p>
<p>Also, though he fully pardoned Celia for her desertion of himself, he
had never quite come to understand or fully forgive her desertion of
the boy, her staying away as she had done month after month, year
after year, missing all the beauty of his babyhood.</p>
<p>He therefore found it impossible to tell the boy that his mother had
heartlessly deserted him, as impossible as to tell him that his father
was a failure.</p>
<p>Yet the child, like every other, insisted upon knowing something of
his origin. To satisfy him, Seth evolved a story, adding to it from
time to time. He told it sitting in the firelight, the boy in his
arms.</p>
<p>It was the story of the Flying Peccary.</p>
<p>"Tell me how I came in the cyclone," Charlie would insist, nestling
into the comfortable curve of his arm.</p>
<p>"The cyclone brought you paht of the way," corrected Seth, jealous of
his theory that cyclones never touched the place of his dugout, the
forks of the two rivers, "and the flyin' peccary brought you the rest.
You've heard me tell about these little Mexican hawgs, the wildest,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>woolliest, measliest little hawgs that evah breathed the breath of
life and how they ate up the cyclone?"</p>
<p>"Yes," nodded Charlie.</p>
<p>"Well, this was the first time, I reckon, that a cyclone evah met its
match, becawse a cyclone was nevah known befo' to stop at anything
until it had cleaned up the earth and just stopped then on account of
its bein' out of breath and tiahd. But it met its match that time.</p>
<p>"You see, Texas is full of those measly little peccaries. You can
hahdly live, they say, down theah for them. They eat up the rail
fences, the wagon beds, the bahns and the sheep and the cows. They
don't stop at women and children, I heah, if they get a good chance at
them. And grit! They've got plenty of that, I tell you, and to spah,
those little bad measly Mexican hawgs.</p>
<p>"Well, one day a herd of peccaries wah a gruntin' and squealin' around
the prairie, huntin' for something to eat as usual, when a cyclone
come lumberin' along.</p>
<p>"It come bringin' everything with it it could bring; houses, bahns,
chicken coops and a plentiful sprinklin' of human bein's, to liven up
things a little. A <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>cyclone ain't very particular, any more than a
peccary. It snatches up anything that comes handy. Sometimes it picks
up a few knives and whacks things with them as it goes along. You know
that, don't you, Cyclona?"</p>
<p>Cyclona nodded. She always lingered at the fireside to hear this story
of the flying peccary which was her favorite as well as the child's.</p>
<p>"It brought me," she said.</p>
<p>The boy raised himself in Seth's arms.</p>
<p>"Maybe you are my sister!" he cried.</p>
<p>"Maybe I am," smiled Cyclona.</p>
<p>"At that theah Towanda cyclone," recommenced Seth, "that little Kansas
town the cyclone got mad at and made way with, theah must have been a
hundred knives or mo' flyin' around loose. They cut hogs half in two.
You would have thought a butchah had done it. And the chickens were
carved ready to be put on the table. It was wonderful the things that
cyclone did."</p>
<p>"And the peccaries," Charlie reminded him.</p>
<p>"That cyclone," began Seth all over again, "came flyin' along black as
night and thunderin' laik mad and caught up the whole herd of
peccaries.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span>"Those peccaries ain't even-tempahd animals.</p>
<p>"They've got tempahs laik greased lightnin'. It made them firin' mad
fo' a cyclone to take such liberties with them, and they got up and
slammed back at it right and left. Well, they didn't do a thing to
that cyclone. In the first place the whole herd of peccaries began to
snap and grunt laik fury till the noise of the cyclone simmahd down
into a sort of pitiful whine, laik the whine of a whipped dog. Imagine
a cyclone comin' to that! Then, they tell me, you couldn't heah
anything but the squealin' and gruntin' of those pesky little
peccaries.</p>
<p>"Between squeals they bit into that theah cyclone fo' all it was wuth,
takin' great chunks out of it, swallowin' lightnin' and eatin' big
mouthfuls of thundah just as if they laiked it. All the stuff the
cyclone was bringin' along with it wa'n't anything to them. They
swallowed it whole and pretty soon, you'd hahdly believe it, but theah
wa'n't anything lef' of that cyclone at all.</p>
<p>"They had eaten up ever' single bit of it except a tiny breeze they
had fohgotten that died away mournful laik across the prairies,
sighin' becawse it had <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></SPAN></span>stahted out so brash and come to such a sudden
untimely and unexpected end.</p>
<p>"Then, theah was the herd of peccaries about five miles from wheah
they had stahted, sittin' down, resting, a-smilin' at each othah and
congratulatin' each othah, I reckon, on the way they had knocked the
stuffin' out of that theah ole cyclone fo' good and all.</p>
<p>"They must have scahd the res' of the cyclones off, too, becawse with
them and the forks of the rivahs, they haven't been seen or heahd of
aroun' these pahts since."</p>
<p>"Exceptin' the tail end of that one that moved me," Cyclona reminded
him.</p>
<p>"And what about me?" questioned Charlie.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. One of these heah peccaries, a good-natured peccary, too,
with a laikin' fo' little children, found you in the cyclone. You were
a pretty little baby with big blue eyes the same's you've got now. I
don't know exactly wheah the cyclone found you. Anyway, the peccary
picked you up in his mouth. When he had rested as long as he wanted to
with the other peccaries, he flew along and flew along—they had all
got to be flying peccaries, you know, on account <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></SPAN></span>of swallowin' so
much wind, until he came to the door of my dugout, this same dugout we
are in now, and he laid you very carefully down by the door. Then I
went out in the mawnin' and brought you in."</p>
<p>Charlie invariably at this point reached up his arms and put them
around Seth's neck.</p>
<p>It was very kind of him, he thought, to go out and bring him in. What
if the wolves had come along and eaten him! Or the little hungry
coyotes they heard barking in the nights. Ugh!</p>
<p>"And then the peccary flew away again?" he asked. "Didn't he?"</p>
<p>"Yes," answered Seth. "He flew away with the rest of the flyin'
peccaries."</p>
<p>"And haven't you ever seen them since?" asked Charlie, "or him?"</p>
<p>"Sometimes you can see them 'way up in the air," replied Seth, running
his fingers through his hair, "but they ah so fah away and little, you
can't tell them from birds."</p>
<p>Cyclona nodded again.</p>
<p>"Yes," she corroborated, "they are so far away and little you can't
tell them from birds."</p>
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