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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60102 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60102)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Wanderer of the Wasteland, by Zane Grey,
-Illustrated by W. Herbert Dunton
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Wanderer of the Wasteland
-
-
-Author: Zane Grey
-
-
-
-Release Date: August 15, 2019 [eBook #60102]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Tim Lindell, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 60102-h.htm or 60102-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60102/60102-h/60102-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60102/60102-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/wandererofwastel00grey_0
-
-
-
-
-
-WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-BOOKS BY ZANE GREY
-
-
- WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND
- TALES OF LONELY TRAILS
- TO THE LAST MAN
- THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER
- THE MAN OF THE FOREST
- TALES OF FISHES
- THE DESERT OF WHEAT
- THE U. P. TRAIL
- WILDFIRE
- THE BORDER LEGION
- THE RAINBOW TRAIL
- THE LONE STAR RANGER
- THE LIGHT OF WESTERN STARS
- DESERT GOLD
- THE HERITAGE OF THE DESERT
- RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE
- THE YOUNG FORESTER
- THE YOUNG PITCHER
- THE YOUNG LION HUNTER
- KEN WARD IN THE JUNGLE
-
-
-THE MUSSON BOOK COMPANY, LTD.
-
-_Publishers_
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-[Illustration: THE GIRL’S RED LIPS CURLED IN POUTED SCORN]
-
-
-WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND
-
-by
-
-ZANE GREY
-
-Author of
-“The Man of the Forest,” “To the Last Man,”
-“Riders of the Purple Sage,” Etc.
-
-With Illustrations by W. Herbert Dunton
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Toronto: the Musson Book Company Ltd.
-New York: Harper & Brothers
-
-WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND
-
-Copyright, Canada, 1923
-by the Musson Book Company, Ltd.
-Printed in Canada
-
-
-
-
- Dedicated to my wife
-
- LINA ELISE GREY
-
- Without whose love, faith, spirit
- and help I never could have
- written this novel
-
- ZANE GREY
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- CHAPTER I 1
-
- CHAPTER II 11
-
- CHAPTER III 18
-
- CHAPTER IV 27
-
- CHAPTER V 39
-
- CHAPTER VI 52
-
- CHAPTER VII 64
-
- CHAPTER VIII 79
-
- CHAPTER IX 92
-
- CHAPTER X 102
-
- CHAPTER XI 118
-
- CHAPTER XII 134
-
- CHAPTER XIII 151
-
- CHAPTER XIV 156
-
- CHAPTER XV 172
-
- CHAPTER XVI 195
-
- CHAPTER XVII 212
-
- CHAPTER XVIII 231
-
- CHAPTER XIX 252
-
- CHAPTER XX 262
-
- CHAPTER XXI 285
-
- CHAPTER XXII 295
-
- CHAPTER XXIII 309
-
- CHAPTER XXIV 329
-
- CHAPTER XXV 348
-
- CHAPTER XXVI 358
-
- CHAPTER XXVII 370
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII 393
-
- CHAPTER XXIX 403
-
- CHAPTER XXX 413
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- THE GIRL’S RED LIPS CURLED IN POUTED SCORN _Frontispiece_
-
- THEN THE GUN BOOMED WITH MUFFLED REPORT--AND GUERD LAREY,
- UTTERING A CRY OF AGONY, FELL AWAY FROM ADAM 58
-
- BUT AT LENGTH THE BURDEN OF A HEAVY WEIGHT, AND THE DRAGGING
- SAND, AND THE HOT SUN BROUGHT ADAM TO A PASS WHERE REST
- WAS IMPERATIVE 172
-
-
-
-
-WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Adam Larey gazed with hard and wondering eyes down the silent current
-of the red river upon which he meant to drift away into the desert.
-
-The Rio Colorado was no river to trust. It chafed at its banks as if
-to engulf them; muddy and thick it swirled and glided along in flood,
-sweeping in curves back and forth from Arizona to California shore.
-Majestic and gleaming under the hot sky, it swung southward between
-wide green borders of willow and cottonwood toward a stark and naked
-upflung wilderness of mountain peaks, the red ramparts of the unknown
-and trackless desert.
-
-Adam rushed down the bank and threw his pack into a boat. There his
-rapid action seemed checked by the same violence that had inspired his
-haste. He looked back, up at the dusty adobe town of Ehrenberg, asleep
-now under the glaring noonday heat. It would not wake out of that
-siesta till the return of the weary gold diggers, or the arrival of the
-stagecoach or the steamer. A tall Indian, swarthy and unkempt, stood
-motionless in the shade of a wall, watching stolidly.
-
-Adam broke down then. Sobs made his utterance incoherent. “Guerd is
-no brother--of mine--any more!” he burst out. His accent was one of
-humiliation and cheated love. “And as for--for _her_--I’ll never--never
-think of her--again.”
-
-When once more he turned to the river, a spirit wrestled with the
-emotion that had unnerved him. Adam Larey appeared to be a boy of
-eighteen, with darkly tanned, clear-cut, and comely face, and a
-lofty stature, straight and spare and wide. Untying the boat from
-its mooring, he became conscious of a singular thrill. Sight of the
-silent river fascinated him. If it had been drink that had fortified
-his reckless resolve, it was some strange call to the wildness in him
-that had stirred exaltation in the prospect of adventure. But there
-was more. Never again to be dominated by that selfish Guerd, his
-brother who had taken all and given nothing! Guerd would be stung by
-this desertion. Perhaps he would be sorry. That thought gave Adam a
-pang. Long habit of being influenced, and strength of love fostered in
-playmate days, these made him waver. But the tide of resentment surged
-up once more; and there flowed the red Colorado, rolling away to the
-southwest, a gateway to the illimitable wastes of desert land, with its
-mystery, its adventure, its gold and alluring freedom.
-
-“I’ll go,” he declared, passionately, and with a shove he sent the boat
-adrift and leaped over the bow to the rowing seat. The boat floated
-lazily, half circling, till it edged into the current; then, as if
-grasped by unseen power, it glided downstream. Adam seemed to feel the
-resistless current of this mysterious river take hold of his heart.
-There would be no coming back--no breasting that mighty flood with puny
-oars. The moment was sudden and poignant in its revelation. How swiftly
-receded the cluster of brown adobe huts, the somber, motionless Indian!
-He had left Ehrenberg behind, and a brother who was his only near
-relative, and a little sum of love that had failed him.
-
-“I’m done with Guerd forever,” he muttered, looking back with hard dry
-eyes. “It’s his fault. Mother always warned me.... Ah! if she had lived
-I would still be home. Home! and not here--in this awful desert of heat
-and wastelands--among men like wolves and women like....”
-
-He did not finish the thought, but from his pack he took a bottle that
-glittered in the sunlight, and, waving it defiantly at the backward
-scene of glare and dust and lonely habitation, he drank deeply. Then he
-flung the bottle from him with a violent gesture of repulsion. He had
-no love for strong drink. The bottle fell with hollow splash, rode the
-muddy swirls, and sank. Whereupon Adam applied himself to the oars with
-long and powerful sweep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In that moment of bitter soliloquy there had flashed through Adam
-Larey’s mind memories and pictures of the past--the old homestead back
-East, vivid and unforgetable--the sad face of his mother, who had
-loved him as she had never loved his brother Guerd. There had been a
-mystery about the father who had died in Adam’s childhood. Adam thought
-of these facts now, seeing a vague connection between them and his
-presence there alone upon that desert river. When his mother died she
-had left all her money to him. But Adam had shared his small fortune
-with Guerd. That money had been the beginning of evil days. If it had
-not changed Guerd it had awakened slumbering jealousy and passion.
-Guerd squandered his share and disgraced himself in the home town.
-Then had begun his ceaseless importunity for Adam to leave college, to
-see life, to seek adventures, to sail round the Horn to the California
-gold fields. Adam had been true to the brother spirit within him and
-the voice of the tempter had fallen upon too thrilling ears. Yearning
-to be with his brother, and to see wild life upon his own account,
-Adam yielded to the importunity. He chose, however, to travel westward
-by land. At various points _en route_ Guerd had fallen in with evil
-companions, among whom he seemed to feel freer. At Tucson he launched
-himself upon the easy and doubtful career of a gambler, which practice
-did not spare even his brother. At Ehrenberg, Guerd had found life to
-his liking--a mining and outfitting post remote from civilization,
-where he made friends compatible with his lately developed tastes,
-where he finally filched the favor of dark eyes that had smiled first
-upon Adam.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was a June sun that burned down upon the Colorado desert and its red
-river. Adam Larey had taken to rowing the boat with a powerful energy.
-But the fiery liquor he had absorbed and the intense heat beating down
-upon him soon prostrated him, half drunk and wholly helpless, upon the
-bottom of the leaky boat, now at the mercy of the current.
-
-Strangest of all rivers was the Rio Colorado. Many names it had borne,
-though none so fitting and lasting as that which designated its color.
-Neither crimson nor scarlet was it, nor any namable shade of red,
-yet somehow red was its hue. Like blood with life gone from it! With
-its source at high altitude, fed by snow fields and a thousand lakes
-and streams, the Colorado stormed its great canyoned confines with a
-mighty torrent; and then, spent and leveled, but still tremendous and
-insatiate, it bore down across the desert with its burden of silt and
-sand. It was silent, it seemed to glide along, yet it was appalling.
-
-The boat that carried Adam Larey might as well have been a rudderless
-craft in an ocean current. Slowly round and round it turned, as if
-every rod of the river was an eddy, sweeping near one shore and then
-the other. The hot hours of the afternoon waned. Sunset was a glaring
-blaze without clouds. Cranes and bitterns swept in lumbering flight
-over the wide green crests of the bottom lands, and desert buzzards
-sailed down from the ruddy sky. The boat drifted on. Before darkness
-fell the boat had drifted out of the current into a back eddy, where
-slowly it rode round and round, at last to catch hold of the arrowweeds
-and lodge in a thicket.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At dawn Adam Larey awoke, sober enough, but sick and aching, parched
-with thirst. The eastern horizon, rose-flushed and golden, told him of
-the advent of another day. He thrilled even in his misery. Scooping
-up the muddy and sand-laden water, which was cold and held a taste of
-snow, he quenched his thirst and bathed his hot face. Then opening his
-pack, he took out food he had been careful to bring.
-
-Then he endeavored to get his bearings. Adam could see by the stain on
-the arrowweeds that the flood had subsided a foot during the night.
-A reasonable calculation was that he had drifted a good many miles.
-“I’ll row till it gets hot, then rest up in a shady place,” he decided.
-Pushing away from the weeds, he set the oars and rowed out to meet the
-current. As soon as that caught him the motion became exhilarating.
-By and by, what with the exercise and the cool breeze of morning on
-his face and the sweet, dank smell of river lowlands, he began to wear
-off the effects of the liquor and with it the disgust and sense of
-unfitness with which it had left him. Then at length gloom faded from
-his mind, though a pang abided in his breast. It was not an unfamiliar
-sensation. Resolutely he faced that wide traveling river, grateful
-for something nameless that seemed borne on its bosom, conscious of
-a strange expansion of his soul, ready to see, to hear, to smell, to
-feel, to taste the wildness and wonder of freedom as he had dreamed it.
-
-The sun rose, and Adam’s face and hands felt as if some hot material
-thing had touched them. He began to sweat, which was all that was
-needed to restore his usual healthy feeling of body. From time to time
-he saw herons, and other long-legged waterfowl, and snipe flitting over
-the sand bars, and somber, gray-hued birds that he could not name. The
-spell of river or desert hovered over these birds. The fact brought to
-Adam the strange nature of this silence. Like an invisible blanket it
-covered all, water and brush and land.
-
-“It’s desert silence,” he said, wonderingly.
-
-When he raised the oars and rested them there seemed absolutely no
-sound. And this fact struck him overpoweringly with its meaning and
-with a sudden unfamiliar joy. On the gentle wind came a fragrant hot
-breath that mingled with the rank odor of flooded bottom lands. The
-sun, hot as it was, felt good upon his face and back. He loved the sun
-as he hated cold.
-
-“Maybe Guerd’s coaxing me West will turn out well for me,” soliloquized
-Adam, with resurging boyish hope. “As the Mexicans say, _Quien sabe?_”
-
-At length he espied a sloping bank where it appeared safe to risk
-landing. This was a cove comparatively free of brush and the bank
-sloped gradually to the water. The summit of the bank was about forty
-or fifty feet high, and before Adam had wholly ascended it he began to
-see the bronze tips of mountains on all sides.
-
-“By Jove!” exclaimed Adam. “No sign of man! No sign of life!”
-
-Some distance from the river bank stood a high knoll. Adam climbed to
-the top of it, and what he saw here made him yearn for the mountain
-peaks. He had never stood at any great elevation. Southward the
-Colorado appeared to enter a mountain gateway and to turn and disappear.
-
-When he had refreshed himself with food and drink he settled himself
-into a comfortable position to rest and sleep a little while. He had
-plucked at the roots of love, but not yet had he torn it from his
-heart. Guerd, his brother! The old boyhood days flashed up. Adam
-found the pang deep in his heart and ineradicable. The old beautiful
-bond, the something warm and intimate between him and Guerd, was gone
-forever. For its loss there could be no recompense. He knew every hour
-would sever him the farther from this brother who had proved false.
-Adam hid his face in the dry grass, and there in the loneliness of that
-desert he began to see into the gulf of his soul.
-
-“I can fight--I can forget!” he muttered. Then he set his mind to the
-problem of his immediate future. Where would he go? There were two
-points below on the river--Picacho, a mining camp, and Yuma, a frontier
-town--about both of which he had heard strange, exciting tales. And
-at that moment Adam felt a reckless eagerness for adventure, and a
-sadness for the retreating of his old dream of successful and useful
-life. At length he fell asleep.
-
-When he awoke he felt hot and wet with sweat. A luminous gold light
-shone through the willows and there was vivid color in the west. He had
-slept hours. When he moved to sit up he heard rustlings in the willows.
-These unseen creatures roused interest and caution in Adam. In his
-travels across Arizona he had passed through wild places and incidents.
-And remembering tales of bad Indians, bad Mexicans, bad white men, and
-the fierce beasts and reptiles of the desert, Adam fortified himself to
-encounters that must come.
