<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<p>They said good-bye at the gate. Billy betrayed awkwardness that was sweet
to Saxon. He was not one of the take-it-for-granted young men. There was a
pause, while she feigned desire to go into the house, yet waited in secret
eagerness for the words she wanted him to say.</p>
<p>“When am I goin' to see you again?” he asked, holding her hand in his.</p>
<p>She laughed consentingly.</p>
<p>“I live 'way up in East Oakland,” he explained. “You know there's where
the stable is, an' most of our teaming is done in that section, so I don't
knock around down this way much. But, say—” His hand tightened on
hers. “We just gotta dance together some more. I'll tell you, the Orindore
Club has its dance Wednesday. If you haven't a date—have you?”</p>
<p>“No,” she said.</p>
<p>“Then Wednesday. What time'll I come for you?”</p>
<p>And when they had arranged the details, and he had agreed that she should
dance some of the dances with the other fellows, and said good night
again, his hand closed more tightly on hers and drew her toward him. She
resisted slightly, but honestly. It was the custom, but she felt she ought
not for fear he might misunderstand. And yet she wanted to kiss him as she
had never wanted to kiss a man. When it came, her face upturned to his,
she realized that on his part it was an honest kiss. There hinted nothing
behind it. Rugged and kind as himself, it was virginal almost, and
betrayed no long practice in the art of saying good-bye. All men were not
brutes after all, was her thought.</p>
<p>“Good night,” she murmured; the gate screeched under her hand; and she
hurried along the narrow walk that led around to the corner of the house.</p>
<p>“Wednesday,” he called softly.</p>
<p>“Wednesday,” she answered.</p>
<p>But in the shadow of the narrow alley between the two houses she stood
still and pleasured in the ring of his foot falls down the cement
sidewalk. Not until they had quite died away did she go on. She crept up
the back stairs and across the kitchen to her room, registering her
thanksgiving that Sarah was asleep.</p>
<p>She lighted the gas, and, as she removed the little velvet hat, she felt
her lips still tingling with the kiss. Yet it had meant nothing. It was
the way of the young men. They all did it. But their good-night kisses had
never tingled, while this one tingled in her brain as well as on her lip.
What was it? What did it mean? With a sudden impulse she looked at herself
in the glass. The eyes were happy and bright. The color that tinted her
cheeks so easily was in them and glowing. It was a pretty reflection, and
she smiled, partly in joy, partly in appreciation, and the smile grew at
sight of the even rows of strong white teeth. Why shouldn't Billy like
that face? was her unvoiced query. Other men had liked it. Other men did
like it. Even the other girls admitted she was a good-looker. Charley Long
certainly liked it from the way he made life miserable for her.</p>
<p>She glanced aside to the rim of the looking-glass where his photograph was
wedged, shuddered, and made a moue of distaste. There was cruelty in those
eyes, and brutishness. He was a brute. For a year, now, he had bullied
her. Other fellows were afraid to go with her. He warned them off. She had
been forced into almost slavery to his attentions. She remembered the
young bookkeeper at the laundry—not a workingman, but a soft-handed,
soft-voiced gentleman—whom Charley had beaten up at the corner
because he had been bold enough to come to take her to the theater. And
she had been helpless. For his own sake she had never dared accept another
invitation to go out with him.</p>
<p>And now, Wednesday night, she was going with Billy. Billy! Her heart
leaped. There would be trouble, but Billy would save her from him. She'd
like to see him try and beat Billy up.</p>
<p>With a quick movement, she jerked the photograph from its niche and threw
it face down upon the chest of drawers. It fell beside a small square case
of dark and tarnished leather. With a feeling as of profanation she again
seized the offending photograph and flung it across the room into a
corner. At the same time she picked up the leather case. Springing it
open, she gazed at the daguerreotype of a worn little woman with steady
gray eyes and a hopeful, pathetic mouth. Opposite, on the velvet lining,
done in gold lettering, was, CARLTON FROM DAISY. She read it reverently,
for it represented the father she had never known, and the mother she had
so little known, though she could never forget that those wise sad eyes
were gray.</p>
<p>Despite lack of conventional religion, Saxon's nature was deeply
religious. Her thoughts of God were vague and nebulous, and there she was
frankly puzzled. She could not vision God. Here, in the daguerreotype, was
the concrete; much she had grasped from it, and always there seemed an
infinite more to grasp. She did not go to church. This was her high altar
and holy of holies. She came to it in trouble, in loneliness, for counsel,
divination, and comfort. In so far as she found herself different from the
girls of her acquaintance, she quested here to try to identify her
characteristics in the pictured face. Her mother had been different from
other women, too. This, forsooth, meant to her what God meant to others.
