“It is my right to know,” the girl said.
Her voice was firm-fibred with determination. There was no hint of
pleading in it, yet it was the determination that is reached through a
long period of pleading. But in her case it had been pleading, not of
speech, but of personality. Her lips had been ever mute, but her face and
eyes, and the very attitude of her soul, had been for a long time eloquent
with questioning. This the man had known, but he had never answered; and
now she was demanding by the spoken word that he answer.
“It is my right,” the girl repeated.
“I know it,” he answered, desperately and helplessly.
She waited, in the silence which followed, her eyes fixed upon the light
that filtered down through the lofty boughs and bathed the great redwood
trunks in mellow warmth. This light, subdued and colored, seemed almost a
radiation from the trunks themselves, so strongly did they saturate it
with their hue. The girl saw without seeing, as she heard, without
hearing, the deep gurgling of the stream far below on the canyon bottom.
She looked down at the man. “Well?” she asked, with the firmness which
feigns belief that obedience will be forthcoming.
She was sitting upright, her back against a fallen tree-trunk, while he
lay near to her, on his side, an elbow on the ground and the hand
supporting his head.
“Dear, dear Lute,” he murmured.
She shivered at the sound of his voice—not from repulsion, but from
struggle against the fascination of its caressing gentleness. She had come
to know well the lure of the man—the wealth of easement and rest
that was promised by every caressing intonation of his voice, by the mere
touch of hand on hand or the faint impact of his breath on neck or cheek.
The man could not express himself by word nor look nor touch without
weaving into the expression, subtly and occultly, the feeling as of a hand
that passed and that in passing stroked softly and soothingly. Nor was
this all-pervading caress a something that cloyed with too great
sweetness; nor was it sickly sentimental; nor was it maudlin with love’s
madness. It was vigorous, compelling, masculine. For that matter, it was
largely unconscious on the man’s part. He was only dimly aware of it. It
was a part of him, the breath of his soul as it were, involuntary and
unpremeditated.
But now, resolved and desperate, she steeled herself against him. He tried
to face her, but her gray eyes looked out to him, steadily, from under
cool, level brows, and he dropped his head upon her knee. Her hand strayed
into his hair softly, and her face melted into solicitude and tenderness.
But when he looked up again, her gray eyes were steady, her brows cool and
level.
“What more can I tell you?” the man said. He raised his head and met her
gaze. “I cannot marry you. I cannot marry any woman. I love you—you
know that—better than my own life. I weigh you in the scales against
all the dear things of living, and you outweigh everything. I would give
everything to possess you, yet I may not. I cannot marry you. I can never
marry you.”
Her lips were compressed with the effort of control. His head was sinking
back to her knee, when she checked him.
“You are already married, Chris?”
“No! no!” he cried vehemently. “I have never been married. I want to marry
only you, and I cannot!”
“Then—”
“Don’t!” he interrupted. “Don’t ask me!”
“It is my right to know,” she repeated.
“I know it,” he again interrupted. “But I cannot tell you.”
“You have not considered me, Chris,” she went on gently.
“I know, I know,” he broke in.
“You cannot have considered me. You do not know what I have to bear from
my people because of you.”
“I did not think they felt so very unkindly toward me,” he said bitterly.
“It is true. They can scarcely tolerate you. They do not show it to you,
but they almost hate you. It is I who have had to bear all this. It was
not always so, though. They liked you at first as... as I liked you. But
that was four years ago. The time passed by—a year, two years; and
then they began to turn against you. They are not to be blamed. You spoke
no word. They felt that you were destroying my life. It is four years,
now, and you have never once mentioned marriage to them. What were they to
think? What they have thought, that you were destroying my life.”
As she talked, she continued to pass her fingers caressingly through his
hair, sorrowful for the pain that she was inflicting.
“They did like you at first. Who can help liking you? You seem to draw
affection from all living things, as the trees draw the moisture from the
ground. It comes to you as it were your birthright. Aunt Mildred and Uncle
Robert thought there was nobody like you. The sun rose and set in you.
They thought I was the luckiest girl alive to win the love of a man like
you. ‘For it looks very much like it,’ Uncle Robert used to say, wagging
his head wickedly at me. Of course they liked you. Aunt Mildred used to
sigh, and look across teasingly at Uncle, and say, ‘When I think of Chris,
it almost makes me wish I were younger myself.’ And Uncle would answer, ‘I
don’t blame you, my dear, not in the least.’ And then the pair of them
would beam upon me their congratulations that I had won the love of a man
like you.
“And they knew I loved you as well. How could I hide it?—this great,
wonderful thing that had entered into my life and swallowed up all my
days! For four years, Chris, I have lived only for you. Every moment was
yours. Waking, I loved you. Sleeping, I dreamed of you. Every act I have
performed was shaped by you, by the thought of you. Even my thoughts were
moulded by you, by the invisible presence of you. I had no end, petty or
great, that you were not there for me.”
“I had no idea of imposing such slavery,” he muttered.
“You imposed nothing. You always let me have my own way. It was you who
were the obedient slave. You did for me without offending me. You
forestalled my wishes without the semblance of forestalling them, so
natural and inevitable was everything you did for me. I said, without
offending me. You were no dancing puppet. You made no fuss. Don’t you see?
You did not seem to do things at all. Somehow they were always there, just
done, as a matter of course.
“The slavery was love’s slavery. It was just my love for you that made you
swallow up all my days. You did not force yourself into my thoughts. You
crept in, always, and you were there always—how much, you will never
know.
“But as time went by, Aunt Mildred and Uncle grew to dislike you. They
grew afraid. What was to become of me? You were destroying my life. My
music? You know how my dream of it has dimmed away. That spring, when I
first met you—I was twenty, and I was about to start for Germany. I
was going to study hard. That was four years ago, and I am still here in
California.
“I had other lovers. You drove them away—No! no! I don’t mean that.
It was I that drove them away. What did I care for lovers, for anything,
when you were near? But as I said, Aunt Mildred and Uncle grew afraid.
There has been talk—friends, busybodies, and all the rest. The time
went by. You did not speak. I could only wonder, wonder. I knew you loved
me. Much was said against you by Uncle at first, and then by Aunt Mildred.
They were father and mother to me, you know. I could not defend you. Yet I
was loyal to you. I refused to discuss you. I closed up. There was
half-estrangement in my home—Uncle Robert with a face like an
undertaker, and Aunt Mildred’s heart breaking. But what could I do, Chris?
What could I do?”
The man, his head resting on her knee again, groaned, but made no other
reply.
“Aunt Mildred was mother to me, yet I went to her no more with my
confidences. My childhood’s book was closed. It was a sweet book, Chris.
The tears come into my eyes sometimes when I think of it. But never mind
that. Great happiness has been mine as well. I am glad I can talk frankly
of my love for you. And the attaining of such frankness has been very
sweet. I do love you, Chris. I love you... I cannot tell you how. You are
everything to me, and more besides. You remember that Christmas tree of
the children?—when we played blindman’s buff? and you caught me by
the arm so, with such a clutching of fingers that I cried out with the
hurt? I never told you, but the arm was badly bruised. And such sweet I
got of it you could never guess. There, black and blue, was the imprint of
your fingers—your fingers, Chris, your fingers. It was the touch of
you made visible. It was there a week, and I kissed the marks—oh, so
often! I hated to see them go; I wanted to rebruise the arm and make them
linger. I was jealous of the returning white that drove the bruise away.
Somehow,—oh! I cannot explain, but I loved you so!”
In the silence that fell, she continued her caressing of his hair, while
she idly watched a great gray squirrel, boisterous and hilarious, as it
scampered back and forth in a distant vista of the redwoods. A
crimson-crested woodpecker, energetically drilling a fallen trunk, caught
and transferred her gaze. The man did not lift his head. Rather, he
crushed his face closer against her knee, while his heaving shoulders
marked the hardness with which he breathed.
“You must tell me, Chris,” the girl said gently. “This mystery—it is
killing me. I must know why we cannot be married. Are we always to be this
way?—merely lovers, meeting often, it is true, and yet with the long
absences between the meetings? Is it all the world holds for you and me,
Chris? Are we never to be more to each other? Oh, it is good just to love,
I know—you have made me madly happy; but one does get so hungry at
times for something more! I want more and more of you, Chris. I want all
of you. I want all our days to be together. I want all the companionship,
the comradeship, which cannot be ours now, and which will be ours when we
are married—” She caught her breath quickly. “But we are never to be
married. I forgot. And you must tell me why.”
The man raised his head and looked her in the eyes. It was a way he had
with whomever he talked, of looking them in the eyes.
“I have considered you, Lute,” he began doggedly. “I did consider you at
the very first. I should never have gone on with it. I should have gone
away. I knew it. And I considered you in the light of that knowledge, and
yet... I did not go away. My God! what was I to do? I loved you. I could
not go away. I could not help it. I stayed. I resolved, but I broke my
resolves. I was like a drunkard. I was drunk of you. I was weak, I know. I
failed. I could not go away. I tried. I went away—you will remember,
though you did not know why. You know now. I went away, but I could not
remain away. Knowing that we could never marry, I came back to you. I am
here, now, with you. Send me away, Lute. I have not the strength to go
myself.”
“But why should you go away?” she asked. “Besides, I must know why, before
I can send you away.”
“Don’t ask me.”
“Tell me,” she said, her voice tenderly imperative.
“Don’t, Lute; don’t force me,” the man pleaded, and there was appeal in
his eyes and voice.
“But you must tell me,” she insisted. “It is justice you owe me.”
The man wavered. “If I do...” he began. Then he ended with determination,
“I should never be able to forgive myself. No, I cannot tell you. Don’t
try to compel me, Lute. You would be as sorry as I.”
“If there is anything... if there are obstacles... if this mystery does
really prevent....” She was speaking slowly, with long pauses, seeking the
more delicate ways of speech for the framing of her thought. “Chris, I do
love you. I love you as deeply as it is possible for any woman to love, I
am sure. If you were to say to me now ‘Come,’ I would go with you. I would
follow wherever you led. I would be your page, as in the days of old when
ladies went with their knights to far lands. You are my knight, Chris, and
you can do no wrong. Your will is my wish. I was once afraid of the
censure of the world. Now that you have come into my life I am no longer
afraid. I would laugh at the world and its censure for your sake—for
my sake too. I would laugh, for I should have you, and you are more to me
than the good will and approval of the world. If you say ‘Come,’ I will—”
“Don’t! Don’t!” he cried. “It is impossible! Marriage or not, I cannot
even say ‘Come.’ I dare not. I’ll show you. I’ll tell you.”
He sat up beside her, the action stamped with resolve. He took her hand in
his and held it closely. His lips moved to the verge of speech. The
mystery trembled for utterance. The air was palpitant with its presence.
As if it were an irrevocable decree, the girl steeled herself to hear. But
the man paused, gazing straight out before him. She felt his hand relax in
hers, and she pressed it sympathetically, encouragingly. But she felt the
rigidity going out of his tensed body, and she knew that spirit and flesh
were relaxing together. His resolution was ebbing. He would not speak—she
knew it; and she knew, likewise, with the sureness of faith, that it was
because he could not.
She gazed despairingly before her, a numb feeling at her heart, as though
hope and happiness had died. She watched the sun flickering down through
the warm-trunked redwoods. But she watched in a mechanical, absent way.
She looked at the scene as from a long way off, without interest, herself
an alien, no longer an intimate part of the earth and trees and flowers
she loved so well.
So far removed did she seem, that she was aware of a curiosity, strangely
impersonal, in what lay around her. Through a near vista she looked at a
buckeye tree in full blossom as though her eyes encountered it for the
first time. Her eyes paused and dwelt upon a yellow cluster of Diogenes’
lanterns that grew on the edge of an open space. It was the way of flowers
always to give her quick pleasure-thrills, but no thrill was hers now. She
pondered the flower slowly and thoughtfully, as a hasheesh-eater, heavy
with the drug, might ponder some whim-flower that obtruded on his vision.
In her ears was the voice of the stream—a hoarse-throated, sleepy
old giant, muttering and mumbling his somnolent fancies. But her fancy was
not in turn aroused, as was its wont; she knew the sound merely for water
rushing over the rocks of the deep canyon-bottom, that and nothing more.
Her gaze wandered on beyond the Diogenes’ lanterns into the open space.
Knee-deep in the wild oats of the hillside grazed two horses,
chestnut-sorrels the pair of them, perfectly matched, warm and golden in
the sunshine, their spring-coats a sheen of high-lights shot through with
color-flashes that glowed like fiery jewels. She recognized, almost with a
shock, that one of them was hers, Dolly, the companion of her girlhood and
womanhood, on whose neck she had sobbed her sorrows and sung her joys. A
moistness welled into her eyes at the sight, and she came back from the
remoteness of her mood, quick with passion and sorrow, to be part of the
world again.
The man sank forward from the hips, relaxing entirely, and with a groan
dropped his head on her knee. She leaned over him and pressed her lips
softly and lingeringly to his hair.
“Come, let us go,” she said, almost in a whisper.
She caught her breath in a half-sob, then tightened her lips as she rose.
His face was white to ghastliness, so shaken was he by the struggle
through which he had passed. They did not look at each other, but walked
directly to the horses. She leaned against Dolly’s neck while he tightened
the girths. Then she gathered the reins in her hand and waited. He looked
at her as he bent down, an appeal for forgiveness in his eyes; and in that
moment her own eyes answered. Her foot rested in his hands, and from there
she vaulted into the saddle. Without speaking, without further looking at
each other, they turned the horses’ heads and took the narrow trail that
wound down through the sombre redwood aisles and across the open glades to
the pasture-lands below. The trail became a cow-path, the cow-path became
a wood-road, which later joined with a hay-road; and they rode down
through the low-rolling, tawny California hills to where a set of bars let
out on the county road which ran along the bottom of the valley. The girl
sat her horse while the man dismounted and began taking down the bars.
“No—wait!” she cried, before he had touched the two lower bars.
She urged the mare forward a couple of strides, and then the animal lifted
over the bars in a clean little jump. The man’s eyes sparkled, and he
clapped his hands.
“You beauty! you beauty!” the girl cried, leaning forward impulsively in
the saddle and pressing her cheek to the mare’s neck where it burned
flame-color in the sun.
“Let’s trade horses for the ride in,” she suggested, when he had led his
horse through and finished putting up the bars. “You’ve never sufficiently
appreciated Dolly.”
“No, no,” he protested.
“You think she is too old, too sedate,” Lute insisted. “She’s only
sixteen, and she can outrun nine colts out of ten. Only she never cuts up.
She’s too steady, and you don’t approve of her—no, don’t deny it,
sir. I know. And I know also that she can outrun your vaunted Washoe Ban.
There! I challenge you! And furthermore, you may ride her yourself. You
know what Ban can do; so you must ride Dolly and see for yourself what she
can do.”
They proceeded to exchange the saddles on the horses, glad of the
diversion and making the most of it.
“I’m glad I was born in California,” Lute remarked, as she swung astride
of Ban. “It’s an outrage both to horse and woman to ride in a sidesaddle.”
“You look like a young Amazon,” the man said approvingly, his eyes passing
tenderly over the girl as she swung the horse around.
“Are you ready?” she asked.
“All ready!”
“To the old mill,” she called, as the horses sprang forward. “That’s less
than a mile.”
“To a finish?” he demanded.
She nodded, and the horses, feeling the urge of the reins, caught the
spirit of the race. The dust rose in clouds behind as they tore along the
level road. They swung around the bend, horses and riders tilted at sharp
angles to the ground, and more than once the riders ducked low to escape
the branches of outreaching and overhanging trees. They clattered over the
small plank bridges, and thundered over the larger iron ones to an ominous
clanking of loose rods.
They rode side by side, saving the animals for the rush at the finish, yet
putting them at a pace that drew upon vitality and staying power. Curving
around a clump of white oaks, the road straightened out before them for
several hundred yards, at the end of which they could see the ruined mill.
“Now for it!” the girl cried.
She urged the horse by suddenly leaning forward with her body, at the same
time, for an instant, letting the rein slack and touching the neck with
her bridle hand. She began to draw away from the man.
“Touch her on the neck!” she cried to him.
With this, the mare pulled alongside and began gradually to pass the girl.
Chris and Lute looked at each other for a moment, the mare still drawing
ahead, so that Chris was compelled slowly to turn his head. The mill was a
hundred yards away.
“Shall I give him the spurs?” Lute shouted.
The man nodded, and the girl drove the spurs in sharply and quickly,
calling upon the horse for its utmost, but watched her own horse forge
slowly ahead of her.
“Beaten by three lengths!” Lute beamed triumphantly, as they pulled into a
walk. “Confess, sir, confess! You didn’t think the old mare had it in
her.”
Lute leaned to the side and rested her hand for a moment on Dolly’s wet
neck.
“Ban’s a sluggard alongside of her,” Chris affirmed. “Dolly’s all right,
if she is in her Indian Summer.”
Lute nodded approval. “That’s a sweet way of putting it—Indian
Summer. It just describes her. But she’s not lazy. She has all the fire
and none of the folly. She is very wise, what of her years.”
“That accounts for it,” Chris demurred. “Her folly passed with her youth.
Many’s the lively time she’s given you.”
“No,” Lute answered. “I never knew her really to cut up. I think the only
trouble she ever gave me was when I was training her to open gates. She
was afraid when they swung back upon her—the animal’s fear of the
trap, perhaps. But she bravely got over it. And she never was vicious. She
never bolted, nor bucked, nor cut up in all her life—never, not
once.”
The horses went on at a walk, still breathing heavily from their run. The
road wound along the bottom of the valley, now and again crossing the
stream. From either side rose the drowsy purr of mowing-machines,
punctuated by occasional sharp cries of the men who were gathering the
hay-crop. On the western side of the valley the hills rose green and dark,
but the eastern side was already burned brown and tan by the sun.
“There is summer, here is spring,” Lute said. “Oh, beautiful Sonoma
Valley!”
Her eyes were glistening and her face was radiant with love of the land.
Her gaze wandered on across orchard patches and sweeping vineyard
stretches, seeking out the purple which seemed to hang like a dim smoke in
the wrinkles of the hills and in the more distant canyon gorges. Far up,
among the more rugged crests, where the steep slopes were covered with
manzanita, she caught a glimpse of a clear space where the wild grass had
not yet lost its green.
“Have you ever heard of the secret pasture?” she asked, her eyes still
fixed on the remote green.
A snort of fear brought her eyes back to the man beside her. Dolly,
upreared, with distended nostrils and wild eyes, was pawing the air madly
with her fore legs. Chris threw himself forward against her neck to keep
her from falling backward, and at the same time touched her with the spurs
to compel her to drop her fore feet to the ground in order to obey the
go-ahead impulse of the spurs.
“Why, Dolly, this is most remarkable,” Lute began reprovingly.
But, to her surprise, the mare threw her head down, arched her back as she
went up in the air, and, returning, struck the ground stiff-legged and
bunched.
“A genuine buck!” Chris called out, and the next moment the mare was
rising under him in a second buck.
Lute looked on, astounded at the unprecedented conduct of her mare, and
admiring her lover’s horsemanship. He was quite cool, and was himself
evidently enjoying the performance. Again and again, half a dozen times,
Dolly arched herself into the air and struck, stiffly bunched. Then she
threw her head straight up and rose on her hind legs, pivoting about and
striking with her fore feet. Lute whirled into safety the horse she was
riding, and as she did so caught a glimpse of Dolly’s eyes, with the look
in them of blind brute madness, bulging until it seemed they must burst
from her head. The faint pink in the white of the eyes was gone, replaced
by a white that was like dull marble and that yet flashed as from some
inner fire.
A faint cry of fear, suppressed in the instant of utterance, slipped past
Lute’s lips. One hind leg of the mare seemed to collapse, and for a moment
the whole quivering body, upreared and perpendicular, swayed back and
forth, and there was uncertainty as to whether it would fall forward or
backward. The man, half-slipping sidewise from the saddle, so as to fall
clear if the mare toppled backward, threw his weight to the front and
alongside her neck. This overcame the dangerous teetering balance, and the
mare struck the ground on her feet again.
But there was no let-up. Dolly straightened out so that the line of the
face was almost a continuation of the line of the stretched neck; this
position enabled her to master the bit, which she did by bolting straight
ahead down the road.
For the first time Lute became really frightened. She spurred Washoe Ban
in pursuit, but he could not hold his own with the mad mare, and dropped
gradually behind. Lute saw Dolly check and rear in the air again, and
caught up just as the mare made a second bolt. As Dolly dashed around a
bend, she stopped suddenly, stiff-legged. Lute saw her lover torn out of
the saddle, his thigh-grip broken by the sudden jerk. Though he had lost
his seat, he had not been thrown, and as the mare dashed on Lute saw him
clinging to the side of the horse, a hand in the mane and a leg across the
saddle. With a quick cavort he regained his seat and proceeded to fight
with the mare for control.
But Dolly swerved from the road and dashed down a grassy slope yellowed
with innumerable mariposa lilies. An ancient fence at the bottom was no
obstacle. She burst through as though it were filmy spider-web and
disappeared in the underbrush. Lute followed unhesitatingly, putting Ban
through the gap in the fence and plunging on into the thicket. She lay
along his neck, closely, to escape the ripping and tearing of the trees
and vines. She felt the horse drop down through leafy branches and into
the cool gravel of a stream’s bottom. From ahead came a splashing of
water, and she caught a glimpse of Dolly, dashing up the small bank and
into a clump of scrub-oaks, against the trunks of which she was trying to
scrape off her rider.
Lute almost caught up amongst the trees, but was hopelessly outdistanced
on the fallow field adjoining, across which the mare tore with a fine
disregard for heavy ground and gopher-holes. When she turned at a sharp
angle into the thicket-land beyond, Lute took the long diagonal, skirted
the ticket, and reined in Ban at the other side. She had arrived first.
From within the thicket she could hear a tremendous crashing of brush and
branches. Then the mare burst through and into the open, falling to her
knees, exhausted, on the soft earth. She arose and staggered forward, then
came limply to a halt. She was in lather-sweat of fear, and stood
trembling pitiably.
Chris was still on her back. His shirt was in ribbons. The backs of his
hands were bruised and lacerated, while his face was streaming blood from
a gash near the temple. Lute had controlled herself well, but now she was
aware of a quick nausea and a trembling of weakness.
“Chris!” she said, so softly that it was almost a whisper. Then she
sighed, “Thank God.”
“Oh, I’m all right,” he cried to her, putting into his voice all the
heartiness he could command, which was not much, for he had himself been
under no mean nervous strain.
He showed the reaction he was undergoing, when he swung down out of the
saddle. He began with a brave muscular display as he lifted his leg over,
but ended, on his feet, leaning against the limp Dolly for support. Lute
flashed out of her saddle, and her arms were about him in an embrace of
thankfulness.
“I know where there is a spring,” she said, a moment later.
They left the horses standing untethered, and she led her lover into the
cool recesses of the thicket to where crystal water bubbled from out the
base of the mountain.
“What was that you said about Dolly’s never cutting up?” he asked, when
the blood had been stanched and his nerves and pulse-beats were normal
again.
“I am stunned,” Lute answered. “I cannot understand it. She never did
anything like it in all her life. And all animals like you so—it’s
not because of that. Why, she is a child’s horse. I was only a little girl
when I first rode her, and to this day—”
“Well, this day she was everything but a child’s horse,” Chris broke in.
“She was a devil. She tried to scrape me off against the trees, and to
batter my brains out against the limbs. She tried all the lowest and
narrowest places she could find. You should have seen her squeeze through.
And did you see those bucks?”
Lute nodded.
“Regular bucking-bronco proposition.”
“But what should she know about bucking?” Lute demanded. “She was never
known to buck—never.”
He shrugged his shoulders. “Some forgotten instinct, perhaps, long-lapsed
and come to life again.”
The girl rose to her feet determinedly. “I’m going to find out,” she said.
They went back to the horses, where they subjected Dolly to a rigid
examination that disclosed nothing. Hoofs, legs, bit, mouth, body—everything
was as it should be. The saddle and saddle-cloth were innocent of bur or
sticker; the back was smooth and unbroken. They searched for sign of
snake-bite and sting of fly or insect, but found nothing.
“Whatever it was, it was subjective, that much is certain,” Chris said.
“Obsession,” Lute suggested.
They laughed together at the idea, for both were twentieth-century
products, healthy-minded and normal, with souls that delighted in the
butterfly-chase of ideals but that halted before the brink where
superstition begins.
“An evil spirit,” Chris laughed; “but what evil have I done that I should
be so punished?”
“You think too much of yourself, sir,” she rejoined. “It is more likely
some evil, I don’t know what, that Dolly has done. You were a mere
accident. I might have been on her back at the time, or Aunt Mildred, or
anybody.”
As she talked, she took hold of the stirrup-strap and started to shorten
it.
“What are you doing?” Chris demanded.
“I’m going to ride Dolly in.”
“No, you’re not,” he announced. “It would be bad discipline. After what
has happened I am simply compelled to ride her in myself.”
But it was a very weak and very sick mare he rode, stumbling and halting,
afflicted with nervous jerks and recurring muscular spasms—the
aftermath of the tremendous orgasm through which she had passed.
“I feel like a book of verse and a hammock, after all that has happened,”
Lute said, as they rode into camp.
It was a summer camp of city-tired people, pitched in a grove of towering
redwoods through whose lofty boughs the sunshine trickled down, broken and
subdued to soft light and cool shadow. Apart from the main camp were the
kitchen and the servants’ tents; and midway between was the great dining
hall, walled by the living redwood columns, where fresh whispers of air
were always to be found, and where no canopy was needed to keep the sun
away.
“Poor Dolly, she is really sick,” Lute said that evening, when they had
returned from a last look at the mare. “But you weren’t hurt, Chris, and
that’s enough for one small woman to be thankful for. I thought I knew,
but I really did not know till to-day, how much you meant to me. I could
hear only the plunging and struggle in the thicket. I could not see you,
nor know how it went with you.”
“My thoughts were of you,” Chris answered, and felt the responsive
pressure of the hand that rested on his arm.
She turned her face up to his and met his lips.
“Good night,” she said.
“Dear Lute, dear Lute,” he caressed her with his voice as she moved away
among the shadows.
“Who’s going for the mail?” called a woman’s voice through the trees.
Lute closed the book from which they had been reading, and sighed.
“We weren’t going to ride to-day,” she said.
“Let me go,” Chris proposed. “You stay here. I’ll be down and back in no
time.”
She shook her head.
“Who’s going for the mail?” the voice insisted.
“Where’s Martin?” Lute called, lifting her voice in answer.
“I don’t know,” came the voice. “I think Robert took him along somewhere—horse-buying,
or fishing, or I don’t know what. There’s really nobody left but Chris and
you. Besides, it will give you an appetite for dinner. You’ve been
lounging in the hammock all day. And Uncle Robert must have his
newspaper.”
“All right, Aunty, we’re starting,” Lute called back, getting out of the
hammock.
A few minutes later, in riding-clothes, they were saddling the horses.
They rode out on to the county road, where blazed the afternoon sun, and
turned toward Glen Ellen. The little town slept in the sun, and the
somnolent storekeeper and postmaster scarcely kept his eyes open long
enough to make up the packet of letters and newspapers.
An hour later Lute and Chris turned aside from the road and dipped along a
cow-path down the high bank to water the horses, before going into camp.
“Dolly looks as though she’d forgotten all about yesterday,” Chris said,
as they sat their horses knee-deep in the rushing water. “Look at her.”
The mare had raised her head and cocked her ears at the rustling of a
quail in the thicket. Chris leaned over and rubbed around her ears.
Dolly’s enjoyment was evident, and she drooped her head over against the
shoulder of his own horse.
“Like a kitten,” was Lute’s comment.
“Yet I shall never be able wholly to trust her again,” Chris said. “Not
after yesterday’s mad freak.”
“I have a feeling myself that you are safer on Ban,” Lute laughed. “It is
strange. My trust in Dolly is as implicit as ever. I feel confident so far
as I am concerned, but I should never care to see you on her back again.
Now with Ban, my faith is still unshaken. Look at that neck! Isn’t he
handsome! He’ll be as wise as Dolly when he is as old as she.”
“I feel the same way,” Chris laughed back. “Ban could never possibly
betray me.”
They turned their horses out of the stream. Dolly stopped to brush a fly
from her knee with her nose, and Ban urged past into the narrow way of the
path. The space was too restricted to make him return, save with much
trouble, and Chris allowed him to go on. Lute, riding behind, dwelt with
her eyes upon her lover’s back, pleasuring in the lines of the bare neck
and the sweep out to the muscular shoulders.
Suddenly she reined in her horse. She could do nothing but look, so brief
was the duration of the happening. Beneath and above was the almost
perpendicular bank. The path itself was barely wide enough for footing.
Yet Washoe Ban, whirling and rearing at the same time, toppled for a
moment in the air and fell backward off the path.
So unexpected and so quick was it, that the man was involved in the fall.
There had been no time for him to throw himself to the path. He was
falling ere he knew it, and he did the only thing possible—slipped
the stirrups and threw his body into the air, to the side, and at the same
time down. It was twelve feet to the rocks below. He maintained an upright
position, his head up and his eyes fixed on the horse above him and
falling upon him.
Chris struck like a cat, on his feet, on the instant making a leap to the
side. The next instant Ban crashed down beside him. The animal struggled
little, but sounded the terrible cry that horses sometimes sound when they
have received mortal hurt. He had struck almost squarely on his back, and
in that position he remained, his head twisted partly under, his hind legs
relaxed and motionless, his fore legs futilely striking the air.
Chris looked up reassuringly.
“I am getting used to it,” Lute smiled down to him. “Of course I need not
ask if you are hurt. Can I do anything?”
He smiled back and went over to the fallen beast, letting go the girths of
the saddle and getting the head straightened out.
“I thought so,” he said, after a cursory examination. “I thought so at the
time. Did you hear that sort of crunching snap?”
She shuddered.
“Well, that was the punctuation of life, the final period dropped at the
end of Ban’s usefulness.” He started around to come up by the path. “I’ve
been astride of Ban for the last time. Let us go home.”
At the top of the bank Chris turned and looked down.
“Good-by, Washoe Ban!” he called out. “Good-by, old fellow.”
The animal was struggling to lift its head. There were tears in Chris’s
eyes as he turned abruptly away, and tears in Lute’s eyes as they met his.
She was silent in her sympathy, though the pressure of her hand was firm
in his as he walked beside her horse down the dusty road.
“It was done deliberately,” Chris burst forth suddenly. “There was no
warning. He deliberately flung himself over backward.”
“There was no warning,” Lute concurred. “I was looking. I saw him. He
whirled and threw himself at the same time, just as if you had done it
yourself, with a tremendous jerk and backward pull on the bit.”
“It was not my hand, I swear it. I was not even thinking of him. He was
going up with a fairly loose rein, as a matter of course.”
“I should have seen it, had you done it,” Lute said. “But it was all done
before you had a chance to do anything. It was not your hand, not even
your unconscious hand.”
“Then it was some invisible hand, reaching out from I don’t know where.”
He looked up whimsically at the sky and smiled at the conceit.
Martin stepped forward to receive Dolly, when they came into the stable
end of the grove, but his face expressed no surprise at sight of Chris
coming in on foot. Chris lingered behind Lute for moment.
“Can you shoot a horse?” he asked.
The groom nodded, then added, “Yes, sir,” with a second and deeper nod.
“How do you do it?”
“Draw a line from the eyes to the ears—I mean the opposite ears,
sir. And where the lines cross—”
“That will do,” Chris interrupted. “You know the watering place at the
second bend. You’ll find Ban there with a broken back.”
“Oh, here you are, sir. I have been looking for you everywhere since
dinner. You are wanted immediately.”
Chris tossed his cigar away, then went over and pressed his foot on its
glowing fire.
“You haven’t told anybody about it?—Ban?” he queried.
Lute shook her head. “They’ll learn soon enough. Martin will mention it to
Uncle Robert to-morrow.”
“But don’t feel too bad about it,” she said, after a moment’s pause,
slipping her hand into his.
“He was my colt,” he said. “Nobody has ridden him but you. I broke him
myself. I knew him from the time he was born. I knew every bit of him,
every trick, every caper, and I would have staked my life that it was
impossible for him to do a thing like this. There was no warning, no
fighting for the bit, no previous unruliness. I have been thinking it
over. He didn’t fight for the bit, for that matter. He wasn’t unruly, nor
disobedient. There wasn’t time. It was an impulse, and he acted upon it
like lightning. I am astounded now at the swiftness with which it took
place. Inside the first second we were over the edge and falling.
“It was deliberate—deliberate suicide. And attempted murder. It was
a trap. I was the victim. He had me, and he threw himself over with me.
Yet he did not hate me. He loved me... as much as it is possible for a
horse to love. I am confounded. I cannot understand it any more than you
can understand Dolly’s behavior yesterday.”
“But horses go insane, Chris,” Lute said. “You know that. It’s merely
coincidence that two horses in two days should have spells under you.”
“That’s the only explanation,” he answered, starting off with her. “But
why am I wanted urgently?”
“Planchette.”
“Oh, I remember. It will be a new experience to me. Somehow I missed it
when it was all the rage long ago.”
“So did all of us,” Lute replied, “except Mrs. Grantly. It is her favorite
phantom, it seems.”
“A weird little thing,” he remarked. “Bundle of nerves and black eyes.
I’ll wager she doesn’t weigh ninety pounds, and most of that’s magnetism.”
“Positively uncanny... at times.” Lute shivered involuntarily. “She gives
me the creeps.”
“Contact of the healthy with the morbid,” he explained dryly. “You will
notice it is the healthy that always has the creeps. The morbid never has
the creeps. It gives the creeps. That’s its function. Where did you people
pick her up, anyway?”
“I don’t know—yes, I do, too. Aunt Mildred met her in Boston, I
think—oh, I don’t know. At any rate, Mrs. Grantly came to
California, and of course had to visit Aunt Mildred. You know the open
house we keep.”
They halted where a passageway between two great redwood trunks gave
entrance to the dining room. Above, through lacing boughs, could be seen
the stars. Candles lighted the tree-columned space. About the table,
examining the Planchette contrivance, were four persons. Chris’s gaze
roved over them, and he was aware of a guilty sorrow-pang as he paused for
a moment on Lute’s Aunt Mildred and Uncle Robert, mellow with ripe middle
age and genial with the gentle buffets life had dealt them. He passed
amusedly over the black-eyed, frail-bodied Mrs. Grantly, and halted on the
fourth person, a portly, massive-headed man, whose gray temples belied the
youthful solidity of his face.
“Who’s that?” Chris whispered.
“A Mr. Barton. The train was late. That’s why you didn’t see him at
dinner. He’s only a capitalist—water-power-long-distance-electricity
transmitter, or something like that.”
“Doesn’t look as though he could give an ox points on imagination.”
“He can’t. He inherited his money. But he knows enough to hold on to it
and hire other men’s brains. He is very conservative.”
“That is to be expected,” was Chris’s comment. His gaze went back to the
man and woman who had been father and mother to the girl beside him. “Do
you know,” he said, “it came to me with a shock yesterday when you told me
that they had turned against me and that I was scarcely tolerated. I met
them afterwards, last evening, guiltily, in fear and trembling—and
to-day, too. And yet I could see no difference from of old.”
“Dear man,” Lute sighed. “Hospitality is as natural to them as the act of
breathing. But it isn’t that, after all. It is all genuine in their dear
hearts. No matter how severe the censure they put upon you when you are
absent, the moment they are with you they soften and are all kindness and
warmth. As soon as their eyes rest on you, affection and love come
bubbling up. You are so made. Every animal likes you. All people like you.
They can’t help it. You can’t help it. You are universally lovable, and
the best of it is that you don’t know it. You don’t know it now. Even as I
tell it to you, you don’t realize it, you won’t realize it—and that
very incapacity to realize it is one of the reasons why you are so loved.
You are incredulous now, and you shake your head; but I know, who am your
slave, as all people know, for they likewise are your slaves.
“Why, in a minute we shall go in and join them. Mark the affection, almost
maternal, that will well up in Aunt Mildred’s eyes. Listen to the tones of
Uncle Robert’s voice when he says, ‘Well, Chris, my boy?’ Watch Mrs.
Grantly melt, literally melt, like a dewdrop in the sun.
“Take Mr. Barton, there. You have never seen him before. Why, you will
invite him out to smoke a cigar with you when the rest of us have gone to
bed—you, a mere nobody, and he a man of many millions, a man of
power, a man obtuse and stupid like the ox; and he will follow you about,
smoking; the cigar, like a little dog, your little dog, trotting at your
back. He will not know he is doing it, but he will be doing it just the
same. Don’t I know, Chris? Oh, I have watched you, watched you, so often,
and loved you for it, and loved you again for it, because you were so
delightfully and blindly unaware of what you were doing.”
“I’m almost bursting with vanity from listening to you,” he laughed,
passing his arm around her and drawing her against him.
“Yes,” she whispered, “and in this very moment, when you are laughing at
all that I have said, you, the feel of you, your soul,—call it what
you will, it is you,—is calling for all the love that is in me.”
She leaned more closely against him, and sighed as with fatigue. He
breathed a kiss into her hair and held her with firm tenderness.
Aunt Mildred stirred briskly and looked up from the Planchette board.
“Come, let us begin,” she said. “It will soon grow chilly. Robert, where
are those children?”
“Here we are,” Lute called out, disengaging herself.
“Now for a bundle of creeps,” Chris whispered, as they started in.
Lute’s prophecy of the manner in which her lover would be received was
realized. Mrs. Grantly, unreal, unhealthy, scintillant with frigid
magnetism, warmed and melted as though of truth she were dew and he sun.
Mr. Barton beamed broadly upon him, and was colossally gracious. Aunt
Mildred greeted him with a glow of fondness and motherly kindness, while
Uncle Robert genially and heartily demanded, “Well, Chris, my boy, and
what of the riding?”
But Aunt Mildred drew her shawl more closely around her and hastened them
to the business in hand. On the table was a sheet of paper. On the paper,
rifling on three supports, was a small triangular board. Two of the
supports were easily moving casters. The third support, placed at the apex
of the triangle, was a lead pencil.
“Who’s first?” Uncle Robert demanded.
There was a moment’s hesitancy, then Aunt Mildred placed her hand on the
board, and said: “Some one has always to be the fool for the delectation
of the rest.”
“Brave woman,” applauded her husband. “Now, Mrs. Grantly, do your worst.”
“I?” that lady queried. “I do nothing. The power, or whatever you care to
think it, is outside of me, as it is outside of all of you. As to what
that power is, I will not dare to say. There is such a power. I have had
evidences of it. And you will undoubtedly have evidences of it. Now please
be quiet, everybody. Touch the board very lightly, but firmly, Mrs. Story;
but do nothing of your own volition.”
Aunt Mildred nodded, and stood with her hand on Planchette; while the rest
formed about her in a silent and expectant circle. But nothing happened.
The minutes ticked away, and Planchette remained motionless.
“Be patient,” Mrs. Grantly counselled. “Do not struggle against any
influences you may feel working on you. But do not do anything yourself.
The influence will take care of that. You will feel impelled to do things,
and such impulses will be practically irresistible.”
“I wish the influence would hurry up,” Aunt Mildred protested at the end
of five motionless minutes.
“Just a little longer, Mrs. Story, just a little longer,” Mrs. Grantly
said soothingly.
Suddenly Aunt Mildred’s hand began to twitch into movement. A mild concern
showed in her face as she observed the movement of her hand and heard the
scratching of the pencil-point at the apex of Planchette.
For another five minutes this continued, when Aunt Mildred withdrew her
hand with an effort, and said, with a nervous laugh:
“I don’t know whether I did it myself or not. I do know that I was growing
nervous, standing there like a psychic fool with all your solemn faces
turned upon me.”
“Hen-scratches,” was Uncle Robert’s judgement, when he looked over the
paper upon which she had scrawled.
“Quite illegible,” was Mrs. Grantly’s dictum. “It does not resemble
writing at all. The influences have not got to working yet. Do you try it,
Mr. Barton.”
That gentleman stepped forward, ponderously willing to please, and placed
his hand on the board. And for ten solid, stolid minutes he stood there,
motionless, like a statue, the frozen personification of the commercial
age. Uncle Robert’s face began to work. He blinked, stiffened his mouth,
uttered suppressed, throaty sounds, deep down; finally he snorted, lost
his self-control, and broke out in a roar of laughter. All joined in this
merriment, including Mrs. Grantly. Mr. Barton laughed with them, but he
was vaguely nettled.
“You try it, Story,” he said.
Uncle Robert, still laughing, and urged on by Lute and his wife, took the
board. Suddenly his face sobered. His hand had begun to move, and the
pencil could be heard scratching across the paper.
“By George!” he muttered. “That’s curious. Look at it. I’m not doing it. I
know I’m not doing it. Look at that hand go! Just look at it!”
“Now, Robert, none of your ridiculousness,” his wife warned him.
“I tell you I’m not doing it,” he replied indignantly. “The force has got
hold of me. Ask Mrs. Grantly. Tell her to make it stop, if you want it to
stop. I can’t stop it. By George! look at that flourish. I didn’t do that.
I never wrote a flourish in my life.”
“Do try to be serious,” Mrs. Grantly warned them. “An atmosphere of levity
does not conduce to the best operation of Planchette.”
“There, that will do, I guess,” Uncle Robert said as he took his hand
away. “Now let’s see.”
He bent over and adjusted his glasses. “It’s handwriting at any rate, and
that’s better than the rest of you did. Here, Lute, your eyes are young.”
“Oh, what flourishes!” Lute exclaimed, as she looked at the paper. “And
look there, there are two different handwritings.”
She began to read: “This is the first lecture. Concentrate on this
sentence: ‘I am a positive spirit and not negative to any condition.’ Then
follow with concentration on positive love. After that peace and harmony
will vibrate through and around your body. Your soul—The other
writing breaks right in. This is the way it goes: Bullfrog 95, Dixie 16,
Golden Anchor 65, Gold Mountain 13, Jim Butler 70, Jumbo 75, North Star
42, Rescue 7, Black Butte 75, Brown Hope 16, Iron Top 3.”
“Iron Top’s pretty low,” Mr. Barton murmured.
“Robert, you’ve been dabbling again!” Aunt Mildred cried accusingly.
“No, I’ve not,” he denied. “I only read the quotations. But how the devil—I
beg your pardon—they got there on that piece of paper I’d like to
know.”
“Your subconscious mind,” Chris suggested. “You read the quotations in
to-day’s paper.”
“No, I didn’t; but last week I glanced over the column.”
“A day or a year is all the same in the subconscious mind,” said Mrs.
Grantly. “The subconscious mind never forgets. But I am not saying that
this is due to the subconscious mind. I refuse to state to what I think it
is due.”
“But how about that other stuff?” Uncle Robert demanded. “Sounds like what
I’d think Christian Science ought to sound like.”
“Or theosophy,” Aunt Mildred volunteered. “Some message to a neophyte.”
“Go on, read the rest,” her husband commanded.
“This puts you in touch with the mightier spirits,” Lute read. “You shall
become one with us, and your name shall be ‘Arya,’ and you shall—Conqueror
20, Empire 12, Columbia Mountain 18, Midway 140—and, and that is
all. Oh, no! here’s a last flourish, Arya, from Kandor—that must
surely be the Mahatma.”
“I’d like to have you explain that theosophy stuff on the basis of the
subconscious mind, Chris,” Uncle Robert challenged.
Chris shrugged his shoulders. “No explanation. You must have got a message
intended for some one else.”
“Lines were crossed, eh?” Uncle Robert chuckled. “Multiplex spiritual
wireless telegraphy, I’d call it.”
“It IS nonsense,” Mrs. Grantly said. “I never knew Planchette to behave so
outrageously. There are disturbing influences at work. I felt them from
the first. Perhaps it is because you are all making too much fun of it.
You are too hilarious.”
“A certain befitting gravity should grace the occasion,” Chris agreed,
placing his hand on Planchette. “Let me try. And not one of you must laugh
or giggle, or even think ‘laugh’ or ‘giggle.’ And if you dare to snort,
even once, Uncle Robert, there is no telling what occult vengeance may be
wreaked upon you.”
“I’ll be good,” Uncle Robert rejoined. “But if I really must snort, may I
silently slip away?”
Chris nodded. His hand had already begun to work. There had been no
preliminary twitchings nor tentative essays at writing. At once his hand
had started off, and Planchette was moving swiftly and smoothly across the
paper.
“Look at him,” Lute whispered to her aunt. “See how white he is.”
Chris betrayed disturbance at the sound of her voice, and thereafter
silence was maintained. Only could be heard the steady scratching of the
pencil. Suddenly, as though it had been stung, he jerked his hand away.
With a sigh and a yawn he stepped back from the table, then glanced with
the curiosity of a newly awakened man at their faces.
“I think I wrote something,” he said.
“I should say you did,” Mrs. Grantly remarked with satisfaction, holding
up the sheet of paper and glancing at it.
“Read it aloud,” Uncle Robert said.
“Here it is, then. It begins with ‘beware’ written three times, and in
much larger characters than the rest of the writing. BEWARE! BEWARE!
BEWARE! Chris Dunbar, I intend to destroy you. I have already made two
attempts upon your life, and failed. I shall yet succeed. So sure am I
that I shall succeed that I dare to tell you. I do not need to tell you
why. In your own heart you know. The wrong you are doing—And here it
abruptly ends.”
Mrs. Grantly laid the paper down on the table and looked at Chris, who had
already become the centre of all eyes, and who was yawning as from an
overpowering drowsiness.
“Quite a sanguinary turn, I should say,” Uncle Robert remarked.
“I have already made two attempts upon your life,” Mrs. Grantly read from
the paper, which she was going over a second time.
“On my life?” Chris demanded between yawns. “Why, my life hasn’t been
attempted even once. My! I am sleepy!”
“Ah, my boy, you are thinking of flesh-and-blood men,” Uncle Robert
laughed. “But this is a spirit. Your life has been attempted by unseen
things. Most likely ghostly hands have tried to throttle you in your
sleep.”
“Oh, Chris!” Lute cried impulsively. “This afternoon! The hand you said
must have seized your rein!”
“But I was joking,” he objected.
“Nevertheless...” Lute left her thought unspoken.
Mrs. Grantly had become keen on the scent. “What was that about this
afternoon? Was your life in danger?”
Chris’s drowsiness had disappeared. “I’m becoming interested myself,” he
acknowledged. “We haven’t said anything about it. Ban broke his back this
afternoon. He threw himself off the bank, and I ran the risk of being
caught underneath.”
“I wonder, I wonder,” Mrs. Grantly communed aloud. “There is something in
this.... It is a warning.... Ah! You were hurt yesterday riding Miss
Story’s horse! That makes the two attempts!”
She looked triumphantly at them. Planchette had been vindicated.
“Nonsense,” laughed Uncle Robert, but with a slight hint of irritation in
his manner. “Such things do not happen these days. This is the twentieth
century, my dear madam. The thing, at the very latest, smacks of
mediaevalism.”
“I have had such wonderful tests with Planchette,” Mrs. Grantly began,
then broke off suddenly to go to the table and place her hand on the
board.
“Who are you?” she asked. “What is your name?”
The board immediately began to write. By this time all heads, with the
exception of Mr. Barton’s, were bent over the table and following the
pencil.
“It’s Dick,” Aunt Mildred cried, a note of the mildly hysterical in her
voice.
Her husband straightened up, his face for the first time grave.
“It’s Dick’s signature,” he said. “I’d know his fist in a thousand.”
“‘Dick Curtis,’” Mrs. Grantly read aloud. “Who is Dick Curtis?”
“By Jove, that’s remarkable!” Mr. Barton broke in. “The handwriting in
both instances is the same. Clever, I should say, really clever,” he added
admiringly.
“Let me see,” Uncle Robert demanded, taking the paper and examining it.
“Yes, it is Dick’s handwriting.”
“But who is Dick?” Mrs. Grantly insisted. “Who is this Dick Curtis?”
“Dick Curtis, why, he was Captain Richard Curtis,” Uncle Robert answered.
“He was Lute’s father,” Aunt Mildred supplemented. “Lute took our name.
She never saw him. He died when she was a few weeks old. He was my
brother.”
“Remarkable, most remarkable.” Mrs. Grantly was revolving the message in
her mind. “There were two attempts on Mr. Dunbar’s life. The subconscious
mind cannot explain that, for none of us knew of the accident to-day.”
“I knew,” Chris answered, “and it was I that operated Planchette. The
explanation is simple.”
“But the handwriting,” interposed Mr. Barton. “What you wrote and what
Mrs. Grantly wrote are identical.”
Chris bent over and compared the handwriting.
“Besides,” Mrs. Grantly cried, “Mr. Story recognizes the handwriting.”
She looked at him for verification.
He nodded his head. “Yes, it is Dick’s fist. I’ll swear to that.”
But to Lute had come a visioning. While the rest argued pro and con and
the air was filled with phrases,—“psychic phenomena,”
“self-hypnotism,” “residuum of unexplained truth,” and “spiritism,”—she
was reviving mentally the girlhood pictures she had conjured of this
soldier-father she had never seen. She possessed his sword, there were
several old-fashioned daguerreotypes, there was much that had been said of
him, stories told of him—and all this had constituted the material
out of which she had builded him in her childhood fancy.
“There is the possibility of one mind unconsciously suggesting to another
mind,” Mrs. Grantly was saying; but through Lute’s mind was trooping her
father on his great roan war-horse. Now he was leading his men. She saw
him on lonely scouts, or in the midst of the yelling Indians at Salt
Meadows, when of his command he returned with one man in ten. And in the
picture she had of him, in the physical semblance she had made of him, was
reflected his spiritual nature, reflected by her worshipful artistry in
form and feature and expression—his bravery, his quick temper, his
impulsive championship, his madness of wrath in a righteous cause, his
warm generosity and swift forgiveness, and his chivalry that epitomized
codes and ideals primitive as the days of knighthood. And first, last, and
always, dominating all, she saw in the face of him the hot passion and
quickness of deed that had earned for him the name “Fighting Dick Curtis.”
“Let me put it to the test,” she heard Mrs. Grantly saying. “Let Miss
Story try Planchette. There may be a further message.”
“No, no, I beg of you,” Aunt Mildred interposed. “It is too uncanny. It
surely is wrong to tamper with the dead. Besides, I am nervous. Or,
better, let me go to bed, leaving you to go on with your experiments. That
will be the best way, and you can tell me in the morning.” Mingled with
the “Good-nights,” were half-hearted protests from Mrs. Grantly, as Aunt
Mildred withdrew.
“Robert can return,” she called back, “as soon as he has seen me to my
tent.”
“It would be a shame to give it up now,” Mrs. Grantly said. “There is no
telling what we are on the verge of. Won’t you try it, Miss Story?”
Lute obeyed, but when she placed her hand on the board she was conscious
of a vague and nameless fear at this toying with the supernatural. She was
twentieth-century, and the thing in essence, as her uncle had said, was
mediaeval. Yet she could not shake off the instinctive fear that arose in
her—man’s inheritance from the wild and howling ages when his hairy,
apelike prototype was afraid of the dark and personified the elements into
things of fear.
But as the mysterious influence seized her hand and sent it meriting
across the paper, all the unusual passed out of the situation and she was
unaware of more than a feeble curiosity. For she was intent on another
visioning—this time of her mother, who was also unremembered in the
flesh. Not sharp and vivid like that of her father, but dim and nebulous
was the picture she shaped of her mother—a saint’s head in an
aureole of sweetness and goodness and meekness, and withal, shot through
with a hint of reposeful determination, of will, stubborn and unobtrusive,
that in life had expressed itself mainly in resignation.
Lute’s hand had ceased moving, and Mrs. Grantly was already reading the
message that had been written.
“It is a different handwriting,” she said. “A woman’s hand. ‘Martha,’ it
is signed. Who is Martha?”
Lute was not surprised. “It is my mother,” she said simply. “What does she
say?”
She had not been made sleepy, as Chris had; but the keen edge of her
vitality had been blunted, and she was experiencing a sweet and pleasing
lassitude. And while the message was being read, in her eyes persisted the
vision of her mother.
“Dear child,” Mrs. Grantly read, “do not mind him. He was ever quick of
speech and rash. Be no niggard with your love. Love cannot hurt you. To
deny love is to sin. Obey your heart and you can do no wrong. Obey worldly
considerations, obey pride, obey those that prompt you against your
heart’s prompting, and you do sin. Do not mind your father. He is angry
now, as was his way in the earth-life; but he will come to see the wisdom
of my counsel, for this, too, was his way in the earth-life. Love, my
child, and love well.—Martha.”
“Let me see it,” Lute cried, seizing the paper and devouring the
handwriting with her eyes. She was thrilling with unexpressed love for the
mother she had never seen, and this written speech from the grave seemed
to give more tangibility to her having ever existed, than did the vision
of her.
“This IS remarkable,” Mrs. Grantly was reiterating. “There was never
anything like it. Think of it, my dear, both your father and mother here
with us to-night.”
Lute shivered. The lassitude was gone, and she was her natural self again,
vibrant with the instinctive fear of things unseen. And it was offensive
to her mind that, real or illusion, the presence or the memorized
existences of her father and mother should be touched by these two persons
who were practically strangers—Mrs. Grantly, unhealthy and morbid,
and Mr. Barton, stolid and stupid with a grossness both of the flesh and
the spirit. And it further seemed a trespass that these strangers should
thus enter into the intimacy between her and Chris.
She could hear the steps of her uncle approaching, and the situation
flashed upon her, luminous and clear. She hurriedly folded the sheet of
paper and thrust it into her bosom.
“Don’t say anything to him about this second message, Mrs. Grantly,
please, and Mr. Barton. Nor to Aunt Mildred. It would only cause them
irritation and needless anxiety.”
In her mind there was also the desire to protect her lover, for she knew
that the strain of his present standing with her aunt and uncle would be
added to, unconsciously in their minds, by the weird message of
Planchette.
“And please don’t let us have any more Planchette,” Lute continued
hastily. “Let us forget all the nonsense that has occurred.”
“‘Nonsense,’ my dear child?” Mrs. Grantly was indignantly protesting when
Uncle Robert strode into the circle.
“Hello!” he demanded. “What’s being done?”
“Too late,” Lute answered lightly. “No more stock quotations for you.
Planchette is adjourned, and we’re just winding up the discussion of the
theory of it. Do you know how late it is?”
“Well, what did you do last night after we left?”
“Oh, took a stroll,” Chris answered.
Lute’s eyes were quizzical as she asked with a tentativeness that was
palpably assumed, “With—a—with Mr. Barton?”
“Why, yes.”
“And a smoke?”
“Yes; and now what’s it all about?”
Lute broke into merry laughter. “Just as I told you that you would do. Am
I not a prophet? But I knew before I saw you that my forecast had come
true. I have just left Mr. Barton, and I knew he had walked with you last
night, for he is vowing by all his fetishes and idols that you are a
perfectly splendid young man. I could see it with my eyes shut. The Chris
Dunbar glamour has fallen upon him. But I have not finished the catechism
by any means. Where have you been all morning?”
“Where I am going to take you this afternoon.”
“You plan well without knowing my wishes.”
“I knew well what your wishes are. It is to see a horse I have found.”
Her voice betrayed her delight, as she cried, “Oh, good!”
“He is a beauty,” Chris said.
But her face had suddenly gone grave, and apprehension brooded in her
eyes.
“He’s called Comanche,” Chris went on. “A beauty, a regular beauty, the
perfect type of the Californian cow-pony. And his lines—why, what’s
the matter?”
“Don’t let us ride any more,” Lute said, “at least for a while. Really, I
think I am a tiny bit tired of it, too.”
He was looking at her in astonishment, and she was bravely meeting his
eyes.
“I see hearses and flowers for you,” he began, “and a funeral oration; I
see the end of the world, and the stars falling out of the sky, and the
heavens rolling up as a scroll; I see the living and the dead gathered
together for the final judgement, the sheep and the goats, the lambs and
the rams and all the rest of it, the white-robed saints, the sound of
golden harps, and the lost souls howling as they fall into the Pit—all
this I see on the day that you, Lute Story, no longer care to ride a
horse. A horse, Lute! a horse!”
“For a while, at least,” she pleaded.
“Ridiculous!” he cried. “What’s the matter? Aren’t you well?—you who
are always so abominably and adorably well!”
“No, it’s not that,” she answered. “I know it is ridiculous, Chris, I know
it, but the doubt will arise. I cannot help it. You always say I am so
sanely rooted to the earth and reality and all that, but—perhaps
it’s superstition, I don’t know—but the whole occurrence, the
messages of Planchette, the possibility of my father’s hand, I know not
how, reaching, out to Ban’s rein and hurling him and you to death, the
correspondence between my father’s statement that he has twice attempted
your life and the fact that in the last two days your life has twice been
endangered by horses—my father was a great horseman—all this,
I say, causes the doubt to arise in my mind. What if there be something in
it? I am not so sure. Science may be too dogmatic in its denial of the
unseen. The forces of the unseen, of the spirit, may well be too subtle,
too sublimated, for science to lay hold of, and recognize, and formulate.