-
-When he stepped out of the shady covert it was to see river and valley
-as if encompassed by an immense loneliness, different somehow for the
-few hours of his thought and slumber. The river seemed redder and the
-mountains veiled in ruby haze. Earth and sky were bathed in the hue of
-sunset light.
-
-He descended to the river. Shoving the boat off, he applied himself to
-the oars. His strong strokes, aided by the current, sent the boat along
-swiftly, perhaps ten miles an hour. The rose faded out of the sky, the
-clouds turned drab, the blue deepened, and a pale star shone. Twilight
-failed. With the cooling of the air Adam lay back more powerfully
-upon the oars. Night fell, and one by one, and then many by many, the
-stars came out. This night ride began to be thrilling. There must have
-been danger ahead. By night the river seemed vast, hurrying, shadowy,
-and silent as the grave. Its silence wore upon Adam until it seemed
-unnatural.
-
-As the stars multiplied and brightened, the deep cut where the river
-wound changed its character, becoming dark and clear where it had been
-gloomily impenetrable. The dim, high outlines of the banks showed,
-and above them loomed the black domes of mountains. From time to
-time he turned the boat and, resting upon his oars, he drifted with
-the current, straining his eyes and ears. These moments of inaction
-brought the cold, tingling prickle of skin up and down his back. It was
-impossible not to be afraid, yet he thrilled even in his fear. In the
-clear obscurity of the night he could see several rods ahead of him
-over the gleaming river. But the peril that haunted Adam seemed more
-in the distant shadows, round the bends. What a soundless, nameless,
-unintelligible river! To be alone on a river like that, so vast, so
-strange, with the grand and solemn arch of heaven blazed and clouded
-white by stars, taught a lesson incalculable in its effects.
-
-The hour came when an invisible something, like a blight, passed across
-the heavens, paling the blue, dimming the starlight. The intense purity
-of the sky sustained a dull change, then darkened. Adam welcomed the
-first faint gleam of light over the eastern horizon. It brightened.
-The wan stars faded. The mountains heightened their clearness of
-silhouette, and along the bold, dark outlines appeared a faint rose
-color, herald of the sun. It deepened, it spread as the gray light
-turned pink and yellow. The shadows lifted from the river valley and it
-was day again.
-
-“Always I have slept away the great hour,” said Adam. An exhilaration
-uplifted him.
-
-He drifted round a bend in the river while once more eating sparingly
-of his food; and suddenly he espied a high column of smoke rising to
-the southwest. Whereupon he took the oars again and, having become
-rested and encouraged, he rowed with a stroke that would make short
-work of the few miles to the camp.
-
-“Picacho!” soliloquized Adam, remembering tales he had heard. “Now what
-shall I do?... I’ll work at anything.” He carried a considerable sum of
-money in a belt round his waist--the last of the money left him by his
-mother, and he wanted to keep it as long as possible.
-
-Adam was not long in reaching the landing, which appeared to be only a
-muddy bank. A small, dilapidated stern-wheel steamer, such as Adam had
-seen on the Ohio River, lay resting upon the mud. On the bow sat a
-gaunt weather-beaten man with a grizzled beard. He held a long crooked
-fishing pole out over the water, and evidently was fishing. The bank
-sloped up to fine white sand and a dense growth of green, in the middle
-of which there appeared to be a narrow lane. Here in a flowing serape
-stood a Mexican girl, slender and small, with a single touch of red in
-all her darkness of dress.
-
-Adam ran the boat ashore. Lifting his pack, he climbed a narrow bench
-of the bank and walked down to a point opposite the fisherman. Adam
-greeted him and inquired if this place was Picacho.
-
-“Mornin’, stranger,” came the reply. “Yes, this here’s the gold
-diggin’s, an’ she’s hummin’ these days.”
-
-“Catching any fish?” Adam inquired, with interest.
-
-“Yep; I ketched one day before yestiddy,” replied the man, complacently.
-
-“What kind?” went on Adam.
-
-“I’ll be doggoned if I know, but he was good to eat,” answered the
-angler, with a grin. “Where you hail from, stranger?”
-
-“Back East.”
-
-“So I reckoned. No Westerner would tackle the Colorado when she was in
-flood. I opine you hit the river at Ehrenberg. Wal, you’re lucky. Goin’
-to prospect for gold?”
-
-“No, I’d rather work. Can I get a job here?”
-
-“Son, if you’re as straight as you look you can get a good job. But a
-husky lad like you, if he stayed sober, could strike it rich in the
-diggin’s.”
-
-“How about a place to eat and sleep?”
-
-“Thet ain’t so easy to find up at the camp. It’s a few miles up the
-canyon. But say, I’m forgettin’ about the feller who stayed here with
-the Mexicans. They jest buried him. You could get his place. It’s the
-’dobe house--first one. Ask Margarita, there. She’ll show you.”
-
-Thus directed, Adam saw the Mexican girl standing above him. Climbing
-the path to the top of the bank, he threw down his pack.
-
-“_Buenas dias_, señor.” The girl’s soft, liquid accents fitted a dark,
-piquant little face, framed by hair as black as the wing of a raven,
-and lighted by big eyes, like night.
-
-Adam’s Spanish was not that of the Mexicans, but it enabled him to talk
-fairly well. He replied to the girl’s greeting, yet hesitated with the
-query he had on his lips. He felt a slight shrinking as these dark
-eyes reminded him of others of like allurement which he had willed to
-forget. Yet he experienced a warmth and thrill of pleasure in a pretty
-face. Women invariably smiled upon Adam. This one, a girl in her teens,
-smiled with half-lowered eyes, the more provocative for that; and
-she turned partly away with a lithe, quick grace. Adam’s hesitation
-had been a sudden chill at the proximity of something feminine and
-attractive--of something that had hurt him. But it passed. He had done
-more than boldly step across the threshold of a new and freer life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-For Adam’s questions Margarita had a shy, “_Si_, señor,” and the same
-subtle smile that had attracted him. Whereupon he took up his pack and
-followed her.
-
-Back from the river the sand was thick and heavy, clean and white. The
-girl led down a path bordered by willows and mesquites which opened
-into a clearing where stood several squat adobe houses.
-
-Margarita stopped at the first house. The girl’s mother appeared to be
-an indolent person, rather careless of her attire. She greeted Adam in
-English, but when he exercised some of his laborsome Spanish her dark
-face beamed with smiles that made it pleasant to behold. The little
-room indoors, to which she led Adam, was dark, poorly ventilated, and
-altogether unsatisfactory. Adam said so. The señora waxed eloquent.
-Margarita managed to convey her great disappointment by one swift
-look. Then they led him outdoors and round under the low-branching
-mesquites, where he had to stoop, to a small structure. The walls were
-made of two rows of long slender poles, nailed upon heavier uprights
-at the corners, and between these rows had been poured wet adobe mud.
-The hut contained two rooms, the closed one full of wood and rubbish,
-and the other, which had an open front, like a porch, faced the river.
-It was empty, with a floor of white sand. This appeared very much to
-Adam’s liking, and he agreed upon a price for it, to the señora’s
-satisfaction and Margarita’s shy rapture. Adam saw the latter with
-some misgiving, yet he was pleased, and in spite of himself he warmed
-toward this pretty señorita who had apparently taken a sudden fancy to
-him. He was a stranger in a strange land, with a sore and yearning
-heart. While Adam untied his pack and spread out its contents the women
-fetched a low bench, a bucket of water, and a basin. These simple
-articles constituted the furniture of his new lodgings. He was to get
-his meals at the house, where, it was assured, he would be well cared
-for. In moving away, Margarita, who was looking back, caught her hair
-in a thorny branch of the mesquite. Adam was quick to spring to her
-assistance. Then she ran off after her mother.
-
-“What eyes! Well, well!” exclaimed Adam, sensible of a warmth along his
-veins. Suddenly at that moment he thought of his brother Guerd. “I’m
-glad he’s not here.” Margarita had prompted that thought. Guerd was a
-handsome devil, irresistible to women. Adam went back to his unpacking,
-conscious of a sobered enthusiasm.
-
-He hung his few clothes and belongings upon the walls, made his bed
-of blankets on the sand, and then surveyed the homely habitation with
-pleasure.
-
-He found the old fisherman in precisely the same posture. Adam climbed
-on board the boat.
-
-“Get any bites?” he queried.
-
-“I believe I jest had one,” replied the fisherman.
-
-Adam saw that he was about fifty years old, lean and dried, with a
-wrinkled tanned face and scant beard.
-
-“Have a smoke,” said Adam, proffering one of the last of his cigars.
-
-“Lordy!” ejaculated the fisherman, his eyes lighting. “When have I seen
-one of them?... Young man, you’re an obligin’ feller. What’s your name?”
-
-Adam told him, and that he hailed from the East and had been a
-tenderfoot for several memorable weeks.
-
-“My handle’s Merryvale,” replied the other. “I came West twenty-eight
-years ago when I was about your age. Reckon you’re about twenty.”
-
-“No. Only eighteen. Say, you must have almost seen the old days of
-’forty-nine.”
-
-“It was in ’fifty. Yes, I was in the gold rush.”
-
-“Did you strike any gold?” asked Adam, eagerly.
-
-“Son, I was a prospector for twenty years. I’ve made an’ lost more than
-one fortune. Drink an’ faro an’ bad women!... And now I’m a broken-down
-night watchman at Picacho.”
-
-“I’m sorry,” said Adam, sincerely. “I’ll bet you’ve seen some great old
-times. Won’t you tell me about them? You see, I’m foot-loose now and
-sort of wild.”
-
-Merryvale nodded sympathetically. He studied Adam with eyes that were
-shrewd and penetrating, for all their kindliness. Wherefore Adam talked
-frankly about himself and his travels West. Merryvale listened with a
-nod now and then.
-
-“Son, I hate to see the likes of you hittin’ this gold diggin’s,” he
-said.
-
-“Why? Oh, I can learn to take care of myself. It must be a man’s game.
-I’ll love the desert.”
-
-“Wal, son, I oughtn’t discourage you,” replied Merryvale. “An’ it ain’t
-fair for me to think because I went wrong, an’ because I seen so many
-boys go wrong, thet you’ll do the same.... But this gold diggin’s is a
-hell of a place for a tough old timer, let alone a boy runnin’ wild.”
-
-And then he began to talk like a man whose memory was a vast treasure
-store of history and adventure and life. Gold had been discovered
-at Picacho in 1864. In 1872 the mill was erected near the river,
-and the ore was mined five miles up the canyon and hauled down on a
-narrow-gauge railroad. The machinery and construction for this great
-enterprise, together with all supplies, were brought by San Francisco
-steamers round into the Gulf of California, loaded on smaller steamers,
-and carried up the Colorado River to Picacho. These steamers also
-hauled supplies to Yuma and Ehrenberg, where they were freighted by
-wagon trains into the interior. At the present time, 1878, the mine was
-paying well and there were between five and six hundred men employed.
-The camp was always full of adventurers and gamblers, together with a
-few bad women whose capacity for making trouble magnified their number.
-
-“Down here at the boat landin’ an’ the mill it’s always sorta quiet,”
-said Merryvale. “You see, there ain’t many men here. An’ the gamblin’
-hells are all up at the camp, where, in fact, everybody goes of an
-evenin’. Lord knows I’ve bucked the tiger in every gold camp in
-California. There’s a fever grips a man. I never seen the good of gold
-to the man thet dug it.... So, son, if you’re askin’ me for a hunch,
-let me tell you, drink little an’ gamble light an’ fight shy of the
-females!”
-
-“Merryvale, I’m more of a tenderfoot than I look, I guess,” replied
-Adam. “You’d hardly believe I never drank till I started West a few
-months ago. I can’t stand liquor.”
-
-Adam’s face lost its brightness and his eyes shadowed, though they held
-frankly to Merryvale’s curious gaze.
-
-“Son, you’re a strappin’ youngster an’ you’ve got looks no woman will
-pass by,” said Merryvale. “An’ in this country the preference of women
-brings trouble. Wal, for thet matter, all the trouble anywheres is made
-by them. But in the desert, where it’s wild an’ hot an’ there’s few
-females of any species, the fightin’ gets bloody.”
-
-“Women have been the least of my fights or troubles,” rejoined Adam.
-“But lately I had a--a little more serious affair--that ended suddenly
-before I fell in deep.”
-
-“Lordy! son, you’ll be a lamb among wolves!” broke in Merryvale. “See
-here, I’m goin’ to start you right. This country is no place for a nice
-clean boy, more’s the shame and pity. Every man who gets on in the
-West, let alone in the desert where the West is magnified, has got to
-live up to the standard. He must work, he must endure, he must fight
-men, he must measure up to women. I ain’t sayin’ it’s a fine standard,
-but it’s the one by which men have survived in a hard country at a hard
-time.”
-
-“Survival of the fittest,” muttered Adam, soberly.
-
-“You’ve said it, son. Thet law makes the livin’ things of this desert,
-whether man or otherwise. _Quien sabe?_ You can never tell what’s in a
-man till he’s tried. Son, I’ve known desert men whose lives were beyond
-all understandin.’ But not one man in a thousand can live on the
-desert. Thet has to do with his mind first; then his endurance. But to
-come back to this here Picacho. I’d not be afraid to back you against
-it if you meet it right.”
-
-“How is that?”
-
-“Lordy! son, I wish I could say the right word,” returned Merryvale, in
-pathetic earnestness. “You ain’t to be turned back?”
-
-“No. I’m here for better or worse. Back home I had my hopes, my dreams.
-They’re gone--vanished.... I’ve no near relatives except a brother
-who--who is not my kind. I didn’t want to come West. But I seem to have
-been freed from a cage. This grand wild desert! It will do something
-wonderful--or terrible with me.”
-
-“Wal, wal, you talk like you look,” replied Merryvale, with a sigh.
-“Time was, son, when a hunch of mine might be doubtful. But now I’m
-old, an’ as I go down the years I remember more my youth an’ I love it
-more. You can trust me.” Then he paused, taking a deep breath, as if
-his concluding speech involved somehow his faith in himself and his
-good will to a stranger. “Be a man with your body! Don’t shirk work
-or play or fight. Eat an’ drink an’ be merry, but don’t live jest for
-thet. Lend a helpin’ hand--be generous with your gold. Put aside a
-third of your earnin’s for gamblin’ an’ look to lose it. Don’t ever get
-drunk. You can’t steer clear of women, good or bad. An’ the only way is
-to be game an’ kind an’ square.”
-
-“Game--kind--square,” mused Adam, thoughtfully.
-
-“Wal, I need a new fishin’ line,” said Merryvale, as he pulled in his
-rod. “We’ll go up to the store an’ then I’ll take you to the mill.”
-
-While passing the adobe house where Adam had engaged board and lodging
-he asked his companion the name of the people.
-
-“Arallanes--Juan Arallanes lives there,” replied Merryvale. “An’ he’s
-the whitest greaser I ever seen. He’s a foreman of the Mexicans
-employed at the mill. His wife is nice, too. But thet black-eyed hussy
-Margarita----”
-
-Merryvale shook his grizzled head, but did not complete his dubious
-beginning. The suggestion piqued Adam’s curiosity. Presently Merryvale
-pointed out a cluster of huts and cabins and one rather pretentious
-stone house, low and square, with windows. Both white- and dark-skinned
-children were playing on the sand in the shady places. Idle men lounged
-in front of the stone house, which Merryvale said was the store. Upon
-entering, Adam saw a complete general store of groceries, merchandise,
-hardware, and supplies; and he felt amazed until he remembered how the
-river steamers made transportation easy as far as the border of the
-desert. Then Merryvale led on to the huge structure of stone and iron
-and wood that Adam had espied from far up the river. As Adam drew near
-he heard the escape of steam, the roar of heavy machinery, and a sound
-that must have been a movement and crushing of ore, with a rush of
-flowing water.
-
-Merryvale evidently found the manager, who was a man of medium height,
-powerfully built, with an unshaven broad face, strong and ruddy. He
-wore a red-flannel shirt, wet with sweat, a gun at his belt, overalls
-thrust into cowhide boots; and altogether he looked a rough and
-practical miner.
-
-“Mac, shake hands with my young friend here,” said Merryvale. “He wants
-a job.”
-
-“Howdy!” replied the other, proffering a big hand that Adam certainly
-felt belonged to a man. Also he was aware of one quick all-embracing
-glance. “Are you good at figures?”
-
-“Why, yes,” answered Adam, “but I want to work.”
-
-“All right. You can help me in the office where I’m stuck. An’ I’ll
-give you outside work, besides. To-morrow.” And with this brusque
-promise the manager strode away in a hurry.
-
-“Mac don’t get time to eat,” explained Merryvale.
-
-Adam had to laugh at the incident. Here he had been recommended by a
-stranger, engaged to work for a man whose name he had not heard and
-who had not asked his, and no mention made of wages. Adam liked this
-simplicity. A man must pass in this country for what he was.
-
-Merryvale went his way then, leaving Adam alone. It seemed to Adam,
-as he pondered there, that his impressions of that gold mill did not
-augur well for a satisfaction with his job. He had no distaste for hard
-labor, though to bend over a desk did not appeal to him. Then he turned
-his gaze to the river and valley. What a splendid scene! The green
-borderland offered soft and relieving contrast to the bare and grisly
-ridges upon which he stood. At that distance the river shone red gold,
-sweeping through its rugged iron gateway and winding majestically down
-the valley to lose itself round a bold bluff.
-
-Adam drew a long breath. A scene like this world of mountain
-wilderness, of untrodden ways, was going to take hold of him. And then,
-singularly, there flashed into memory an image of the girl, Margarita.
-Just then Adam resented thought of her. It was not because she had
-made eyes at him--for he had to confess this was pleasing--but because
-he did not like the idea of a deep and vague emotion running parallel
-in his mind with thought of a roguish and coquettish little girl, of
-doubtful yet engaging possibilities.
-
-“I think too much,” declared Adam. It was action he needed. Work, play,
-hunting, exploring, even gold digging--anything with change of scene
-and movement of muscle--these things that he had instinctively felt to
-be the need of his body, now seemed equally the need of his soul.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-Arallanes, the foreman, did not strike Adam as being typical of
-the Mexicans among whom he lived. He was not a little runt of a
-swarthy-skinned man, but well built, of a clean olive complexion and
-regular features.
-
-After supper Arallanes invited Adam to ride up to the camp. Whereupon
-Margarita asked to be taken. Arallanes laughed, and then talked so
-fast that Adam could not understand. He gathered, however, that the
-empty ore train traveled up the canyon to the camp, there to remain
-until morning. Also Adam perceived that Margarita did not get along
-well with this man, who was her stepfather. They appeared on the verge
-of a quarrel. But the señora spoke a few soft words that worked magic
-upon Arallanes, though they did not change the passion of the girl. How
-swiftly she had paled! Her black eyes burned with a dusky fire. When
-she turned them upon Adam it was certain that he had a new sensation.
-
-“Will not the gracious señor take Margarita to the dance?”
-
-That was how Adam translated her swift, eloquent words. Embarrassed
-and hesitating, he felt that he cut a rather sorry figure before her.
-Then he realized the singular beauty of her big eyes, sloe black and
-brilliant, neither half veiled nor shy now, but bold and wide and
-burning, as if the issue at stake was not trivial.
-
-Arallanes put a hand on Adam. “No, señor,” he said. “Some other time
-you may take Margarita.”
-
-“I--I shall be pleased,” stammered Adam.
-
-The girl’s red lips curled in pouting scorn, and with a wonderful dusky
-flash of eyes she whirled away.
-
-Outside, Arallanes led Adam across the sands, still with that familiar
-hand upon him.
-
-“Boy,” he said, in English, “that girl--she no blood of mine. She damn
-leetle wild cat--mucha Indian--on fire all time.”
-
-If ever Adam had felt the certainty of his youthful years, it had been
-during those last few moments. His collar was hot and tight. A sense
-of shock remained with him. He had not fortified himself at all, nor
-had he surrendered himself to recklessness. But to think of going to
-a dance this very night, in a mining camp, with a dusky-eyed little
-Spanish girl who appeared exactly what Arallanes had called her--the
-very idea took Adam’s breath with the surprise of it, the wildness of
-it, the strange appeal to him.
-
-“Señor veree beeg, but young--like colt,” said Arallanes, with good
-nature. “Tenderfeet, the gamblers say.... He mos’ dam’ sure have tough
-feet soon on Picacho!”
-
-“Well, Arallanes, that can’t come too soon for me,” declared Adam, and
-the statement seemed to give relief.
-
-They climbed to the track where the ore train stood, already with
-laborers in almost every car. After a little wait that seemed long to
-the impatient Adam the train started. The track was built a few feet
-above the sand, but showed signs of having been submerged, and in fact
-washed out in places. The canyon was tortuous, and grew more so as it
-narrowed. Adam descried tunnels dug in the red walls and holes dug
-in gravel benches, which place Arallanes explained had been made by
-prospectors hunting for gold. It developed, however, that there was a
-considerable upgrade. That seemed a long five miles to Adam. The train
-halted and the laborers yelled merrily.
-
-Arallanes led Adam up a long winding path, quite steep, and the other
-men followed in single file. When Adam reached a level once more,
-Arallanes called out, “Picacho!”
-
-But he certainly could not have meant the wide gravelly plateau with
-its squalid huts, its adobe shacks, its rambling square of low flat
-buildings, like a stockade fort roofed with poles and dirt. Arallanes
-meant the mountain that dominated the place--Picacho, the Peak.
-
-Adam faced the west as the sun was setting. The mountain, standing
-magnificently above the bold knobs and ridges around it, was a dark
-purple mass framed in sunset gold; and from its frowning summit,
-notched and edged, streamed a long ruddy golden ray of sunlight that
-shone down through a wind-worn hole. With the sun blocked and hidden
-except for that small aperture there was yet a wonderful effect of
-sunset. A ruddy haze, shading the blue, filled the canyons and the
-spaces. Picacho seemed grand there, towering to the sky, crowned in
-gold, aloof, unscalable, a massive rock sculptured by the ages.
-
-Arallanes laughed at Adam, then sauntered on. Mexicans jabbered as
-they passed, and some of the white men made jocular comment at the boy
-standing there so wide eyed and still. A little Irishman gaped at Adam
-and said to a comrade:
-
-“Begorra, he’s after seein’ a peanut atop ole Picacho.... What-th’-hell
-now, me young fri’nd? Come hev a drink.”
-
-The crowd passed on, and Arallanes lingered, making himself a cigarette
-the while.
-
-Adam had not been prepared for such a spectacle of grandeur and
-desolation. He seemed to feel himself a mite flung there, encompassed
-by colossal and immeasurable fragments of upheaved rock, jagged and
-jutted, with never a softening curve, and all steeped in vivid and
-intense light. The plateau was a ridged and scarred waste, lying under
-the half circle of range behind, and sloping down toward where the
-river lay hidden. The range to the left bore a crimson crest, and it
-lost itself in a region of a thousand peaks. The range to the right was
-cold pure purple and it ended in a dim infinity. Between these ranges,
-far flung across the Colorado, loomed now with exquisite clearness in
-Adam’s sight the mountain world he had gotten a glimpse of from below.
-But now he perceived its marvelous all-embracing immensity, magnified
-by the transparent light, its limitless horizon line an illusion, its
-thin purple distances unbelievable. The lilac-veiled canyons lay clear
-in his sight; the naked bones of the mountains showed hungrily the
-nature of the desert earth; and over all the vast area revealed by the
-setting sun lay the awful barrenness of a dead world, beautiful and
-terrible, with its changing rose and topaz hues only mockeries to the
-lover of life.
-
-A hand fell upon Adam’s shoulder.
-
-“Come, let us look at games of gold and women,” said Arallanes.
-
-Then he led Adam into a big, poorly lighted, low-ceiled place, as
-crudely constructed as a shed, and full of noise and smoke. The
-attraction seemed to be a rude bar, various gambling games, and some
-hawk-faced, ghastly spectacles of women drinking with men at the
-tables. From an adjoining apartment came discordant music. This scene
-was intensely interesting to Adam, yet disappointing. His first sight
-of a wild frontier gambling hell did not thrill him.
-
-It developed that Arallanes liked to drink and talk loud and laugh, and
-to take a bold chance at a gambling game. But Adam refused, and meant
-to avoid drinking as long as he could. He wandered around by himself,
-to find that everybody was merry and friendly. Adam tried not to look
-at any of the women while they looked at him. The apartment from which
-came the music was merely a bare canvas-covered room with a board
-floor. Dancing was going on.
-
-Adam’s aimless steps finally led him back to the sand-floored hall,
-where he became absorbed in watching a game of poker that a bystander
-said had no limit. Then Adam sauntered on, and presently was attracted
-by a quarrel among some Mexicans. To his surprise, it apparently
-concerned Arallanes. All of them showed the effects of liquor, and,
-after the manner of their kind, they were gesticulating and talking
-excitedly. Suddenly one of them drew a knife and lunged toward
-Arallanes. Adam saw the movement, and then the long shining blade,
-before he saw what the man looked like. That action silenced the little
-group.
-
-The outstretched hand, quivering with the skewerlike dagger, paused in
-its sweep as it reached a point opposite Adam. Instinctively he leaped,
-and quick as a flash he caught the wrist in a grip so hard that the
-fellow yelled. Adam, now that he possessed the menacing hand, did not
-know what to do with it. With a powerful jerk he pulled the Mexican off
-his feet, and then, exerting his strength to his utmost, he swung him
-round, knocking over men and tables, until his hold loosened. The knife
-flew one way and the Mexican the other. He lay where he fell. Arallanes
-and his comrades made much of Adam.
-
-“We are friends. You will drink with me,” said Arallanes, grandly.
-
-Though no one would have suspected it, Adam was really in need of
-something bracing.
-
-“Señor is only a boy, but he has an arm,” said Arallanes, as he
-clutched Adam’s shoulder and biceps with a nervous hand.... “When señor
-becomes a man he will be a giant.”
-
-Adam’s next change of emotion was from fright to a sense of foolishness
-at his standing there. Then he had another drink, and after his
-feelings changed again, and for that matter the whole complexion of
-everything changed.
-
-He never could have found the narrow path leading down into the canyon.
-Arallanes was his guide. Walking on the sandy floor was hard work and
-made him sweat. The loose sand and gravel dragged at his feet. Not long
-was it before he had walked off the effects of the strong liquor. He
-became curious as to why the Mexican had threatened Arallanes, and was
-told that during the day the foreman had discharged this fellow.
-
-“He ran after Margarita,” added Arallanes, “and I kicked him out of the
-house. The women, señor--ah! they do not mind what a man is!... Have a
-care of Margarita. She has as many loves and lives as a spotted cat.”
-
-For the most part, however, the two men were silent on this laborious
-walk. By and by the canyon widened out so that Adam could view the
-great expanse of sky, fretted with fire, and the mountain spurs,
-rising on all sides, cold and dark against the blue. At last Arallanes
-announced that they were home. Adam had not seen a single house in the
-gray shadows. A few more steps, however, brought tangible substance of
-walls to Adam’s touch. Then he drew a long deep breath and realized
-how tired he was. The darkness gradually changed from pitch black to a
-pale obscurity. He could see dim, spectral outlines of mesquites, and
-a star shining through. At first the night appeared to be absolutely
-silent, but after a while, by straining his ears, he heard a rustling
-of mice or ground squirrels in the adobe walls. The sound comforted
-him, however, and when one of them, or at least some little animal, ran
-softly over his bed the feeling of utter loneliness was broken.
-
-“I’ve begun it,” he whispered, and meant the lonely life that was to
-be his. The silence, the darkness, the loneliness seemed to give him
-deeper thought. The thing that puzzled him and alarmed him was what
-seemed to be swift changes going on in him. If he changed his mind
-every hour, now cast down because of memories he could not wholly
-shake, or lifted to strange exaltation by the beauty of a desert
-sunset, or again swayed by the appeal of a girl’s dusky eyes, and then
-instinctively leaping into a fight with a Mexican--if he were going
-to be as vacillating and wild as these impulses led him to suppose he
-might be, it was certain that he faced a hopeless future.
-
-But could he help himself? Then it seemed his fine instincts, his fine
-principles, and the hopes and dreams that would not die, began to
-contend with a new uprising force in him, a wilder something he had
-never known, a strange stirring and live emotion.