To this she strove to be true, and not to hurt nor vex. And how little she
really knew of her mother, and of how much was conjecture and surmise, she
was unaware; for it was through many years she had erected this
mother-myth.</p>
<p>Yet was it all myth? She resented the doubt with quick jealousy, and,
opening the bottom drawer of the chest, drew forth a battered portfolio.
Out rolled manuscripts, faded and worn, and arose a faint far scent of
sweet-kept age. The writing was delicate and curled, with the quaint
fineness of half a century before. She read a stanza to herself:</p>
<p>“Sweet as a wind-lute's airy strains Your gentle muse has learned to sing,
And California's boundless plains Prolong the soft notes echoing.”</p>
<p>She wondered, for the thousandth time, what a windlute was; yet much of
beauty, much of beyondness, she sensed of this dimly remembered beautiful
mother of hers. She communed a while, then unrolled a second manuscript.
“To C. B.,” it read. To Carlton Brown, she knew, to her father, a
love-poem from her mother. Saxon pondered the opening lines:</p>
<p>“I have stolen away from the crowd in the groves, Where the nude statues
stand, and the leaves point and shiver At ivy-crowned Bacchus, the Queen
of the Loves, Pandora and Psyche, struck voiceless forever.”</p>
<p>This, too, was beyond her. But she breathed the beauty of it. Bacchus, and
Pandora and Psyche—talismans to conjure with! But alas! the
necromancy was her mother's. Strange, meaningless words that meant so
much! Her marvelous mother had known their meaning. Saxon spelled the
three words aloud, letter by letter, for she did not dare their
pronunciation; and in her consciousness glimmered august connotations,
profound and unthinkable. Her mind stumbled and halted on the star-bright
and dazzling boundaries of a world beyond her world in which her mother
had roamed at will. Again and again, solemnly, she went over the four
lines. They were radiance and light to the world, haunted with phantoms of
pain and unrest, in which she had her being. There, hidden among those
cryptic singing lines, was the clue. If she could only grasp it, all would
be made clear. Of this she was sublimely confident. She would understand
Sarah's sharp tongue, her unhappy brother, the cruelty of Charley Long,
the justness of the bookkeeper's beating, the day-long, month-long,
year-long toil at the ironing-board.</p>
<p>She skipped a stanza that she knew was hopelessly beyond her, and tried
again:</p>
<p>“The dusk of the greenhouse is luminous yet<br/>
With quivers of opal and tremors of gold;<br/>
For the sun is at rest, and the light from the west,<br/>
Like delicate wine that is mellow and old,<br/></p>
<p>“Flushes faintly the brow of a naiad that stands In the spray of a
fountain, whose seed-amethysts Tremble lightly a moment on bosom and
hands, Then dip in their basin from bosom and wrists.”</p>
<p>“It's beautiful, just beautiful,” she sighed. And then, appalled at the
length of all the poem, at the volume of the mystery, she rolled the
manuscript and put it away. Again she dipped in the drawer, seeking the
clue among the cherished fragments of her mother's hidden soul.</p>
<p>This time it was a small package, wrapped in tissue paper and tied with
ribbon. She opened it carefully, with the deep gravity and circumstance of
a priest before an altar. Appeared a little red-satin Spanish girdle,
whale-boned like a tiny corset, pointed, the pioneer finery of a frontier
woman who had crossed the plains. It was hand-made after the
California-Spanish model of forgotten days. The very whalebone had been
home-shaped of the raw material from the whaleships traded for in hides
and tallow. The black lace trimming her mother had made. The triple edging
of black velvet strips—her mother's hands had sewn the stitches.</p>
<p>Saxon dreamed over it in a maze of incoherent thought. This was concrete.