Don’t you see, Chris, that there is rationality in the very doubt? It may
be a very small doubt—oh, so small; but I love you too much to run
even that slight risk. Besides, I am a woman, and that should in itself
fully account for my predisposition toward superstition.
“Yes, yes, I know, call it unreality. But I’ve heard you paradoxing upon
the reality of the unreal—the reality of delusion to the mind that
is sick. And so with me, if you will; it is delusion and unreal, but to
me, constituted as I am, it is very real—is real as a nightmare is
real, in the throes of it, before one awakes.”
“The most logical argument for illogic I have ever heard,” Chris smiled.
“It is a good gaming proposition, at any rate. You manage to embrace more
chances in your philosophy than do I in mine. It reminds me of Sam—the
gardener you had a couple of years ago. I overheard him and Martin arguing
in the stable. You know what a bigoted atheist Martin is. Well, Martin had
deluged Sam with floods of logic. Sam pondered awhile, and then he said,
‘Foh a fack, Mis’ Martin, you jis’ tawk like a house afire; but you ain’t
got de show I has.’ ‘How’s that?’ Martin asked. ‘Well, you see, Mis’
Martin, you has one chance to mah two.’ ‘I don’t see it,’ Martin said.
‘Mis’ Martin, it’s dis way. You has jis’ de chance, lak you say, to become
worms foh de fruitification of de cabbage garden. But I’s got de chance to
lif’ mah voice to de glory of de Lawd as I go paddin’ dem golden streets—along
‘ith de chance to be jis’ worms along ‘ith you, Mis’ Martin.’”
“You refuse to take me seriously,” Lute said, when she had laughed her
appreciation.
“How can I take that Planchette rigmarole seriously?” he asked.
“You don’t explain it—the handwriting of my father, which Uncle
Robert recognized—oh, the whole thing, you don’t explain it.”
“I don’t know all the mysteries of mind,” Chris answered. “But I believe
such phenomena will all yield to scientific explanation in the not distant
future.”
“Just the same, I have a sneaking desire to find out some more from
Planchette,” Lute confessed. “The board is still down in the dining room.
We could try it now, you and I, and no one would know.”
Chris caught her hand, crying: “Come on! It will be a lark.”
Hand in hand they ran down the path to the tree-pillared room.
“The camp is deserted,” Lute said, as she placed Planchette on the table.
“Mrs. Grantly and Aunt Mildred are lying down, and Mr. Barton has gone off
with Uncle Robert. There is nobody to disturb us.” She placed her hand on
the board. “Now begin.”
For a few minutes nothing happened. Chris started to speak, but she hushed
him to silence. The preliminary twitchings had appeared in her hand and
arm. Then the pencil began to write. They read the message, word by word,
as it was written:
There is wisdom greater than the wisdom of reason. Love proceeds not out
of the dry-as-dust way of the mind. Love is of the heart, and is beyond
all reason, and logic, and philosophy. Trust your own heart, my daughter.
And if your heart bids you have faith in your lover, then laugh at the
mind and its cold wisdom, and obey your heart, and have faith in your
lover.—Martha.
“But that whole message is the dictate of your own heart,” Chris cried.
“Don’t you see, Lute? The thought is your very own, and your subconscious
mind has expressed it there on the paper.”
“But there is one thing I don’t see,” she objected.
“And that?”
“Is the handwriting. Look at it. It does not resemble mine at all. It is
mincing, it is old-fashioned, it is the old-fashioned feminine of a
generation ago.”
“But you don’t mean to tell me that you really believe that this is a
message from the dead?” he interrupted.
“I don’t know, Chris,” she wavered. “I am sure I don’t know.”
“It is absurd!” he cried. “These are cobwebs of fancy. When one dies, he
is dead. He is dust. He goes to the worms, as Martin says. The dead? I
laugh at the dead. They do not exist. They are not. I defy the powers of
the grave, the men dead and dust and gone!
“And what have you to say to that?” he challenged, placing his hand on
Planchette.
On the instant his hand began to write. Both were startled by the
suddenness of it. The message was brief:
BEWARE! BEWARE! BEWARE!
He was distinctly sobered, but he laughed. “It is like a miracle play.
Death we have, speaking to us from the grave. But Good Deeds, where art
thou? And Kindred? and Joy? and Household Goods? and Friendship? and all
the goodly company?”
But Lute did not share his bravado. Her fright showed itself in her face.
She laid her trembling hand on his arm.
“Oh, Chris, let us stop. I am sorry we began it. Let us leave the quiet
dead to their rest. It is wrong. It must be wrong. I confess I am affected
by it. I cannot help it. As my body is trembling, so is my soul. This
speech of the grave, this dead man reaching out from the mould of a
generation to protect me from you. There is reason in it. There is the
living mystery that prevents you from marrying me. Were my father alive,
he would protect me from you. Dead, he still strives to protect me. His
hands, his ghostly hands, are against your life!”
“Do be calm,” Chris said soothingly. “Listen to me. It is all a lark. We
are playing with the subjective forces of our own being, with phenomena
which science has not yet explained, that is all. Psychology is so young a
science. The subconscious mind has just been discovered, one might say. It
is all mystery as yet; the laws of it are yet to be formulated. This is
simply unexplained phenomena. But that is no reason that we should
immediately account for it by labelling it spiritism. As yet we do not
know, that is all. As for Planchette—”
He abruptly ceased, for at that moment, to enforce his remark, he had
placed his hand on Planchette, and at that moment his hand had been
seized, as by a paroxysm, and sent dashing, willy-nilly, across the paper,
writing as the hand of an angry person would write.
“No, I don’t care for any more of it,” Lute said, when the message was
completed. “It is like witnessing a fight between you and my father in the
flesh. There is the savor in it of struggle and blows.”
She pointed out a sentence that read: “You cannot escape me nor the just
punishment that is yours!”
“Perhaps I visualize too vividly for my own comfort, for I can see his
hands at your throat. I know that he is, as you say, dead and dust, but
for all that, I can see him as a man that is alive and walks the earth; I
see the anger in his face, the anger and the vengeance, and I see it all
directed against you.”
She crumpled up the scrawled sheets of paper, and put Planchette away.
“We won’t bother with it any more,” Chris said. “I didn’t think it would
affect you so strongly. But it’s all subjective, I’m sure, with possibly a
bit of suggestion thrown in—that and nothing more. And the whole
strain of our situation has made conditions unusually favorable for
striking phenomena.”
“And about our situation,” Lute said, as they went slowly up the path they
had run down. “What we are to do, I don’t know. Are we to go on, as we
have gone on? What is best? Have you thought of anything?”
He debated for a few steps. “I have thought of telling your uncle and
aunt.”
“What you couldn’t tell me?” she asked quickly.
“No,” he answered slowly; “but just as much as I have told you. I have no
right to tell them more than I have told you.”
This time it was she that debated. “No, don’t tell them,” she said
finally. “They wouldn’t understand. I don’t understand, for that matter,
but I have faith in you, and in the nature of things they are not capable
of this same implicit faith. You raise up before me a mystery that
prevents our marriage, and I believe you; but they could not believe you
without doubts arising as to the wrong and ill-nature of the mystery.
Besides, it would but make their anxieties greater.”
“I should go away, I know I should go away,” he said, half under his
breath. “And I can. I am no weakling. Because I have failed to remain away
once, is no reason that I shall fail again.”
She caught her breath with a quick gasp. “It is like a bereavement to hear
you speak of going away and remaining away. I should never see you again.
It is too terrible. And do not reproach yourself for weakness. It is I who
am to blame. It is I who prevented you from remaining away before, I know.
I wanted you so. I want you so.
“There is nothing to be done, Chris, nothing to be done but to go on with
it and let it work itself out somehow. That is one thing we are sure of:
it will work out somehow.”
“But it would be easier if I went away,” he suggested.
“I am happier when you are here.”
“The cruelty of circumstance,” he muttered savagely.
“Go or stay—that will be part of the working out. But I do not want
you to go, Chris; you know that. And now no more about it. Talk cannot
mend it. Let us never mention it again—unless... unless some time,
some wonderful, happy time, you can come to me and say: ‘Lute, all is well
with me. The mystery no longer binds me. I am free.’ Until that time let
us bury it, along with Planchette and all the rest, and make the most of
the little that is given us.
“And now, to show you how prepared I am to make the most of that little, I
am even ready to go with you this afternoon to see the horse—though
I wish you wouldn’t ride any more... for a few days, anyway, or for a
week. What did you say was his name?”
“Comanche,” he answered. “I know you will like him.”
Chris lay on his back, his head propped by the bare jutting wall of stone,
his gaze attentively directed across the canyon to the opposing
tree-covered slope. There was a sound of crashing through underbrush, the
ringing of steel-shod hoofs on stone, and an occasional and mossy descent
of a dislodged boulder that bounded from the hill and fetched up with a
final splash in the torrent that rushed over a wild chaos of rocks beneath
him. Now and again he caught glimpses, framed in green foliage, of the
golden brown of Lute’s corduroy riding-habit and of the bay horse that
moved beneath her.
She rode out into an open space where a loose earth-slide denied lodgement
to trees and grass. She halted the horse at the brink of the slide and
glanced down it with a measuring eye. Forty feet beneath, the slide
terminated in a small, firm-surfaced terrace, the banked accumulation of
fallen earth and gravel.
“It’s a good test,” she called across the canyon. “I’m going to put him
down it.”