-
-“But I’m glad,” he burst out, as if telling his secret to the
-darkness. “Glad to be rid of Guerd--damn him and his meanness!... Glad
-to be alone!... Glad to come into this wild desert!... Glad that girl
-made eyes at me! I’ll not lie to myself. I wanted to hug her--to kiss
-her--and I’ll do it if she’ll let me.... That gambling hell disgusted
-me, and sight of the greaser’s knife scared me cold. Yet when I got
-hold of him--felt my strength--how helpless he was--that I could
-have cracked his bones--why, scared as I was, I felt a strange wild
-something that is not gone yet.... I’m changing. It’s a different life.
-And I’ve got to meet things as they come, and be game.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next morning Adam went to work and it developed that this was to copy
-MacKay’s lead-pencil scrawls, and after that was done to keep accurate
-account of ore mined and operated.
-
-Several days passed before Adam caught up with his work to the hour.
-Then MacKay, true to his word, said he would set him on a man’s job
-part of the time. The job upon which MacKay put Adam was no less than
-keeping up the fire under the huge boilers. As wood had to be used for
-fuel and as it was consumed rapidly, the task of stoking was not easy.
-Besides, hot as the furnace was, it seemed the sun was hotter. Adam
-sweat till he could wring water out of his shirt.
-
-That night he made certain MacKay was playing a joke on him. Arallanes
-confided this intelligence, and even Margarita had been let into the
-secret. MacKay had many laborers for the hard work, and he wanted to
-cure the tenderfoot of his desire for a man’s job, such as he had asked
-for. It was all good-natured, and amused Adam. He imagined he knew what
-he needed, and while he was trying to find it he could have just as
-much fun as MacKay.
-
-Much to MacKay’s surprise, Adam presented himself next afternoon, in
-boots, overalls, and undershirt, to go on with his job of firing the
-engine.
-
-“Wasn’t yesterday enough?” queried the boss.
-
-“I can stand it.”
-
-Then it pleased Adam to see a considerable evidence of respect in the
-rough mill operator’s expression. For a week Adam kept up with his
-office work and labored each afternoon at the stoking job. No one
-suspected that he suffered, though it was plain enough that he lost
-flesh and was exceedingly fatigued. Then Margarita’s reception of him,
-when he trudged home in the waning sunset hour, was sweet despite the
-fact that he tried to repudiate its sweetness. Once she put a little
-brown hand on his blistered arm, and her touch held the tenderness of
-woman. All women must be akin. They liked a man who could do things,
-and the greater his feats of labor or fight the better they liked him.
-
-The following week MacKay took a Herculean laborer off a strenuous
-job with the ore and put Adam in his place. MacKay maintained his
-good humor, but he had acquired a little grimness. This long-limbed
-tenderfoot was a hard nut to crack. Adam’s father had been a man of
-huge stature and tremendous strength; and many a time had Adam heard it
-said that he might grow to be like his father. Far indeed was he from
-that now; but he took the brawny and seasoned laborer’s place and kept
-it. If the other job had been toil for Adam, this new one was pain. He
-learned there what labor meant. Also he learned how there was only one
-thing that common men understood and respected in a co-laborer, and it
-was the grit and muscle to stand the grind. Adam was eighteen years
-old and far from having reached his growth. This fact might have been
-manifest to his fellow workers, but it was not that which counted. He
-realized that those long hours of toil at which he stubbornly stuck had
-set his spirit in some immeasurable and unquenchable relation to the
-strange life that he divined was to be his.
-
-Two weeks and more went by. MacKay, in proportion to the growth of his
-admiration and friendship for Adam, gradually weakened on his joke. And
-one day, when banteringly he dared Adam to tip a car of ore that two
-Mexicans were laboring at, and Adam in a single heave sent the tons of
-ore roaring into the shaft, then MacKay gave up and in true Western
-fashion swore his defeat and shook hands with the boy.
-
-So in those few days Adam made friends who changed the color and
-direction of his life. From Merryvale he learned the legend and history
-of the frontier. MacKay opened his eyes to the great health for mind
-and body in sheer toil. Arallanes represented a warmth of friendship
-that came unsought, showing what might be hidden in any man. Margarita
-was still an unknown quantity in Adam’s development. Their acquaintance
-had gone on mostly under the eyes of the señora or Arallanes. Sometimes
-at sunset Adam had sat with her on the sand of the river bank. Her
-charm grew. Then the unexpected happened. A break occurred in the
-machinery and a small but invaluable part could not be repaired. It had
-to come from San Francisco.
-
-Adam seemed to be thrown back upon his own resources. He did not know
-what to do with himself. Arallanes advised him not to go panning for
-gold, and to be cautious if he went up to Picacho, for the Mexican Adam
-had so roughly handled was the ringleader in a bad gang that it would
-be well to avoid. All things conspired, it seemed, to throw Adam into
-the company of Margarita, who always waited around the corner of every
-hour, watching with her dusky eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-So as the slow, solemn days drifted onward, like the wonderful river
-which dominated the desert valley, it came to pass that the dreaming,
-pondering Adam suddenly awakened to the danger in this dusky-eyed
-maiden.
-
-The realization came to Adam at the still sunset hour when he and
-Margarita were watching the river slide like a gleam of gold out of
-the west. They were walking among the scattered mesquites along the
-sandy bank, a place lonesome and hidden from the village behind, yet
-open to the wide space of river and valley beyond. The air seemed full
-of marvelous tints of gold and rose and purple. The majestic scene,
-beautiful and sad, needed life to make it perfect. Adam, more than
-usually drawn by Margarita’s sympathy, was trying to tell her something
-of the burden on his mind, that he was alone in the world, with only a
-hard gray future before him, with no one to care whether he lived or
-died.
-
-Then had come his awakening. It did not speak well for Margarita’s
-conceptions of behavior, but it proved her a creature of heart and
-blood. To be suddenly enveloped by a wind of flame, in the slender
-twining form of this girl of Spanish nature, was for Adam at once a
-revelation and a catastrophe. But if he was staggered, he was also
-responsive, as in a former moment of poignancy he had vowed he would
-be. A strong and shuddering power took hold of his heart and he felt
-the leap, the beat, the burn of his blood. When he lifted Margarita
-and gathered her in a close embrace it was more than a hot upflashing
-of boyish passion that flushed his face and started tears from under
-his tight-shut eyelids. It was a sore hunger for he knew not what,
-a gratefulness that he could express only by violence, a yielding to
-something deeper and more far-reaching than was true of the moment.
-
-Adam loosened Margarita’s hold upon his neck and held her back from him
-so he could see her face. It was sweet, rosy. Her eyes were shining,
-black and fathomless as night, soft with a light that had never shone
-upon Adam from any other woman’s.
-
-“Girl, do you--love me?” he demanded, and if his voice broke with the
-strange eagerness of a boy, his look had all the sternness of a man.
-
-“Ah...!” whispered Margarita.
-
-“You--you big-hearted girl!” he exclaimed, with a laugh that was glad,
-yet had a tremor in it. “Margarita, I--I must love you, too--since I
-feel so queer.”
-
-Then he bent to her lips, and from these first real kisses that
-had ever been spent upon him by a woman he realized in one flash
-his danger. He released Margarita in a consideration she did not
-comprehend; and in her pouting reproach, her soft-eyed appeal, her
-little brown hands that would not let go of him, there was further
-menace to his principles.
-
-Adam, gay and teasing, yet kindly and tactfully, tried to find a way to
-resist her.
-
-“Señorita, some one will see us,” he said.
-
-“Who cares?”
-
-“But, child, we--we must think.”
-
-“Señor, no woman ever thinks when love is in her heart and on her lips.”
-
-Her reply seemed to rebuke Adam, for he sensed in it what might be
-true of life, rather than just of this one little girl, swayed by
-unknown and uncontrollable forces. She appeared to him then subtly and
-strongly, as if there was infinitely more than willful love in her. But
-it did not seem to be the peril of her proffered love that restrained
-Adam so much as the strange consciousness of the willingness of his
-spirit to meet hers halfway.
-
-Suddenly Margarita’s mood changed. She became like a cat that had been
-purring under a soft, agreeable hand and then had been stroked the
-wrong way.
-
-“Señor think he love me?” she flashed, growing white.
-
-“Yes--I said so--Margarita. Of course I do,” he hastened to assure her.
-
-“Maybe you--a gringo liar!”
-
-Adam might have resented this insulting hint but for his uncertainty
-of himself, his consequent embarrassment, and his thrilling sense of
-the nearness of her blazing eyes. What a little devil she looked! This
-did not antagonize Adam, but it gave him proof of his impudence, of his
-dreaming carelessness. Margarita might not be a girl to whom he should
-have made love, but it was too late. Besides, he did not regret that.
-Only he was upset; he wanted to think.
-
-“If the _grande_ señor trifle--Margarita will cut out his heart!”
-
-This swift speech, inflexible and wonderful with a passion that
-revealed to Adam the half-savage nature of a woman whose race was alien
-to his, astounded and horrified him, and yet made his blood tingle
-wildly.
-
-“Margarita, I do not trifle,” replied Adam, earnestly. “God knows I’m
-glad you--you care for me. How have I offended you? What is it you
-want?”
-
-“Let señor swear he love me,” she demanded, imperiously.
-
-Adam answered to that with the wildness that truly seemed flashing more
-and more from him; and the laughter and boldness on his lips hid the
-gravity that had settled there. He was no clod. Under the softness of
-him hid a flint that struck fire.
-
-As Margarita had been alluring and provocative, then as furious as a
-barbarian queen, so she now changed again to another personality in
-which it pleased her to be proud, cold, aloof, an outraged woman to
-be wooed back to tenderness. If, at the last moment of the walk home,
-Margarita evinced signs of another sudden transformation, Adam appeared
-not to note them. Leaving her in the dusk at the door where the señora
-sat, he strode away to the bank of the river. When he felt himself free
-and safe once more, he let out a great breath of relief.
-
-“Whew! Now I’ve done it!... So she’d cut my heart out? And I had to
-swear I loved her! The little savage!... But she’s amazing--and she’s
-adorable, with all her cat claws. Wouldn’t Guerd rave over a girl like
-Margarita?... And here I am, standing on my two feet, in possession of
-all my faculties, Adam Larey, a boy who thought he had principles--yet
-now I’m a ranting lover of a dark-skinned, black-eyed slip of a greaser
-girl! It can’t be true!”
-
-With that outburst came sobering thought. Adam’s resolve not to ponder
-and brood about himself was as if it had never been. He knew he would
-never make such a resolve again. For hours he strolled up and down the
-sandy bank, deep in thought, yet aware of the night and the stars, the
-encompassing mountains, and the silent, gleaming river winding away in
-the gloom. As he had become used to being alone out in the solitude
-and darkness, there had come to him a vague awakening sense of their
-affinity with his nature. Success and people might fail and betray him,
-but the silent, lonely starlit nights were going to be teachers, even
-as they had been to the Wise Men of the Arabian waste.
-
-Adam at length gave up in despair and went to bed, hoping in slumber to
-forget a complexity of circumstance and emotion that seemed to him an
-epitome of his callow helplessness. The desert began to loom to Adam as
-a region inimical to comfort and culture. He had almost decided that
-the physical nature of the desert was going to be good for him. But
-what of its spirit, mood, passion as typified by Margarita Arallanes?
-
-Adam could ask himself that far-reaching query, and yet, all the answer
-he got was a rush of hot blood at memory of the sweet fire of her
-kisses. He saw her to be a simple child of the desert, like an Indian,
-answering to savage impulses, wholly unconscious of what had been
-a breach of womanly reserve and restraint. Was she good or bad? How
-could she be bad if she did not know any better? Thus Adam pondered and
-conjectured, and cursed his ignorance, and lamented his failings, all
-the time honest to acknowledge that he was fond of Margarita and drawn
-to her. About the only conclusion he formed from his perplexity was the
-one that he owed it to Margarita to live up to his principles.
-
-At this juncture he recollected Merryvale’s significant remarks about
-the qualities needed by men who were to survive in the desert, and
-his nobler sentiments suffered a rout. The suddenness, harshness,
-fierceness of the desert grafted different and combating qualities upon
-a man or else it snuffed him out, like a candle blown by a gusty wind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next morning, as every morning, the awakening was sweet, fresh, new,
-hopeful. Another day! And the wonderful dry keenness of the air, the
-colors that made the earth seem a land of enchantment, were enough in
-themselves to make life worth living. In the morning he always felt
-like a boy.
-
-Margarita’s repentance for her moods of yesterday took a material turn
-in the preparation of an unusually good breakfast for Adam. He was
-always hungry and good meals were rare. Adam liked her attentions,
-and he encouraged them; though not before the señora or Arallanes,
-for the former approved too obviously and the latter disapproved too
-mysteriously.
-
-When, some time later, a boat arrived, Adam was among the first to meet
-it at the dock.
-
-He encountered MacKay coming ashore in the company of a man and two
-women, one of whom was young. The manager showed a beaming face for
-the first time in many days. Repairs for the mill engine had come.
-MacKay at once introduced Adam to the party; and it so turned out that
-presently the manager, who was extremely busy, left his friends for
-Adam to entertain. They were people whom Adam liked immediately, and as
-the girl was pretty, of a blond type seldom seen in the Southwest, it
-seemed to Adam that his task was more than agreeable. He showed them
-around the little village and then explained how interesting it would
-be for them to see the gold mill. How long a time it seemed since he
-had been in the company of a girl like those he had known at home! She
-was merry, intelligent, a little shy.
-
-He was invited aboard the boat to have lunch with the mother and
-daughter. Everything tended to make this a red-letter day for Adam.
-The hours passed all too swiftly and time came for the boat to depart.
-When the boat swung free from the shore Adam read in the girl’s eyes
-the thought keen in his own mind--that they would never meet again.
-The round of circumstances might never again bring a girl like that
-into Adam’s life, if it were to be lived in these untrodden ways. He
-waved his hand with all the eloquence which it would express. Then the
-obtruding foliage on the bank hid the boat and the girl was gone. His
-last thought was a selfish one--that his brother Guerd would not see
-her at Ehrenberg.
-
-Some of MacKay’s laborers were working with unloaded freight on the
-dock. One of these was Regan, the little Irishman who had been keen to
-mark Adam on several occasions. He winked at MacKay and pointed at Adam.
-
-“Mac, shure thot boy’s a divil with the wimmen!”