This she understood. This she worshiped as man-created gods have been
worshiped on less tangible evidence of their sojourn on earth.</p>
<p>Twenty-two inches it measured around. She knew it out of many
verifications. She stood up and put it about her waist. This was part of
the ritual. It almost met. In places it did meet. Without her dress it
would meet everywhere as it had met on her mother. Closest of all, this
survival of old California-Ventura days brought Saxon in touch. Hers was
her mother's form. Physically, she was like her mother. Her grit, her
ability to turn off work that was such an amazement to others, were her
mother's. Just so had her mother been an amazement to her generation—her
mother, the toy-like creature, the smallest and the youngest of the
strapping pioneer brood, who nevertheless had mothered the brood. Always
it had been her wisdom that was sought, even by the brothers and sisters a
dozen years her senior. Daisy, it was, who had put her tiny foot down and
commanded the removal from the fever flatlands of Colusa to the healthy
mountains of Ventura; who had backed the savage old Indian-fighter of a
father into a corner and fought the entire family that Vila might marry
the man of her choice; who had flown in the face of the family and of
community morality and demanded the divorce of Laura from her criminally
weak husband; and who on the other hand, had held the branches of the
family together when only misunderstanding and weak humanness threatened
to drive them apart.</p>
<p>The peacemaker and the warrior! All the old tales trooped before Saxon's
eyes. They were sharp with detail, for she had visioned them many times,
though their content was of things she had never seen. So far as details
were concerned, they were her own creation, for she had never seen an ox,
a wild Indian, nor a prairie schooner. Yet, palpitating and real,
shimmering in the sun-flashed dust of ten thousand hoofs, she saw pass,
from East to West, across a continent, the great hegira of the land-hungry
Anglo-Saxon. It was part and fiber of her. She had been nursed on its
traditions and its facts from the lips of those who had taken part.
Clearly she saw the long wagon-train, the lean, gaunt men who walked
before, the youths goading the lowing oxen that fell and were goaded to
their feet to fall again. And through it all, a flying shuttle, weaving
the golden dazzling thread of personality, moved the form of her little,
indomitable mother, eight years old, and nine ere the great traverse was
ended, a necromancer and a law-giver, willing her way, and the way and the
willing always good and right.</p>
<p>Saxon saw Punch, the little, rough-coated Skye-terrier with the honest
eyes (who had plodded for weary months), gone lame and abandoned; she saw
Daisy, the chit of a child, hide Punch in the wagon. She saw the savage
old worried father discover the added burden of the several pounds to the
dying oxen. She saw his wrath, as he held Punch by the scruff of the neck.
And she saw Daisy, between the muzzle of the long-barreled rifle and the
little dog. And she saw Daisy thereafter, through days of alkali and heat,
walking, stumbling, in the dust of the wagons, the little sick dog, like a
baby, in her arms.</p>
<p>But most vivid of all, Saxon saw the fight at Little Meadow—and
Daisy, dressed as for a gala day, in white, a ribbon sash about her waist,
ribbons and a round-comb in her hair, in her hands small water-pails, step
forth into the sunshine on the flower-grown open ground from the wagon
circle, wheels interlocked, where the wounded screamed their delirium and
babbled of flowing fountains, and go on, through the sunshine and the
wonder-inhibition of the bullet-dealing Indians, a hundred yards to the
waterhole and back again.</p>
<p>Saxon kissed the little, red satin Spanish girdle passionately, and
wrapped it up in haste, with dewy eyes, abandoning the mystery and godhead
of mother and all the strange enigma of living.</p>
<p>In bed, she projected against her closed eyelids the few rich scenes of
her mother that her child-memory retained. It was her favorite way of
wooing sleep. She had done it all her life—sunk into the
death-blackness of sleep with her mother limned to the last on her fading
consciousness. But this mother was not the Daisy of the plains nor of the
daguerreotype. They had been before Saxon's time. This that she saw
nightly was an older mother, broken with insomnia and brave with sorrow,
who crept, always crept, a pale, frail creature, gentle and unfaltering,
dying from lack of sleep, living by will, and by will refraining from
going mad, who, nevertheless, could not will sleep, and whom not even the
whole tribe of doctors could make sleep. Crept—always she crept,
about the house, from weary bed to weary chair and back again through long
days and weeks of torment, never complaining, though her unfailing smile
was twisted with pain, and the wise gray eyes, still wise and gray, were
grown unutterably larger and profoundly deep.</p>
<p>But on this night Saxon did not win to sleep quickly; the little creeping
mother came and went; and in the intervals the face of Billy, with the
cloud-drifted, sullen, handsome eyes, burned against her eyelids. And once
again, as sleep welled up to smother her, she put to herself the question
IS THIS THE MAN?</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />