<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VII</h2>
<h3>TWICE IN JEOPARDY</h3>
<div class='cap'>COOL and sparkling after its morning rain-bath,
and showing along its green ridges
those first, faint signs of yellow that foretell
a coming ripeness, the grass-mantled prairie
lay beneath the warm noon sun. The little
girl, cantering over it toward the sod shanty
on the farther river bluffs, frightened the trilling
meadow-larks, as she passed, from their
perch on the dripping sunflowers, and scattered
the drops on the wild wheat-blades with the
hoofs of her blind black pony.</div>
<p>The storm had wept so copiously upon the
fading plains that the furrows, turned along the
edge of the broad wheat-field to check fires, ran
full and swift down the gentle slope that the
little girl was crossing and almost kept pace
with her pony. Every hollow in her path was
filled to the brim, and the chain of sloughs to
the south, now resounding with the joyous
quacks of bluewings and mallards, were swelling
their waters with the feeding of countless
streams. And the drenched ground, where the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
flowers bent their clean faces as if worn with
the heavy downpour, sent up that grateful essence
that follows in the wake of a shower.</p>
<p>The blind, black pony felt the new life in the
springy turf and the fresh air and flirted his
unshod heels dangerously near to a tracking
wolf-dog as he splashed through runlet and
pool. <i>Pluff-et-y-pluff, pluff-et-y-pluff, pluff-et-y-pluff</i>,
he drummed softly, and the panting
hound, muzzle down, followed with a soft <i>swish,
swish</i>. But to the little girl, thinking of the
bounty for gopher brushes that her big brothers
had offered her the day before, the galloping
echoed a different song: <i>A-cent-for-a-tail,
a-cent-for-a-tail, a-cent-for-a-tail</i>, it sang in her
ears, till she struck the pony a welt on the flanks
with the ends of her long rope reins, and jerked
his head impatiently toward the shallow ford
that led to the home of the Swede boy.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> morning before, the little girl's mother
and the three big brothers had held an indignation
meeting in the timothy meadow, which,
once the choicest bit of hay land on the farm,
was now so thickly strewn with wide, brown
gopher-mounds, that the little girl, with a good
running start down the barren corn strip, could
cross it without touching a spear of grass, by
bopping from one hillock to another. But while
this amused her very much, for she pretended<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
that the knolls were muskrat houses in a deep,
deep slough, it only enraged her mother and
the big brothers. For the gray gophers had
intrenched themselves so well in the timothy,
and had thrown up such damaging earthworks,
that only a scythe could save what little
hay remained; and they had not only taken
into their burrows—as had been discovered
the week before—all the freshly dropped seed
from the barren corn strip, but had dug up
kernels all over the field when they were sprouting
into stalks.</p>
<p>The meadow had lain fallow the summer
before, and had served no further use than the
grazing of some picketed cows. Then, one
parching July day it had been cut, to kill the
thistles and pigweed that overran it, and in the
following May had been plowed, dragged, and
sown to wild timothy. The few mounds dotting
it had been turned under with the belief that,
between the fallow and the new plowing, the
gophers would be driven out. Instead, they
had kept to their burrows and, all in good time,
had tripled their number.</p>
<p>So, as the little girl's mother and the big
brothers stood on the edge of the timothy and
viewed the concave stretch that should have
showed green and waving from its rim to the
boggy center, they planned the destruction of
the rodents, and declared that if any escaped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
death by poison, the little girl should snare
them and receive a cent for each tail.</p>
<p>When her mother's calico slat-sunbonnet
and the big hats of her big brothers had bobbed
out of sight across the corn, the little girl sat
down upon a hillock and counted gophers.
But there were so many and they ran about so
much that she could not keep track of them;
so she gave it up soon and began to think over
all the things she would buy from the thick catalogue
with the money she would get when she
had snared a great number.</p>
<p>And she was still sitting there, watching the
gophers covetously, when she saw the eldest
brother returning. He had a salmon-can full
of poisoned wheat in one hand, and when he
reached the meadow he made a circuit and left
a pinch of grain at the mouths of a score of
burrows, where the greedy animals could find
it and cram it into their cheek-pouches, and
then crawl into their holes to die. When he
had distributed all the grain, he threw the
salmon-can away, wiped his fingers on his overalls,
and started for the watermelon patch.</p>
<p>The little girl had silently withdrawn into
the corn-field at his approach, but now she came
out and, after satisfying herself that he was out
of sight, picked up the can and also made a
circuit of the meadow. Strangely enough, she
stopped at the very burrows he had visited.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
When she was done, she went to the boggy center,
found a deep cow track that was half full
of water, and carefully emptied the can into it.
Then she took it back to where the eldest brother
had thrown it, and, with a look toward the
watermelon patch, went home.</p>
<p>On his way back to the farm-house, the eldest
brother paused in the timothy to see if the gophers
had eaten of the poisoned grain. He
was delighted to find, on going from hill to
hill, that not a single kernel was visible! He
imparted the good news to the family at the
dinner-table, and it was received with rejoicing.
The little girl alone was silent. But, doubtless,
she had not heard what he said, for she was
intent upon a huge piece of dried-prune cobbler.</p>
<p>That afternoon she went out to the barn to
get some hair for a slipping-noose. Kate, the
raw-boned cultivator horse, standing idle in
her stall, turned her head and nickered when
she heard the door creak open, expecting a
nibble of sugar-bread. But the little girl had
nothing for her. Instead, she rolled a dry-goods
box into an adjoining stall, climbed upon it, and,
reaching over the rough board side, got hold
of Kate's long black tail.</p>
<p>The mare flattened her ears back, stamped
crossly, and swayed her hind quarters against
the opposite partition. But the little girl only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
clung the tighter and, unmindful in her security,
chose and pulled out a dozen of the longest
hairs she could find. Then, jumping down,
she arranged them, ends together, hooked them
over a nail at their center, and plaited them.
And when she had tied a piece of stout, dark
string to the end of the braid, she slipped it
through the hair loop. The next moment, with
a stick in one hand and the snare in the other,
she started happily for the meadow.</p>
<p>When she reached it, saucy <i>chur-r-rs</i> from all
over the timothy announced her. And as she
paused on its edge to decide which burrow
she would attack first, a dozen gophers sat up
on their haunches to look at her, or frisked
gaily from mound to mound.</p>
<p>She caught sight of a gray back at a near-by
hole, and, running forward, chased the animal
out of sight, stooped and carefully arranged
the noose around the opening, and, after covering
it with dirt, straightened the string to its
full length. Then she crept back noiselessly
to the hole to take a last peep before she threw
herself down flat upon her stomach, grasped
the end of the string, and lay very still.</p>
<p>For a moment there was no movement at the
burrow. But soon the tip end of a gopher's
nose appeared, the whiskers moving inquiringly,
and disappeared. When it came again,
the little girl whistled a note softly, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
nose came out so far that two sharp black
eyes showed. The eyes saw her, too, and the
gopher, growing bolder and more inquisitive,
raised himself higher on his fore paws to take
a better look. Presently all of his white throat
was visible, and the little girl knew that it was
time to act. With one quick, vigorous jerk of
her extended right arm, she tightened the loop
around him. And, amid a whirl of dirt, gray
tail, and tawny back, the gopher was pulled out
into the timothy.</p>
<p>The little girl sat upon her knees and looked
at him. Her heart was beating wildly, and she
was almost as scared as the panting creature
at the end of her string. He held the snare
taut as he crouched in a bunch of grass and
watched her. Finally, she pulled at it a little.
It brought him toward her, reluctantly sliding
along on his feet, which he braced stiffly. Then,
as she pulled again, he began to tug madly, and
clattered in alarm.</p>
<p>"<i>Seek—seek!</i>" he cried, twisting and turning
his lithe body; "<i>seek—seek—seek!</i>" The
next instant he took the string into his mouth
and bit it ferociously.</p>
<p>The little girl paled at the sight, and arose
trembling to her feet. This shortened the
snare, and the gopher came nearer, tumbling
over and over through the grass. Remembering
her stick, the little girl backed slowly toward it,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
not taking her eyes off him for an instant.