-
-MacKay roared with laughter and looked significantly past Adam as if
-this mirth was not wholly due to his presence alone. Some one else
-seemed implicated. Suddenly Adam turned. Margarita stood there, with
-face and mien of a tragedy queen, and it seemed to Adam that her
-burning black eyes did not see anything in the world but him. Then,
-with one of her swift actions, graceful and lithe, yet violent, she
-wheeled and fled.
-
-“O Lord!” murmured Adam, aghast at the sudden-dawning significance
-of the case. He had absolutely forgotten Margarita’s existence. Most
-assuredly she had seen every move of his with her big eyes, and read
-his mind, too. He could not see the humor of his situation at the
-moment, but as he took a short cut through the shady mesquites toward
-his hut, and presently espied Margarita in ambush. What fiendish glee
-this predicament of his would have aroused in his brother Guerd! Adam,
-the lofty, the supercilious, had come a cropper at last--such would
-have been Guerd’s scorn and rapture!
-
-Margarita came rushing from the side, right upon him even as he turned.
-So swiftly she came that he could not get a good look at her, but she
-appeared a writhing, supple little thing, instinct with fury. Hissing
-Spanish maledictions, she flung herself upward, and before he could
-ward her off she had slapped and scratched his face and beat wildly at
-him with flying brown fists. He thrust her away, but she sprang back.
-Then, suddenly hot with anger, he grasped her and, jerking her off
-her feet, he shook her with far from gentle force, and did not desist
-till he saw that he was hurting her. Letting her down and holding her
-at arm’s length, he gazed hard at the white face framed by disheveled
-black hair and lighted by eyes so magnificently expressive of supreme
-passion that his anger was shocked into wonder and admiration. Desert
-eyes! Right there a conception dawned in his mind--he was seeing a
-spirit through eyes developed by the desert.
-
-“Margarita!” he exclaimed, “are you a cat--that you----”
-
-“I hate you,” she hissed, interrupting him. The expulsion of her
-breath, the bursting swell of her breast, the quiver of her whole
-lissom body, all were exceedingly potent of an intensity that utterly
-amazed Adam. Such a little girl, such a frail strength, such a
-deficient brain to hold all that passion! What would she do if she had
-real cause for wrath?
-
-“Ah, Margarita, you don’t mean that. I didn’t do anything. Let me tell
-you.”
-
-She repeated her passionate utterance, and Adam saw that he could
-no more change her then than he could hope to move the mountain.
-Resentment stirred in him.
-
-“Well,” he burst out, boyishly, “if you’re so darned fickle as that I’m
-glad you do hate me.”
-
-Then he released his hold on her arms and, turning away without another
-glance in her direction, he strode from the glade. He took the gun he
-had repaired and set off down the river trail. When he got into the
-bottom lands of willow and cottonwood he glided noiselessly along,
-watching and listening for game of some kind.
-
-In the wide mouth of a wash not more than a mile from the village Adam
-halted to admire some exceedingly beautiful trees. The first was one
-of a species he had often noted there, and it was a particularly fine
-specimen, perhaps five times as high as his head and full and round in
-proportion. The trunk was large at the ground, soon separating into
-innumerable branches that in turn spread and drooped and separated into
-a million twigs and stems and points. Trunk and branch and twig, every
-inch of this wonderful tree was a bright, soft green color, as smooth
-as if polished, and it did not have a single leaf. As Adam gazed at
-this strange, unknown tree, grasping the nature of it and its exquisite
-color and grace and life, he wondered anew at the marvel of the desert.
-
-As he walked around to the side toward the river he heard a cry.
-Wheeling quickly, he espied Margarita running toward him. Margarita’s
-hair was flying. Blood showed on her white face. She had torn her dress.
-
-“Margarita!” cried Adam, as he reached her. “What’s the matter?”
-
-She was so out of breath she could scarcely speak.
-
-“Felix--he hide back there--in trail,” she panted. “Margarita
-watch--she know--she go round.”
-
-The girl labored under extreme agitation, which, however, did not seem
-to be fright.
-
-“Felix? You mean the Mexican who drew a knife on your father? The
-fellow I threw around--up at Picacho?”
-
-“_Si_--señor,” replied Margarita.
-
-“Well, what of it? Why does Felix hide up in the trail?”
-
-“Felix swore revenge. He kill you.”
-
-“Oh-ho!... So that’s it,” ejaculated Adam, and he whistled his
-surprise. A hot, tight sensation struck deeply inside him. “Then you
-came to find me--warn me?”
-
-She nodded vehemently and clung to him, evidently wearied and weakening.
-
-“Margarita, that was good of you,” said Adam, earnestly, and he led her
-out of the sun into the shade of the tree. With his handkerchief he
-wiped the blood from thorn scratches on her cheek. The dusky eyes shone
-with a vastly different light from the lurid hate of a few hours back.
-“I thank you, girl, and I’ll not forget it.... But why did you run out
-in the sun and through the thorns to warn me?”
-
-“Señor know now--he kill Felix before Felix kill him,” replied
-Margarita, in speech that might have been naïve had its simplicity not
-been so deadly.
-
-Adam laughed again, a little grimly. This was not the first time there
-had been forced upon him a hint of the inevitableness of life in the
-desert. But it was not his duty to ambush the Mexican who would ambush
-him. The little coldness thrilled out of Adam to the close, throbbing
-presence of Margarita. The fragrance, the very breath of her, went to
-his head like wine.
-
-“But girl--only a little while ago--you slapped me--scratched me--hated
-me,” he said, in wonder and reproach.
-
-“No--no--no! Margarita love señor!” she cried, and seemed to twine
-around him and climb into his arms at once. The same fire, the same
-intensity as of that unforgetable moment of hate and passion, dominated
-her now, only it was love.
-
-And this time it was Adam who sought her red lips and returned her
-kisses. Again that shuddering wild gust in his blood! It was as strange
-and imperious to him then as in a sober reflection it had been bold,
-gripping, physical, a drawing of him not sanctioned by his will. In
-this instance he was weaker in its grip, but still he conquered.
-Releasing Margarita, he led her to a shady place in the sand under the
-green tree, and found a seat where he could lean against a low branch.
-Margarita fell against his shoulder, and there clung to him and wept.
-Her dusky hair rippled over him, soft and silky to the touch of his
-fingers. The poor, faded dress, of a fabric unknown to Adam, ragged and
-dusty and torn, and the little shoes, worn and cracked, showing the
-soles of her stockingless feet, spoke eloquently of poverty. Adam noted
-the slender grace of her slight form, the arch of the bare instep, and
-the shapeliness of her ankles, brown almost as an Indian’s. And all at
-once there charged over him an overwhelming sense of the pitifulness
-and the wonderfulness of her--a ragged, half-dressed little Mexican
-girl, whose care of her hair and face, and the few knots of ribbon,
-betrayed the worshipful vanity that was the jewel of her soul, and
-whose physical perfection was in such strange contrast to the cramped,
-undeveloped mind.
-
-“My God!” whispered Adam, under his breath. Something big and undefined
-was born in him then. He saw her, he pitied her, he loved her, he
-wanted her; but these feelings were not so much what constituted the
-bigness and vagueness that waved through his soul. He could not grasp
-it. But it had to do with the life, the beauty, the passion, the soul
-of this Mexican girl; and it was akin to a reverence he felt for the
-things in her that she could not understand.
-
-Margarita soon recovered, and assumed a demeanor so shy and modest
-and wistful that Adam could not believe she was the same girl.
-Nevertheless, he took good care not to awaken her other characteristics.
-
-“Margarita, what is the name of this beautiful tree?” he asked.
-
-“_Palo verde._ It means green tree.”
-
-It interested him then to instruct himself further in regard to the
-desert growths that had been strange to him; and to this end he led
-Margarita from one point to another, pleased to learn how familiar she
-was with every growing thing.
-
-Presently Margarita brought to Adam’s gaze a tree that resembled smoke,
-so blue-gray was it, so soft and hazy against the sky, so columnar and
-mushrooming. What a strange, graceful tree and what deep-blue blossoms
-it bore! Upon examination Adam was amazed to discover that every branch
-and twig of this tree was a thorn. A hard, cruel, beautiful tree of
-thorns that at a little distance resembled smoke!
-
-“_Palo Christi_,” murmured Margarita, making the sign of the cross. And
-she told Adam that this was the Crucifixion tree, which was the species
-that furnished the crown of thorns for the head of Christ.
-
-Sunset ended several happy and profitable hours for Adam. He had not
-forgotten about the Mexican, Felix, and had thought it just as well to
-let time pass and to keep out of trouble as long as he could. He and
-Margarita reached home without seeing any sign of Felix. Arallanes,
-however, had espied the Mexican sneaking around, and he warned Adam in
-no uncertain terms. Merryvale, too, had a word for Adam’s ear; and it
-was significant that he did not advise a waiting course. In spite of
-all Adam’s reflections he did not need a great deal of urging. After
-supper he started off for Picacho with Arallanes and a teamster who was
-freighting supplies up to the camp.
-
-Picacho was in full blast when they arrived. The dim lights, the
-discordant yells, the raw smell of spirits, the violence of the crude
-gambling hall worked upon Adam’s already excited mind; and by the time
-he had imbibed a few drinks he was ready for anything. But they did not
-find Felix.
-
-Then Adam, if not half drunk, at least somewhat under the influence
-of rum, started to walk back to his lodgings. The walk was long and,
-by reason of the heavy, dragging sand, one of considerable labor.
-Adam was in full possession of his faculties when he reached the
-village. But his blood was hot from the exercise, and the excitement
-of the prospective battle of the early evening had given way to an
-excitement of the senses, in the youthful romance felt in the dark,
-the starlight, the wildness of the place. So when in the pale gloom of
-the mesquites Margarita glided to him like a lissom spectre, to enfold
-him and cling and whisper, Adam had neither the will, nor the heart,
-nor the desire to resist her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Adam’s dull eyelids opened on a dim, gray desert dawn. The coming of
-the dawn was in his mind, and it showed pale through his shut lids.
-He could not hold back the hours. Something had happened in the night
-and he would never be the same again. With a sharp pang, a sense of
-incomprehensible loss, Adam felt die in him the old unreasoning,
-instinctive boy. And there was more, too deep and too subtle for him
-to divine. It had to do with a feminine strain in him, a sweetness and
-purity inherited from his mother and developed by her teachings. It had
-separated him from his brother Guerd and kept him aloof from a baseness
-common to their comrades. Nevertheless, the wildness of this raw,
-uncouth, primitive West had been his undoing.
-
-It was with bitterness that Adam again faced the growing light. All
-he could do was to resign himself to fate. The joy of life, the
-enchantments--all that had made him feel different from other boys
-and hide his dreams--failed now in this cool dark morning of reality.
-He could not understand the severity of the judgment he meted out
-to himself. His spirit suffered an ineffaceable blunting. And the
-tight-drawing knot in his breast, the gnawing of remorse, the strange,
-dark oppression--these grew and reached a climax, until something
-gave way within him and there was a sinking of the heart, a weary and
-inscrutable feeling.
-
-Then he remembered Margarita, and the very life and current of his
-blood seemed to change. Like a hot wave the memory of Margarita
-surged over Adam, her strange new sweetness, the cunning of her when
-she waylaid him in the dead of the night, the clinging lissomness
-of her and the whispered incoherence that needed no translation,
-the inevitableness of the silent, imperious demand of her presence,
-unashamed and insistent.
-
-Adam leaped out of his blankets, breaking up this mood and thought by
-violent action. For Adam then the sunrise was glorious, the valley
-was beautiful, the desert was wild and free, the earth was an immense
-region to explore, and nature, however insatiable and inexorable, was
-prodigal of compensations. He drank a sweet cup that held one drop of
-poison bitterness. Life swelled in his breast. He wished he were an
-Indian. As he walked along there flashed into mind words spoken long
-ago by his mother: “My son, you take things too seriously, you feel too
-intensely the ordinary moments of life.” He understood her now, but
-he could not distinguish ordinary things from great things. How could
-anything be little?
-
-Margarita’s greeting was at once a delight and a surprise. Her smile,
-the light of her dusky eyes, would have made any man happier. But there
-was a subtle air about her this morning that gave Adam a slight shock,
-an undefined impression that he represented less to Margarita than he
-had on yesterday.
-
-Then came the shrill whistle of the downriver boat. Idle men flocked
-toward the dock. When Adam reached the open space on the bank before
-the dock he found it crowded with an unusual number of men, all
-manifestly more than ordinarily interested in something concerning the
-boat. By slipping through the mesquites Adam got around to the edge of
-the crowd.
-
-A tall, gaunt man, clad in black, strode off the gangplank. His height,
-his form, his gait were familiar to Adam. He had seen that embroidered
-flowery vest with its silver star conspicuously in sight, and the brown
-beardless face with its square jaw and seamy lines.
-
-“Collishaw!” ejaculated Adam, in dismay. He recognized in this man one
-whom he had known at Ehrenberg, a gambling, gun-fighting sheriff to
-whom Guerd had become attached. As his glance swept back of Collishaw
-his pulse beat quicker. The next passenger to stride off the gangplank
-was a very tall, superbly built young man. Adam would have known that
-form in a crowd of a thousand men. His heart leaped with a great throb.
-Guerd, his brother!
-
-Guerd looked up. His handsome, heated face, bold and keen and reckless,
-flashed in the sunlight. His piercing gaze swept over the crowd upon
-the bank.
-
-“Hello, Adam!” he yelled, with gay, hard laugh. Then he prodded
-Collishaw and pointed up at Adam. “There he is! We’ve found him.”
-
-Adam plunged away into the thickest of mesquites, and, indifferent to
-the clawing thorns, he did not halt until he was far down the bank.
-
-It died hard, that regurgitation of brother love. It represented most
-of his life, and all of his home associations, and the memories of
-youth. The strength of it proved his loyalty to himself. How warm
-and fine that suddenly revived emotion! How deep seated, beyond his
-control! He could have sobbed out over the pity of it, the loss of it,
-the fallacy of it. Plucked out by the roots, it yet lived hidden in
-the depths of him. Adam in his flight to be alone had yielded to the
-amaze and shame and fury stirred in him by a realization of joy in the
-mere sight of this brother who hated him. For years his love had fought
-against the gradual truth of Guerd’s hate. He had not been able to
-prove it, but he felt it. Adam had no fear of Guerd, nor any reason why
-he could not face him, except this tenderness of which he was ashamed.
-When he had fought down the mawkish sentiment he would show Guerd and
-Collishaw what he was made of. Money! That was Guerd’s motive, with an
-added possibility of further desire to dominate and hound.