The animal gingerly launched himself on the treacherous footing,
irregularly losing and gaining his hind feet, keeping his fore legs stiff,
and steadily and calmly, without panic or nervousness, extricating the
fore feet as fast as they sank too deep into the sliding earth that surged
along in a wave before him. When the firm footing at the bottom was
reached, he strode out on the little terrace with a quickness and
springiness of gait and with glintings of muscular fires that gave the lie
to the calm deliberation of his movements on the slide.
“Bravo!” Chris shouted across the canyon, clapping his hands.
“The wisest-footed, clearest-headed horse I ever saw,” Lute called back,
as she turned the animal to the side and dropped down a broken slope of
rubble and into the trees again.
Chris followed her by the sound of her progress, and by occasional
glimpses where the foliage was more open, as she zigzagged down the steep
and trailless descent. She emerged below him at the rugged rim of the
torrent, dropped the horse down a three-foot wall, and halted to study the
crossing.
Four feet out in the stream, a narrow ledge thrust above the surface of
the water. Beyond the ledge boiled an angry pool. But to the left, from
the ledge, and several feet lower, was a tiny bed of gravel. A giant
boulder prevented direct access to the gravel bed. The only way to gain it
was by first leaping to the ledge of rock. She studied it carefully, and
the tightening of her bridle-arm advertised that she had made up her mind.
Chris, in his anxiety, had sat up to observe more closely what she
meditated.
“Don’t tackle it,” he called.
“I have faith in Comanche,” she called in return.
“He can’t make that side-jump to the gravel,” Chris warned. “He’ll never
keep his legs. He’ll topple over into the pool. Not one horse in a
thousand could do that stunt.”
“And Comanche is that very horse,” she answered. “Watch him.”
She gave the animal his head, and he leaped cleanly and accurately to the
ledge, striking with feet close together on the narrow space. On the
instant he struck, Lute lightly touched his neck with the rein, impelling
him to the left; and in that instant, tottering on the insecure footing,
with front feet slipping over into the pool beyond, he lifted on his hind
legs, with a half turn, sprang to the left, and dropped squarely down to
the tiny gravel bed. An easy jump brought him across the stream, and Lute
angled him up the bank and halted before her lover.
“Well?” she asked.
“I am all tense,” Chris answered. “I was holding my breath.”
“Buy him, by all means,” Lute said, dismounting. “He is a bargain. I could
dare anything on him. I never in my life had such confidence in a horse’s
feet.”
“His owner says that he has never been known to lose his feet, that it is
impossible to get him down.”
“Buy him, buy him at once,” she counselled, “before the man changes his
mind. If you don’t, I shall. Oh, such feet! I feel such confidence in them
that when I am on him I don’t consider he has feet at all. And he’s quick
as a cat, and instantly obedient. Bridle-wise is no name for it! You could
guide him with silken threads. Oh, I know I’m enthusiastic, but if you
don’t buy him, Chris. I shall. Remember, I’ve second refusal.”
Chris smiled agreement as he changed the saddles. Meanwhile she compared
the two horses.
“Of course he doesn’t match Dolly the way Ban did,” she concluded
regretfully; “but his coat is splendid just the same. And think of the
horse that is under the coat!”
Chris gave her a hand into the saddle, and followed her up the slope to
the county road. She reined in suddenly, saying:
“We won’t go straight back to camp.”
“You forget dinner,” he warned.
“But I remember Comanche,” she retorted. “We’ll ride directly over to the
ranch and buy him. Dinner will keep.”
“But the cook won’t,” Chris laughed. “She’s already threatened to leave,
what of our late-comings.”
“Even so,” was the answer. “Aunt Mildred may have to get another cook, but
at any rate we shall have got Comanche.”
They turned the horses in the other direction, and took the climb of the
Nun Canyon road that led over the divide and down into the Napa Valley.
But the climb was hard, the going was slow. Sometimes they topped the bed
of the torrent by hundreds of feet, and again they dipped down and crossed
and recrossed it twenty times in twice as many rods. They rode through the
deep shade of clean-bunked maples and towering redwoods, to emerge on open
stretches of mountain shoulder where the earth lay dry and cracked under
the sun.
On one such shoulder they emerged, where the road stretched level before
them, for a quarter of a mile. On one side rose the huge bulk of the
mountain. On the other side the steep wall of the canyon fell away in
impossible slopes and sheer drops to the torrent at the bottom. It was an
abyss of green beauty and shady depths, pierced by vagrant shafts of the
sun and mottled here and there by the sun’s broader blazes. The sound of
rushing water ascended on the windless air, and there was a hum of
mountain bees.
The horses broke into an easy lope. Chris rode on the outside, looking
down into the great depths and pleasuring with his eyes in what he saw.
Dissociating itself from the murmur of the bees, a murmur arose of falling
water. It grew louder with every stride of the horses.
“Look!” he cried.
Lute leaned well out from her horse to see. Beneath them the water slid
foaming down a smooth-faced rock to the lip, whence it leaped clear—a
pulsating ribbon of white, a-breath with movement, ever falling and ever
remaining, changing its substance but never its form, an aerial waterway
as immaterial as gauze and as permanent as the hills, that spanned space
and the free air from the lip of the rock to the tops of the trees far
below, into whose green screen it disappeared to fall into a secret pool.
They had flashed past. The descending water became a distant murmur that
merged again into the murmur of the bees and ceased. Swayed by a common
impulse, they looked at each other.
“Oh, Chris, it is good to be alive... and to have you here by my side!”
He answered her by the warm light in his eyes.
All things tended to key them to an exquisite pitch—the movement of
their bodies, at one with the moving bodies of the animals beneath them;
the gently stimulated blood caressing the flesh through and through with
the soft vigors of health; the warm air fanning their faces, flowing over
the skin with balmy and tonic touch, permeating them and bathing them,
subtly, with faint, sensuous delight; and the beauty of the world, more
subtly still, flowing upon them and bathing them in the delight that is of
the spirit and is personal and holy, that is inexpressible yet
communicable by the flash of an eye and the dissolving of the veils of the
soul.
So looked they at each other, the horses bounding beneath them, the spring
of the world and the spring of their youth astir in their blood, the
secret of being trembling in their eyes to the brink of disclosure, as if
about to dispel, with one magic word, all the irks and riddles of
existence.
The road curved before them, so that the upper reaches of the canyon could
be seen, the distant bed of it towering high above their heads. They were
rounding the curve, leaning toward the inside, gazing before them at the
swift-growing picture. There was no sound of warning. She heard nothing,
but even before the horse went down she experienced the feeling that the
unison of the two leaping animals was broken. She turned her head, and so
quickly that she saw Comanche fall. It was not a stumble nor a trip. He
fell as though, abruptly, in midleap, he had died or been struck a
stunning blow.
And in that moment she remembered Planchette; it seared her brain as a
lightning-flash of all-embracing memory. Her horse was back on its
haunches, the weight of her body on the reins; but her head was turned and
her eyes were on the falling Comanche. He struck the road-bed squarely,
with his legs loose and lifeless beneath him.
It all occurred in one of those age-long seconds that embrace an eternity
of happening. There was a slight but perceptible rebound from the impact
of Comanche’s body with the earth. The violence with which he struck
forced the air from his great lungs in an audible groan. His momentum
swept him onward and over the edge. The weight of the rider on his neck
turned him over head first as he pitched to the fall.
She was off her horse, she knew not how, and to the edge. Her lover was
out of the saddle and clear of Comanche, though held to the animal by his
right foot, which was caught in the stirrup. The slope was too steep for
them to come to a stop. Earth and small stones, dislodged by their
struggles, were rolling down with them and before them in a miniature
avalanche. She stood very quietly, holding one hand against her heart and
gazing down. But while she saw the real happening, in her eyes was also
the vision of her father dealing the spectral blow that had smashed
Comanche down in mid-leap and sent horse and rider hurtling over the edge.
Beneath horse and man the steep terminated in an up-and-down wall, from
the base of which, in turn, a second slope ran down to a second wall. A
third slope terminated in a final wall that based itself on the canyon-bed
four hundred feet beneath the point where the girl stood and watched. She
could see Chris vainly kicking his leg to free the foot from the trap of
the stirrup. Comanche fetched up hard against an outputting point of rock.
For a fraction of a second his fall was stopped, and in the slight
interval the man managed to grip hold of a young shoot of manzanita. Lute
saw him complete the grip with his other hand. Then Comanche’s fall began
again. She saw the stirrup-strap draw taut, then her lover’s body and
arms. The manzanita shoot yielded its roots, and horse and man plunged
over the edge and out of sight.
They came into view on the next slope, together and rolling over and over,
with sometimes the man under and sometimes the horse. Chris no longer
struggled, and together they dashed over to the third slope. Near the edge
of the final wall, Comanche lodged on a buttock of stone. He lay quietly,
and near him, still attached to him by the stirrup, face downward, lay his
rider.
“If only he will lie quietly,” Lute breathed aloud, her mind at work on
the means of rescue.
But she saw Comanche begin to struggle again, and clear on her vision, it
seemed, was the spectral arm of her father clutching the reins and
dragging the animal over. Comanche floundered across the hummock, the
inert body following, and together, horse and man, they plunged from
sight. They did not appear again. They had fetched bottom.
Lute looked about her. She stood alone on the world. Her lover was gone.
There was naught to show of his existence, save the marks of Comanche’s
hoofs on the road and of his body where it had slid over the brink.
“Chris!” she called once, and twice; but she called hopelessly.
Out of the depths, on the windless air, arose only the murmur of bees and
of running water.
“Chris!” she called yet a third time, and sank slowly down in the dust of
the road.
She felt the touch of Dolly’s muzzle on her arm, and she leaned her head
against the mare’s neck and waited. She knew not why she waited, nor for
what, only there seemed nothing else but waiting left for her to do.