But, as she retreated, the string tightened again,
and the gopher advanced as before. The little
girl, still too far from the stick, trembled more
than ever at his wild cries, and her hand shook
so that she could hardly hold the snare. He
was attacking it with all his might, bounding
into the air and, blindly fearless in his danger,
coming toward her faster than she could step
backward.</p>
<p>A moment she paused, shaking her apron to
try to scare him. But as, hissing and fighting,
he rolled against her bare feet, she dropped
the string, turned her face from the meadow—and
fled!</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p><span class="smcap">Every</span> Sunday afternoon the Swede boy came
to the farm-house and, squatting opposite the
little girl as she sat enthroned upon the lounge
in all the glory of a stiff Turkey-red dress, eyed
her furtively while her mother read aloud the
story of Mazeppa. His pale eyes, under their
heavy white brows, never wavered from her
face, even during the most stirring danger to
the Cossack chief. Upon these occasions the
little girl's mind wandered, too; for the tale of
bravery recalled the colonel's son at the army
post, the pride of the troop, who, in campaign
hat, yellow-striped trousers, and snug, bright-buttoned
coat, was a sturdy military figure.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span>
And had the Swede boy known it, he was less
to her than a cockle-bur in her blind black
pony's tail.</p>
<p>But youth is fickle and the reservation was
far. So, when the rain was over next morning,
she ran to the barn, bridled her horse,
climbed from the manger to his back, and,
lying flat to escape the top casing of the door,
went out of the stable toward the Swede shanty
at a run. Down deep in the long, narrow, jack-knife
pocket of her apron lay a new gopher
snare, culled, as before, from the tail of the
cultivator mare.</p>
<p>As she scoured across the prairie, her hair
whipping her shoulders and her skirts fluttering
gaily, the last few clouds in the sky, white and
almost empty, dispersed tearfully above the distant
forks of the Vermillion. And when the river
was reached and forded, and the steep bank
climbed on the other side, a drying wind that
had sprung up promised, with the sun, to prepare
the timothy for that afternoon's snaring.</p>
<p>The Swede boy listened silently while the
little girl unfolded her plan, and, after she had
finished, waited a long time before speaking.
His pale eyes looked thoughtfully at the ground,
and the little girl, still mounted on her pony,
could not see whether or not they approved of
the scheme.</p>
<p>"Who gates th' mownay?" he asked at last.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
The little girl hesitated before answering,
struggling with greed.</p>
<p>"Bofe of us?" she faltered.</p>
<p>The Swede boy grunted.</p>
<p>"You catch 'em and kill 'em," said the little
girl, "and I'll snip off their tails. 'Cause my
biggest brother says gray gophers don't worry
no more 'bout losin' their tails than tadpoles
do."</p>
<p>He grunted again, and the little girl, eager
and impatient, turned the blind black pony
about in circles.</p>
<p>"Ay catch 'em, ay kill 'em," the Swede boy
said finally. There was a significant tone in
his voice, and a gleam in the pale eyes under
the tow hair. "An' yo' gate th' mownay," he
added.</p>
<p>They were on the edge of the timothy meadow
as soon as the pony, with his double load,
could cover the distance. And while the little
girl tied the horse to a big stone on the slope
of the carnelian bluff, the Swede boy hastened
to a gopher-hole and fixed the noose about it.
A moment later, when she came stealthily running
up behind him, he was already flat upon
the ground and waiting.</p>
<p>It was not long before the gopher poked his
nose out to see if his pursuer was near, and,
catching sight of a ragged felt hat just above
a clump of pigweed, stood up to investigate.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
The next instant the Swede boy had him and,
springing to his feet, cast a triumphant look
behind. But what was his amazement to see
the little girl, bareheaded, fast disappearing
through the corn!</p>
<p>When she came slowly back, the Swede boy
was again stretched upon his stomach, and
watching a hole nearer the center of the meadow.
The little girl did not follow him, but
stayed on the rim and pityingly viewed the
limp gopher that lay, with eyes half closed,
breast still, and tail thin and lifeless.</p>
<p>"Poor fing!" she said sympathetically, "it's
'cause you stealed the corn."</p>
<p>Then she opened his mouth with the butt end
of her willow riding-switch, to find out what
he had in his cheek-pouches. An onion and
a few marrowfat peas rolled out, and the little
girl, kneeling beside him, eyed him sternly.</p>
<p>"And so," she said, waving her hand toward
the barren strip, "after pickin' up all that corn,
you gophers have to go a-snoopin' round the
veg'table patch!"</p>
<p>She left him and went on to the corn-marker,
his tail, taken in righteous wrath, bearing her
jack-knife company in the long, narrow pocket
of her apron. But when she had sat down
musingly, her chin in her hands, a strange
thing happened to the dead gopher on the meadow
rim. He moved a little, slowly unclosed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
his eyes, raised his head, and looked about; and,
unseen by the Swede boy and the little girl,
crawled away, through the clods that had only
stunned him, to the corn-field, where, with many
a cross <i>seek</i>, he nursed the hairy stump that
henceforth was to serve him for a tail.</p>
<p>Dinnerless, but forgetful of hunger in the
sport of capture, the little girl and the Swede
boy stayed on. Once, during the afternoon, a
gopher stopped their work by getting away with
the snare and leaving them only half of the
string. But the blind black pony good-naturedly
furnished enough wiry strands for another
slipping-noose, and the hunt went on.</p>
<p>On their way to the farm-house at sundown,
they passed the spot where the Swede boy had
left his first capture, but failed to find him anywhere.</p>
<p>"Why, he's runned away!" exclaimed the
little girl.</p>
<p>The Swede boy shook his head. "Noa; ay
keel hame weeth a clode," he said, "an' a bole-snake
gote hame."</p>
<p>They had many a stout noose stolen during
the days that followed. But the Swede boy
snared plenty of gray gophers, and they all
shared the fate of the first one,—lost their
tails and were left to lie on the edge of the
ruined meadow. When the spot was visited
afterward, it was generally found that they had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
disappeared. But this did not trouble the little
girl, for she wisely concluded that the bull-snakes
were having a fat time of it.</p>
<p>The night before the three big brothers left
with the thrashers, the string of gopher-tails
was so long that she brought it into the kitchen
and gave it proudly to the eldest brother to
count. Then it was put into a twist of hay and
shoved into the cook-stove.</p>
<p>"Goin' to give some of them pennies to th'
Swede?" asked the youngest brother as the little
girl sat down at the table and began to add
up her earnings.</p>
<p>She flushed, but did not answer.</p>
<p>"Naw," said the eldest brother. "Why, th'
Swede's not catchin' gophers for money; he's
doin' it for love."</p>
<p>The little girl gathered up her pennies angrily
and went to her room. But, next morning,
when the Swede boy's whistle sounded from
the meadow, she mounted her pony and went
down. For the biggest brother had whispered
to her this word of philosophy: "Might jus' as
well get th' game with th' name."</p>
<p>For several nights after the departure of the
big brothers, the little girl came home radiant,
brushes dangling from her apron ruffle like
scalps. Then, one evening, when four catches
should have made her happy, she ate her supper
with a sad and puzzled face, and afterward<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
added only <i>two</i> tails to her string. Her mother,
seeing that something was troubling her, inquired
what it was; but, on hearing the story,
went into such a hearty fit of laughter that the
little girl's feelings were hurt very much, and
she went to bed on the instant. She did not
broach the subject again. But while the two
weeks of her big brothers' absence were passing,
she was often dejected.</p>
<p>After supper, the first night of their return,
when the benches were still drawn up around
the table, and the big brothers, tired with their
long ride, were pulling at their corn-cob pipes,
the little girl went up to the eldest and touched
him timidly on the arm.</p>
<p>"Well, youngster," he said, "how many gophers
have you snared since we've been gone?"</p>
<p>The little girl got red suddenly, and hesitated
before she spoke. "Sixty," she answered,
half under her breath.</p>
<p>The biggest brother took his pipe out of his
mouth in mock astonishment. "Sixty!" he exclaimed.
"Why, geewhitaker! you'll break
the bank if you don't look out!"</p>
<p>The eldest brother put his hand into his
pocket and took out some change. "Get the
string," he said, "and here's your money."</p>
<p>The little girl looked at the coins mournfully,
and then around the circle, and stepped back
a few paces. "You won't b'lieve me when you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
see it," she said. She went out and came back
presently, holding up the tails.</p>
<p>The eldest brother took them out of her hand,
and she stood silently by while he counted them.
When he had finished, he looked at her crossly.
"Sixty!" he sneered. "You haven't caught
no such thing! Here's only twenty." He
waved the brushes in the air, and the little girl
trembled visibly. "Did you think I'd pay you
for sixty," he continued, "when you ain't got
the tails to show for 'em?"</p>
<p>The little girl trembled more than ever.
"Honest," she said; "honest! We caught
sixty—we did, truly—"</p>
<p>"Where are their tails, then? where are their
tails?" asked the eldest brother, impatiently,
shaking the string so violently that some of the
brushes fell off. "You <i>say</i> you did—<i>but what
have you got to show for 'em</i>?"</p>
<p>The little girl came closer, her eyes wide and
earnest. She was breathing hard and she
lowered her voice as she answered.</p>
<p>"True as cross my heart to die," she said,
"we caught sixty; but this was all the string
I could get. 'Cause—'cause—there's a new
kind of gophers in the timothy meadow,—<i>and
they ain't got tails!</i>"</p>
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