-
-“I’ll fool him,” said Adam, resolutely, as he got up to return.
-
-Adam did not know exactly what he would do, but he was certain that
-he had reached the end of his tether. He went back to the village by a
-roundabout way. Turning a sharp curve in the canyon, he came suddenly
-upon a number of workmen, mostly Mexicans. They were standing under a
-wooden trestle that had been built across the canyon at this narrow
-point. All of them appeared to be gazing upward, and naturally Adam
-directed his gaze likewise.
-
-Thus without warning he saw the distorted and ghastly face of a man
-hanging by the neck on a rope tied to the trestle. The spectacle gave
-Adam a terrible shock.
-
-“That’s Collishaw’s work,” muttered Adam, darkly, and he remembered
-stories told of the sheriff’s grim hand in more than one act of border
-justice. What a hard country!
-
-In front of the village store Adam encountered Merryvale, and he asked
-him for particulars about the execution.
-
-“Wal, I don’t know much,” replied the old watchman, scratching his
-head. “There’s been some placer miners shot an’ robbed up the river.
-This Collishaw is a regular sure-enough sheriff, takin’ the law to
-himself. Reckon there ain’t any law. Wal, he an’ his deputies say they
-tracked thet murderin’ gang to Picacho, an’ swore they identified one
-of them. Arallanes stuck up for thet greaser. There was a hot argument,
-an’, by gosh! I jest swore Collishaw was goin’ to draw on Arallanes.
-But Arallanes backed down, as any man not crazy would have done. The
-greaser swore by all his Virgins thet he wasn’t the man, an’ was
-swearin’ he could prove it when the rope choked him off.... I don’t
-know, Adam. I don’t know. I was fer waitin’ a little to give the feller
-a chance. But Collishaw came down here to hang some one an’ you bet he
-was goin’ to do it.”
-
-“I know him, Merryvale, and you’re betting right,” replied Adam,
-forcefully.
-
-“Adam, one of his men is a fine-lookin’ young chap thet sure must be
-your brother. Now, ain’t he?”
-
-“Yes, you’re right about that, too.”
-
-“Wal, wal! You don’t seem powerful glad.... Son, jest be careful what
-you say to Collishaw. He’s hard an’ I reckon he’s square as he sees
-justice, but he doesn’t ring right to an old timer like me. He courts
-the crowd. An’ he’s been askin’ fer you. There he comes now.”
-
-The sheriff appeared, approaching with several companions, and halted
-before the store. His was a striking figure, picturesque, commanding,
-but his face was repellent. His massive head was set on a bull neck of
-swarthy and weathered skin like wrinkled leather; his broad face, of
-similar hue, appeared a mass of crisscrossed lines, deep at the eyes,
-and long on each side of the cruel, thin-lipped, tight-shut mouth; his
-chin stuck out like a square rock; and his eyes, dark and glittering,
-roved incessantly in all directions, had been trained to see men before
-they saw him.
-
-Adam knew that Collishaw had seen him first, and, acting upon the
-resolution that he had made down in the thicket, he strode over to the
-sheriff.
-
-“Collishaw, I’ve been told you wanted me,” said Adam.
-
-“Hello, Larey! Yes, I was inquirin’ aboot you,” replied Collishaw, with
-the accent of a Texan.
-
-“What do you want of me?” asked Adam.
-
-Collishaw drew Adam aside out of earshot of the other men.
-
-“It’s a matter of thet little gamblin’ debt you owe Guerd,” he replied,
-in low voice.
-
-“Collishaw, are you threatening me with some such job as you put up on
-that poor greaser?” inquired Adam, sarcastically, as he waved his hand
-up the canyon.
-
-Probably nothing could have surprised this hardened sheriff, but he
-straightened up with a jerk and shed his confidential and admonishing
-air.
-
-“No, I can’t arrest you on a gamblin’ debt,” he replied, bluntly, “but
-I’m shore goin’ to make you pay.”
-
-“You are, like hell!” retorted Adam. “What had you to do with it? If
-Guerd owed you money in that game, I’m not responsible. And I didn’t
-pay because I caught Guerd cheating. I’m not much of a gambler,
-Collishaw, but I’ll bet you a stack of gold twenties against your fancy
-vest that Guerd never collects a dollar of his crooked deal.”
-
-With that Adam turned on his heel and strode off toward the river.
-His hard-earned independence added something to the wrong done him
-by these men. He saw himself in different light. The rankling of the
-injustice he had suffered at Ehrenberg had softened only in regard to
-the girl in the case. Remembering her again, it seemed her part in his
-alienation from Guerd did not loom so darkly and closely. Margarita
-had come between that affair and the present hour. This other girl had
-really been nothing to him, but Margarita had become everything. A
-gratefulness, a big, generous warmth, stirred in Adam’s heart for the
-dark-eyed Mexican girl. What did it matter who she was? In this desert
-he must learn to adjust differences of class and race and habit in
-relation to the wildness of time and place.
-
-In the open sandy space leading to the houses near the river Adam met
-Arallanes. The usually genial foreman appeared pale, somber, sick. To
-Adam’s surprise, Arallanes would not talk about the hanging. Adam had
-another significant estimate of the character of Collishaw. Arallanes,
-however, was not so close lipped concerning Guerd Larey.
-
-“_Quien sabe, señor?_” he concluded. “Maybe it’s best for you.
-Margarita is a she-cat. You are my friend. I should tell you.... But,
-well, señor, if you would keep Margarita, look out for your brother.”
-
-Adam gaped his astonishment and had not a word for Arallanes as he
-turned away. It took him some time to realize the content of Arallanes
-warning and advice. But what fixed itself in Adam’s mind was the fact
-that Guerd had run across Margarita and had been attracted by her. How
-perfectly natural! How absolutely inevitable! Adam could not remember
-any girl he had ever admired or liked in all his life that Guerd had
-not taken away from him. Among the boys at home it used to be a huge
-joke, in which Adam had good-naturedly shared. All for Guerd! Adam
-could recall the time when he had been happy to give up anything
-or anyone to his brother. But out here in the desert, where he was
-beginning to assimilate the meaning of a man’s fight for his life and
-his possessions, he felt vastly different. Moreover, he had gone too
-far with Margarita, regretable as the fact was. She belonged to him,
-and his principles were such that he believed he owed her a like return
-of affection, and besides that, loyalty and guardianship. Margarita was
-only seventeen years old. No doubt Guerd would fascinate her if she was
-not kept out of his way.
-
-“But--suppose she likes Guerd--and wants him--as she wanted me?”
-muttered Adam, answering a divining flash of the inevitable order of
-things to be. Still, he repudiated that. His intellect told him what to
-expect, but his feeling was too strong to harbor doubt of Margarita.
-Only last night she had changed the world for him--opened his eyes to
-life not as it was dreamed, but lived!
-
-Adam found the wife of Arallanes home alone.
-
-“Señora, where is Margarita?”
-
-“Margarita is there,” she replied, with dark, eloquent glance upon Adam
-and a slow gesture toward the river bank.
-
-Adam soon espied Guerd and Margarita on the river bank some few rods
-below the landing place. Here was a pretty sandy nook, shaded by a
-large mesquite, and somewhat out of sight of passers-by going to and
-fro from village to dock. Two enormous wheels connected by an iron bar,
-a piece of discarded mill machinery, stood in the shade of the tree.
-Margarita sat on the cross-bar and Guerd stood beside her. They were
-close together, facing a broad sweep of the river and the wonderland
-of colored peaks beyond. They did not hear Adam’s approach on the soft
-sand.
-
-“Señorita, one look from your midnight eyes and I fell in love with
-you,” Guerd was declaring, with gay passion, and his hand upon her was
-as bold as his speech. “You little Spanish princess!... Beautiful as
-the moon and stars!... Hidden in this mining camp, a desert flower born
-to blush unseen! I shall----”
-
-It was here that Adam walked around the high wheels to confront them.
-For him the moment was exceedingly poignant. But despite the tumult
-within him he preserved a cool and quiet exterior. Margarita’s radiance
-vanished in surprise.
-
-“Well, if it ain’t Adam!” ejaculated her companion. “You
-son-of-a-gun!... Why, you’ve changed!”
-
-“Guerd,” began Adam, and then his voice halted. To meet his brother
-this way was a tremendous ordeal. And Guerd’s presence seemed to
-charge the very air. Worship of this magnificent brother had been the
-strongest thing in Adam’s life, next to love of mother. To see him
-again! Guerd Larey’s face was beautiful, yet virile and strong. The
-beauty was mere perfection of feature. The big curved mouth, the square
-chin, the straight nose, the large hazel-green eyes full of laughter
-and love of life, the broad forehead and clustering fair hair--all
-these were features that made him singularly handsome. His skin was
-clear brown tan with a tinge of red. Adam saw no change in Guerd,
-except perhaps an intensifying of an expression of wildness which made
-him all the more fascinating to look at. For Adam the mocking thing
-about Guerd’s godlike beauty was the fact that it deceived. At heart,
-at soul, Guerd was as false as hell!
-
-“Adam, are you goin’ to shake hands?” queried Guerd, lazily extending
-his arm. “You sure strike me queer, boy!”
-
-“No,” replied Adam, and his quick-revolving thoughts grasped at Guerd’s
-slipshod speech. Guerd had absorbed even the provincial words and
-idioms of the uncouth West.
-
-“All right. Suit yourself,” said Guerd. “I reckon you see I’m rather
-pleasantly engaged.”
-
-“Yes, I see,” returned Adam, bitterly, with a fleeting glance at
-Margarita. She had recovered from her surprise and now showed cunning
-feminine curiosity. “Guerd, I met Collishaw, and he had the gall to
-brace me for that gambling debt. And I’ve hunted you up to tell you
-that you cheated me. I’ll not pay it.”
-
-“Oh yes, you will,” replied Guerd, smilingly.
-
-“I will not,” said Adam, forcefully.
-
-“Boy, you’ll pay it or I’ll take it out of your hide,” declared Guerd,
-slowly frowning, as if a curious hint of some change in Adam had dawned
-upon him.
-
-“You can’t take it that way--or any other way,” retorted Adam.
-
-“But, say--I didn’t cheat,” remonstrated Guerd, evidently making a last
-stand of argument to gain his end.
-
-“You lie!” flashed Adam. “You know it. I know it.... Guerd, let’s waste
-no words. I told you at Ehrenberg--after you played that shabby trick
-on me--over the girl there--I told you I was through with you for good.”
-
-Guerd seemed to realize with wonder and chagrin that he had now to deal
-with a man. How the change in his expression thrilled Adam! What relief
-came to him in the consciousness that he was now stronger than Guerd!
-He had never been certain of that.
-
-“Through and be damned!” exclaimed Guerd, and he took his arm from
-around Margarita and rose from his leaning posture to his lofty height.
-“I’m sick of your milksop ideas. All I want of you is that money. If
-you don’t pony up with it I’ll tear your clothes off gettin’ it. Savvy
-that?”
-
-“Ha-ha!” laughed Adam, tauntingly. “I say to you what I said to
-Collishaw--you will, like hell!”
-
-Guerd Larey’s lips framed curses that were inaudible. He was astounded.
-The red flamed his neck and face.
-
-“I’ll meet you after I get through talking to this girl,” he said.
-
-“Any time you want,” rejoined Adam, bitingly, “but I’ll have my say
-now, once and for all.... The worm has turned, Guerd Larey. Your goose
-has stopped laying golden eggs. I will take no more burdens of yours on
-my shoulders. You’ve bullied me all my life. You’ve hated me. I know
-now. Oh, I remember so well! You robbed me of toys, clothes, playmates.
-Then girl friends! Then money!... Then--a worthless woman!... You’re a
-fraud--a cheat--a liar.... You’ve fallen in with your kind out here and
-you’re going straight to hell.”
-
-The whiteness of Guerd’s face attested to his roused passion. But he
-had more restraint than Adam. He was older, and the difference of age
-between them showed markedly.
-
-“So you followed me out here to say all that?” he queried.
-
-“No, not altogether,” replied Adam. “I came after Margarita.”
-
-“Came after Margarita?” echoed Guerd, blankly. “Is that her name? Say,
-Adam, is this one of your goody-goody tricks? Rescuing a damsel in
-distress sort of thing!... You and I have fallen out more than once
-over that. I kick--I----”
-
-“Guerd, we’ve fallen out forever,” interrupted Adam, and then he turned
-to the girl. “Margarita, I want you----”
-
-“But it’s none of your damned business,” burst out Guerd, hotly,
-interrupting in turn. “What do you care about a Mexican girl? I won’t
-stand your interference. You clear out and let me alone.”
-
-“But, Guerd--it is my business,” returned Adam, haltingly. Some inward
-force dragged at his tongue. “She’s--my girl.”
-
-“What!” ejaculated Guerd, incredulously. Then he bent down to peer
-into Margarita’s face, and from that he swept a flashing, keen glance
-at Adam. His eyes were wonderful then, intensely bright, quickened and
-sharpened with swift turns of thought. “Boy, you don’t mean you’re on
-friendly terms with this greaser girl?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Adam.
-
-“You’ve made love to her!” cried Guerd, and the radiance of his face
-then was beyond Adam’s understanding.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Guerd violently controlled what must have been a spasm of fiendish
-glee. His amaze, deep as it was, seemed not to be his predominant
-feeling, but that very amaze was something to force exquisitely upon
-Adam how far he had fallen. The moment was dark, hateful, far-reaching
-in effect, impossible to realize. Guerd’s glance flashed back and forth
-from Adam to Margarita. But he had not yet grasped what was the tragic
-thing for Adam--the truth of how fatefully far this love affair had
-fallen. Adam’s heart sank like lead in his breast. What humiliation he
-must suffer if he betrayed himself! Hard he fought for composure and
-dignity to hide his secret.
-
-“Adam, in matters of the heart, where two gentlemen admire the lady
-in question, the choice is always left to her,” began Guerd, with
-something of mockery in his rich voice. A devil gleamed from him then,
-and the look of him, the stature, the gallant action of him as he bowed
-before Margarita, fascinated Adam even in his miserable struggle to
-appear a man.
-
-“But, Guerd, you--you’ve known Margarita only a few moments,” he
-expostulated, and the sound of his voice made him weak. “How can you
-put such a choice to--to her? It’s--it’s an insult.”
-
-“Adam, that is for Margarita to decide,” responded Guerd. “Women
-change. It is something you have not learned.” Then as he turned to
-Margarita he seemed to blaze with magnetism. The grace of him and the
-beauty of him in that moment made of him a perfect physical embodiment
-of the emotions of which he was master. He knew his power over women.
-“Margarita, Adam and I are brothers. We are always falling in love
-with the same girl. You must choose between us. Adam would tie you
-down--keep you from the eyes of other men. I would leave you free as a
-bird.”
-
-And he bent over to whisper in her ear, with his strong brown hand on
-her arm, at once gallant yet masterful.
-
-The scene was a nightmare to Adam. How could this be something that was
-happening? But he had sight! Margarita seemed a transformed creature,
-shy, coy, alluring, with the half-veiled dusky eyes, heavy-lidded,
-lighted with the same fire that had shone in them for Adam.
-
-“Margarita, will you come?” cried Adam, goaded to end this situation.
-
-“No,” she replied, softly.
-
-“I beg of you--come!” implored Adam.
-
-The girl shook her black head. A haunting mockery hung around her, in
-her slight smile, in the light of her face. She radiated a strange glow
-like the warm shade of an opal. Older she seemed to Adam and surer of
-herself and somewhat deeper in that mystic obsession of passion he had
-often sensed in her. No spiritual conception of what Adam regarded
-as his obligation to her could ever dawn in that little brain. She
-loved her pretty face and beautiful body. She gloried in her power
-over men. And the new man she felt to be still unwon--who was stronger
-of instinct and harder to hold, under whose brutal hand she would
-cringe and thrill and pant and fight--him she would choose. So Adam
-read Margarita in that moment. If he had felt love for her, which he
-doubted, it was dead. A great pity flooded over him. It seemed that of
-the three there, he was the only one who was true and who understood.
-
-“Margarita, have you forgotten last night?” asked Adam, huskily.
-
-“Ah, señor--so long ago and far away!” she said.
-
-Adam whirled abruptly and, plunging into the thicket of mesquites,
-he tore a way through, unmindful of the thorns. When he reached his
-quarters there was blood on his hands and face, but the sting of the
-thorns was as nothing to the hurt in his heart. He lay down.
-
-“Again!” he whispered. “Guerd has come--and it’s the same old story.
-Only worse!... But, it’s better so! I--I didn’t know--her!...
-Arallanes knew--he told me.... And I--I dreamed so many--many fool
-things. Yes--it’s better--better. I didn’t love her right. It--it was
-something she roused. I never loved her--but if I did love her--it’s
-gone. It’s not loss that--that stabs me now. It’s Guerd--Guerd!
-Again--and I ran off from him.... ‘So long ago and far away,’ she said!
-Are all women like that? I can’t believe it. I never will. I remember
-my mother.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-That night in the dead late hours Adam suddenly awoke. The night
-seemed the same as all the desert nights--dark and cool under the
-mesquites--the same dead, unbroken silence. Adam’s keen intentness
-could not detect a slightest sound of wind or brush or beast. Something
-had pierced his slumbers, and as he pondered deeply there seemed to
-come out of the vagueness beyond that impenetrable wall of sleep a
-voice, a cry, a whisper. Had Margarita, sleeping or waking, called to
-him? Such queer visitations of mind, often repeated, had convinced Adam
-that he possessed a mystic power or sense.
-
-When Adam awoke late, in the light of the sunny morning, unrealities
-of the night dispersed like the gray shadows and vanished. He arose
-eager, vigorous, breathing hard, instinctively seeking for action.
-The day was Sunday. Another idle wait, fruitful of brooding moods!
-But he vowed he would not go to the willow brakes, there to hide from
-Guerd and Collishaw. Let them have their say--do their worst! We would
-go up to Picacho and gamble and drink with the rest of the drifters.
-Merryvale’s words of desert-learned wisdom rang through Adam’s head. As
-for Margarita, all Adam wanted was one more look at her face, into her
-dusky eyes, and that would forever end his relation to her.
-
-At breakfast Arallanes presented a thoughtful and forbidding
-appearance, although this demeanor was somewhat softened by the few
-times he broke silence. The señora’s impassive serenity lacked its
-usual kindliness, and her lowered eyes kept their secrets. Margarita
-had not yet arisen. Adam could not be sure there was really a shadow
-hovering over the home, or in his own mind, coloring, darkening his
-every prospect.
-
-After breakfast he went out to stroll along the river bank and then
-around the village. He ascertained from Merryvale that Collishaw,
-Guerd, and their associates had found lodgings at different houses for
-the night, and after breakfast had left for the mining camp. As usual,
-Merryvale spoke pointedly: “You’re brother said they were goin’ to
-clear out the camp. An’ I reckon he didn’t mean greasers, but whisky
-an’ gold. Son, you stay away from Picacho to-day.” For once, however,
-the kind old man’s advice fell upon deaf ears. Adam had to fight his
-impatience to be off up the canyon; and only a driving need to see
-Margarita held him there. He walked to and fro, from village to river
-and back again. By and by he espied Arallanes and his wife, with their
-friends, dressed in their best, parading toward the little adobe
-church. Margarita was not with them.
-
-Adam waited a little while, hoping to see her appear. He did not
-analyze his strong hope that she would go to church this Sunday as
-usual. But as no sign of her was forthcoming he strode down to the
-little brown house and entered at the open door.
-
-“Margarita!” he called. No answer broke the quiet. His second call,
-however, brought her from her room, a dragging figure with a pale face
-that Adam had never before seen pale.
-
-“Señor Ad-dam,” she faltered.
-
-The look of her, and that voice, stung Adam out of the gentleness
-habitual with him. Leaping at her, he dragged her into the light of the
-door. She cried out in a fear that shocked him. When he let go of her,
-abrupt and sharp in his motions, she threw up her arms as if to ward
-off attack.
-
-“Do you think I would hurt you?” he cried, harshly. “No, Margarita! I
-only wanted to see you--just once more.”
-
-She dropped her arms and raised her face. Then Adam, keen in that
-poignant moment, saw in her the passing of an actual fear of death.
-It struck him mute. It betrayed her. What had been the dalliance of
-yesterday, playful and passionate in its wild youth, through the night
-had become dishonor. Yesterday she had been a cat that loved to be
-stroked; to-day she was a maimed creature, a broken woman.
-
-“Lift your face--higher,” said Adam, hoarsely, as he put out a shaking
-hand to touch her. But he could not touch her. She did lift it and
-looked at him, denying nothing, still unashamed. But now there was soul
-in that face. Adam felt it limned on his memory forever--the stark
-truth of her frailty, the courage of a primitive nature fearing only
-death, yearning for brutal blows as proof of the survival of jealous
-love, a dawning consciousness of his honesty and truth. Terrible was it
-for Adam to realize that if she had been given that choice again she
-would have decided differently. But it was too late.
-
-“_Adios_, señorita,” he said, bowing, and backed out of the door. He
-stopped, and the small pale face with its tragic eyes, straining,
-unutterably eloquent of wrong to him and to herself, passed slowly out
-of his sight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Swiftly Adam strode up the canyon, his fierce energy in keeping with
-his thoughts. He overtook the Irishman, Regan, who accosted him.
-
-“Hullo, Wansfell, ould fri’nd!” he called. “Don’t yez walk so dom’
-fast.”
-
-“Wansfell! Why do you call me that?” asked Adam. How curiously the name
-struck his ear!
-
-“Ain’t thot your noime?”
-
-“No, it’s not.”
-
-“Wal, all right. Will yez hev a dhrink?” Regan produced a brown bottle
-and handed it to Adam.
-
-They walked on up the canyon, Regan with his short, stunted legs being
-hard put to it to keep up with Adam’s long strides. The Irishman would
-attach himself to Adam, that was evident; and he was a most talkative
-and friendly fellow. Whenever he got out of breath he halted to draw
-out the bottle. The liquor in an ordinary hour would have befuddled
-Adam’s wits, but now it only heated his blood.
-
-“Wansfell, if yez ain’t the dom’dest foinest young feller in these
-diggin’s!” ejaculated Regan.
-
-“Thank you, friend. But don’t call me that queer name. Mine’s Adam.”
-
-“A-dom?” echoed Regan. “Phwat a hell of a noime! Adom an’ Eve, huh? I
-seen yez with thot black-eyed wench. She’s purty.”
-
-They finished the contents of the bottle and proceeded on their way.
-Regan waxed warmer in his regard for Adam and launched forth a strong
-argument in favor of their going on a prospecting trip.
-
-“Yez would make a foine prospector an’ pard,” he said. “Out on the
-desert yez are free an’ happy, b’gorra! No place loike the desert,
-pard, whin yez come to know it! Thar’s air to breathe an’ long days wid
-the sun on yer back an’ noights whin a mon knows shlape. Mebbe we’ll
-hev the luck to foind Pegleg Smith’s lost gold mine.”
-
-“Who was Pegleg Smith and what gold mine did he lose?” queried Adam.
-
-Then as they plodded on up the canyon, trying to keep to the shady
-strips and out of the hot sun, Adam heard for a second time the story
-of the famous lost gold mine. Regan told it differently, perhaps
-exaggerating after the manner of prospectors. But the story was
-impelling to any man with a drop of adventurous blood in his veins. The
-lure of gold had not yet obsessed Adam, but he had begun to feel the
-lure of the desert.
-
-Adam concluded that under happier circumstances this Regan would be a
-man well worth cultivating in spite of his love for the bottle. They
-reached the camp about noon, had a lunch at the stand of a Chinaman,
-and then, entering the saloon, they mingled with the crowd, where Adam
-soon became separated from Regan. Liquor flowed like water, and gold
-thudded in sacks and clinked musically in coins upon the tables. Adam
-had one drink, and that incited him to take another. Again the throb
-and burn of his blood warmed out the coldness and bitterness of his
-mood. Deliberately he drank and deliberately he stifled the voice of
-conscience until he was in a reckless and dangerous frame of mind.
-There seemed to be a fire consuming him now, to which liquor was only
-fuel.
-
-He swaggered through the crowded hall, and for once the drunken
-miners, the painted hags, the cold-faced gamblers, did not disgust
-him. The smell of rum and smoke, the feel of the thick sand under his
-feet, the sight of the motley crowd of shirt-sleeved and booted men,
-the discordant din of music, glasses, gold, and voices--all these
-sensations struck him full and intimately with their proof that he was
-a part of this wild assembly of free adventurers. He remembered again
-Merryvale’s idea of a man equipped to cope with this lawless gang and
-hold his own. Suddenly when he espied his brother Guerd he shook with
-the driving passion that had led him there.
-
-Guerd sat at table, gambling with Collishaw and MacKay and other men of
-Picacho well known to Adam. Guerd looked the worse for liquor and bad
-luck. When he glanced up to see Adam, a light gleamed across his hot
-face. He dropped his cards, and as Adam stepped near he rose from the
-table and in two strides confronted him, arrogant, menacing, with the
-manner of a man dangerous to cross.
-
-“I want money,” demanded Guerd.
-
-Adam laughed in his face.
-
-“Go to work. You’re not slick enough with the cards to hide your
-tricks,” replied Adam, in deliberate scorn.
-
-Temper, and not forethought, actuated Guerd then. He slapped Adam, with
-the moderate force of an older brother punishing an impertinence. Swift
-and hard Adam returned that blow, staggering Guerd, who fell against
-the table, but was upheld by Collishaw. He uttered a loud and piercing
-cry.
-
-Sharply the din ceased. The crowd slid back over the sand, leaving
-Adam in the center of a wide space, confronting Guerd, who still leaned
-against Collishaw. Guerd panted for breath. His hot face turned white
-except for the red place where Adam’s fist had struck. MacKay righted
-the table, then hurriedly drew back. Guerd’s fury of astonishment
-passed to stronger controlled passion. He rose from Collishaw’s hold
-and seemed to tower magnificently. He had the terrible look of a man
-who had waited years for a moment of revenge, at last to recognize it.
-
-“You hit me! I’ll beat you for that--I’ll smash your face,” he said,
-stridently.
-
-“Come on,” cried Adam.
-
-At this instant the Irishman, Regan, staggered out of the crowd into
-the open circle. He was drunk.
-
-“Sic ’em, Wansfell, sic ’em,” he bawled. “I’m wid yez. We’ll lick
-thot--loidy face--an’ ivery dom’----”
-
-Some miner reached out a long arm and dragged Regan back.
-
-Guerd Larey leaned over to pound with his fist on the table. A leaping
-glow radiated from his face, as if a genius of hate had inspired some
-word or speech that Adam must find insupportable. His look let loose
-a bursting gush of blood through Adam’s throbbing veins. This was no
-situation built on a quarrel or a jealous rivalry. It was backed by
-years, and by some secret not easily to be divined, though its source
-was the very soul of Cain.
-
-“So that’s your game,” declared Guerd, with ringing passion. “You want
-to fight and you make this debt of yours a pretense. But I’m on to you.
-It’s because of the girl I took from you.”
-
-“Shut up! Have you no sense of decency? Can’t you be half a man?” burst
-out Adam, beginning to shake.
-
-“Ha! Ha! Ha! Listen to Goody-Goody!... Mother’s nice boy----”
-
-“By Heaven, Guerd Larey, if you speak of my--my mother--here--I’ll tear
-out your tongue!”
-
-They were close together now, with only the table between them--Cain
-and Abel--the old bitter story plain in the hate of one flashing face
-and the agony of the other. Guerd Larey had divined the means to
-torture and to crucify this brother whose heart and soul were raw.
-
-“Talk about the fall of Saint Anthony!” cried Guerd, with a voice
-magical in its steely joy. “Never was there a fall like Adam
-Larey’s--the Sunday-school boy--too sweet--too innocent--too pure to
-touch the hand of a girl!... Ha-ha! Oh, we can fight, Adam. I’ll fight
-you. But let me talk--let me tell my friends what a damned hypocrite
-you are.... Gentlemen, behold the immaculate Saint Adam whose Eve was a
-little greaser girl!”
-
-There was no shout of mirth. The hall held a low-breathing silence.
-It was a new scene, a diversion for the gamblers and miners and their
-painted consorts, a clash of a different kind and spirit. Guerd paused
-to catch his breath and evidently to gather supreme passion for the
-delivery of what seemed more to him than life itself. His face was
-marble white, quivering and straining, and his eyes blazed with a
-piercing flame.
-
-Adam saw the living, visible proof of a hate he had long divined. The
-magnificence of Guerd’s passion, the terrible reality of his hate, the
-imminence of a mortal blow, locked Adam’s lips and jaws as in a vise,
-while a gathering fury, as terrible as Guerd’s hate, flooded and dammed
-at the gates of his energy, ready to break out in destroying violence.
-
-“She told me!” Guerd flung the words like bullets. “You needn’t bluff
-it out with your damned lying white face. She told me!... You--you,
-Adam Larey, with your pure thoughts and lofty ideals ... the _rot_ of
-them! _You_--damn your milksop soul!--you were the slave of a dirty
-little greaser girl who fooled you, laughed in your face, left you for
-me--for me at the snap of my fingers.... And, by God! my cup would be
-full--if your mother could only know----”
-
-[Illustration: THEN THE GUN BOOMED WITH MUFFLED REPORT--AND GUERD
-LAREY, UTTERING A CRY OF AGONY, FELL AWAY FROM ADAM]
-
-It was Collishaw’s swift hand that knocked up Adam’s flinging arm and
-the gun which spouted red and boomed heavily. Collishaw grappled
-with him--was flung off--and then Guerd lunged in close to save
-himself. A writhing, wrestling struggle--quick, terrible; then the gun
-boomed with muffled report--and Guerd Larey, uttering a cry of agony,
-fell away from Adam, backward over the table. His gaze, conscious,
-appalling, was fixed on Adam. A dark crimson spot stained his white
-shirt. Then he lay there with fading eyes--the beauty and radiance and
-hate of his face slowly shading.
-
-Collishaw leaned over him. Then with hard, grim gesture he shouted,
-hoarsely: “Dead, by God!... You’ll hang for this!”
-
-A creeping horror was slowly paralyzing Adam. But at that harsh speech
-he leaped wildly, flinging his gun with terrific force into the
-sheriff’s face. Like an upright stone dislodged Collishaw fell. Then
-Adam, bounding forward, flung aside the men obstructing his passage and
-fled out of the door.
-
-Terror lent wings to his feet. In a few moments he was beyond the
-outskirts of the camp. Even here, fierce in his energy, he bounded
-upward, from rock to rock, until he reached the steep jumble of talus
-where swift progress was impossible. Then with hands and feet working
-in unison, as if he had been an ape, he climbed steadily.
-
-From the top of the first rocky slope he gazed back fearfully. Yes, men
-were pursuing him, strung out along the road of the mining camp; and
-among the last was a tall, black-coated, bareheaded man that Adam took
-to be Collishaw. This pursuer was staggering along, flinging his arms.
-
-Adam headed straight up the ascent. Picacho loomed to the right, a
-colossal buttress of red rock, wild and ragged and rugged. But the
-ascent that had looked so short and easy--how long and steep! Every
-shadow was a lie, every space of slope in the sunlight hid the truth
-of its width. Sweat poured from his hot body. He burned. His breath
-came in labored bursts. A painful stab in his side spread and swelled
-to the whole region of his breast. He could hear the mighty throb of
-his heart, and he could hear it in another way--a deep muffled throb
-through his ears.
-
-At last he reached the height of the slope where it ended under a wall
-of rock, the backbone of that ridge, bare and jagged, with no loose
-shale on its almost perpendicular side. Here it took hard labor of
-hand and foot to climb and zigzag and pull himself up. Here he fell
-exhausted.
-
-But the convulsion was short lived. His will power was supreme and his
-endurance had not been permanently disabled. He crawled before he could
-walk, and when he recovered enough to stagger erect he plodded on,
-invincible in his spirit to escape.
-
-From this height, which was a foothill to the great peak, he got his
-bearings and started down.
-
-“They can’t--trail me--here,” he whispered, hoarsely, as he looked back
-with the eyes of a fugitive. “And--down there--I’ll keep off the road.”
-
-After that brief moment of reasoning he became once more victim to fear
-and desperate passion to hurry. He had escaped, his pursuers could
-not see him now, he could hide, the descent was tortuous; yet these
-apparent facts, favorable as they were, could not save him. Adam pushed
-on, gaining strength as he recovered breath. As his direction led him
-downhill, he went swiftly, sometimes at a rapid walk, again sliding
-down here and rushing there, and at other places he stepped from rock
-to rock, like a balancing rope walker.
-
-The descent here appeared to be a long, even slant of broken rocks,
-close together like cobblestones in a street, and of a dark-bronze hue.
-They shone as if they had been varnished. And a closer glance showed
-Adam the many reddish tints of _bisnagi_ cactus growing in the cracks
-between the stones.
-
-His misgivings were soon verified. He had to descend here, for the
-afternoon was far gone, and whatever the labor and pain, he must reach
-the road before dark. The rocks were sharp, uneven, and as slippery as
-if they had been wet. At the very outset Adam slipped, and, falling
-with both hands forward, he thrust them into a cactus. The pain stung,
-and when he had to pull hard to free himself from the thorns, it was as
-if his hands had been nailed. He could not repress moans as he tried to
-pull out the thorns with his teeth. They stuck tight. The blood ran in
-little streams. But he limped on, down the black slope.
-
-The white road below grew closer and closer. It was a goal. This slope
-of treacherous rocks and torturing cacti was a physical ordeal that
-precluded memory of the past or consideration of the present. When Adam
-at last reached the road, there to fall exhausted and wet and burning
-upon a flat rock, it seemed that he had been delivered from an inferno.
-
-Presently he sat up to look around him. A wonderful light showed upon
-the world--the afterglow of sunset. Picacho bore a crown of gold. All
-the lower tips of ranges were purpling in shadow. To the southward a
-wide gray barren led to an endless bleak plateau, flat and dark, with
-dim spurs of mountains in the distance. Desolate, lifeless, silent--the
-gateway to the desert! Adam felt steal over him a sense of awe. The
-vastness of seen and suggested desert seemed flung at him, as if nature
-meant to reveal to him the mystery and might of space. The marvelous
-light magnified the cacti and the rocks, and the winding ranges and
-the bold peaks, and the distances, until all were unreal. Adam felt
-that he had overcome a great hardship, accomplished a remarkable feat,
-had climbed and descended a range as sharp toothed as jagged lava. But
-to what end! Something in the bewildering light of the west, in the
-purple shadows growing cold in the east, in the tremendous oppression
-of illimitable space and silence and solitude and desolation--something
-inexplicable repudiated and mocked his physical sense of great
-achievement.
-
-All at once, in a flash, he remembered his passion, his crime, his
-terror, his flight. Not until that instant had intelligence operated in
-harmony with his feelings. He lifted his face in the cool, darkening
-twilight. The frowning mountains held aloof, and all about him seemed
-detached, rendering his loneliness absolute and immutable.
-
-“Oh! Oh!” he moaned. “What will become of me?... No family--no
-friends--no hope!... Oh, Guerd--my brother! His blood on my hands!...
-He ruined my life! He’s killed my soul!... Oh, damn him, damn him! he’s
-made me a murderer!”
-
-Adam fell face down on the rock with breaking heart. His exceeding
-bitter cries seemed faint and lost in the midst of the vastness of
-desert and sky. The deepening of twilight to darkness, the cold black
-grandeur of the great peak, the mournful wail of a desert wolf, the
-pure pale evening star that pierced the purple sky, the stupendous
-loneliness and silence of that solitude--all these facts seemed
-Nature’s pitiless proof of her indifference to man and his despair.
-His hope, his prayer, his frailty, his fall, his burden and agony and
-life--these were nothing to the desert that worked inscrutably through
-its millions of years, nor to the illimitable expanse of heaven,
-deepening its blue and opening its cold, starry eyes. But a spirit as
-illimitable and as inscrutable breathed out of the universe and over
-the immensity of desert space--a spirit that breathed to the soul of
-the ruined man and bade him rise and take up his burden and go on down
-the naked shingles of the world.
-
-Despair and pride and fear of death, and this strange breath of life,
-dragged Adam up and drove him down the desert road. For a mile he
-staggered and plodded along, bent and bowed like an old man, half
-blinded by tears and choked by sobs, abject in his misery; yet even
-so, the something in him that was strongest of all--the instinct to
-survive--made him keep to the hard, gravelly side of the road, that his
-tracks might not show in the dust.
-
-And that action of blood and muscle, because it came first in the order
-of energy, gradually assumed dominance of him, until again he was
-an escaping fugitive, mostly concerned with direction and objective
-things. The direction took care of itself, being merely a matter of
-keeping along the edge of the road that gleamed pale in front of him.
-Objects near at hand, however, had to be carefully avoided. Rocks were
-indistinct in the gloom; _ocatilla_ cacti thrust out long spectral
-arms; like the tentacles of an octopus; and shadows along the road took
-the alarming shape of men and horses and wagons. All around him, except
-to the west, was profound obscurity, and in that direction an endless
-horizon, wild and black and sharp, with sweeping bold lines between the
-spurs, stood silhouetted against a pale-blue, star-fired sky. Miles and
-miles he walked, and with a strength that had renewed. He never looked
-up at the heavens above. Often he halted to turn and listen. These
-moments were dreaded ones. But he heard only a faint breeze.
-
-Morning broke swiftly and relentlessly, a gray, desert dawning. Dim
-columns of smoke scarce a mile away showed him that Yuma was close.
-Fields and cattle along the road, and then an Indian hut, warned him
-that he was approaching the habitations of men and sooner or later he
-would be seen. He must hide by day and travel by night. Bordering the
-road to his left was a dense thicket of arrowweed, indicating that he
-had reached the bottom lands of the river. Into this Adam crawled like
-a wounded and stealthy deer. Hunger and thirst were slight, but his
-whole body seemed a throbbing ache. Both mind and body longed for the
-oblivion that came at once in sleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Adam’s heavy slumbers were punctuated by periods when he half awakened,
-drowsily aware of extreme heat, of discomfort and sluggish pain, and of
-vague sounds.
-
-Twilight had fallen when he fully awakened, stiff and sore, with a
-gnawing at his stomach and a parching of mouth and throat from thirst.
-He crawled out of the copse of arrowweed, to the opening by which he
-had entered it, and, stealthily proceeding on to the road, he peered
-out and listened. No man in sight--no sound to alarm! Consciousness
-of immense relief brought bitterly home to him the fact that he was a
-fugitive. Taking to the road, he walked rapidly in the direction of the
-lights. He passed low, dark huts somewhat back from the road, and he
-heard strange voices, probably of Indians.
-
-In about a quarter of an hour he came to the river basin, where the
-road dropped down somewhat into the outskirts of Yuma. Most of the
-lights were across the river on the Arizona side. He met both Mexicans
-and Indians who took no apparent notice of him, and this encouraged
-Adam to go on with them down to a ferry-boat.
-
-The boat was shoved off. Adam saw that it was fastened to the cable
-overhead by ropes and pulleys. The current worked it across the river.
-Adam got out with the rest of the passengers, and, leaving them, he
-walked down the bank a few rods. He found a little dock with a skiff
-moored to it, and here he lay flat and drank his fill. The water was
-full of sand, but cool and palatable. Then he washed his face and
-hands. The latter were swollen and stiff from the cactus thorns,
-rendering them clumsy.
-
-Next in order for him was to find a place to eat, and soon he came at
-once upon an eating house where several rough-looking white men and
-some Mexicans were being served by a Chinaman.
-
-When he ended this meal he had determined upon a course to take. He
-needed a gun, ammunition, canteen, burro, and outfit; and he hardly
-expected to be able to purchase them after dark, without exciting
-suspicion. All the same, he set out to look.
-
-A short walk brought Adam to a wide street, dimly lighted by the
-flare of lamps from open doors of saloons and stores. He halted in a
-shadow on the corner. A stream of men was passing--rugged, unshaven,
-dusty-booted white men, and Mexicans with their peaked sombreros and
-embroidered jackets and tight braided trousers.
-
-Presently Adam ventured forth and walked up the street. The town
-resembled Picacho in its noisiest hours, magnified many times. He felt
-a wildness he could not see or hear. It dragged at him. It somehow made
-him a part of the frontier life. He longed to escape from himself.
-
-A glimpse of a tall man in black frock coat startled Adam. That coat
-reminded him of Collishaw. He sheered down a side street into the
-gloom. He saw wagons and heard the munch of horses in stalls. Evidently
-this place was a barnyard and might afford him a safe retreat for the
-night. The first wagon he examined contained straw. Climbing into it,
-he lay down. For a long time he lay there, worrying over the risk he
-must run next day, until at length he fell asleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When day dawned, however, Adam had not such overpowering dread. The sun
-was rising in red splendor and the day promised to be hot. As it was
-early, but few people were to be encountered, and this fact lent Adam
-more courage. He had no difficulty in finding the place where he had
-eaten the night before. Adam ate as heartily as he could, not because
-he was hungry, but for the reason that he had an idea he might have to
-travel far on this meal.
-
-That done, he sallied forth to find a store where he could purchase the
-outfit he needed; and he approached the business section by a street
-that climbed to what was apparently the highest point in Yuma.
-
-Adam entered a store, and almost forgot himself in the interest of
-the purchases he wanted to make. He needed a small mule, or burro, to
-pack his outfit, and while the storekeeper went out to get it for Adam
-several Mexicans entered. One of them recognized Adam. He cried out,
-“Santa Maria!” and ran out, followed by his amazed but less hurried
-comrades. It took Adam a moment to place the man in mind. Felix! the
-Mexican that had drawn a knife on Arallanes.
-
-Therefore Adam pondered. He must take risks to get away with this
-necessary outfit. The storekeeper, who had gone out through the back
-of the store, returned to say he could furnish a good burro ready to
-be packed at once. Adam made a deal with him for the whole outfit
-and began to count out the money. The storekeeper did not wait, and,
-gathering up an armful of Adam’s purchases, he carried them out through
-the back door. This gave Adam opportunity to have a look from the front
-door into the street. There strode Felix, gesticulating wildly to
-the white man Adam had seen before, the black-coated tall Collishaw,
-significant and grim, with a white bandage over his face.
-
-A shock pierced Adam’s heart, and it was followed by a terrible icy
-compression, and then a bursting gush of blood, a flood of fire over
-all his body. Leaping like a deer, he bounded back through the store,
-out of the door, and across an open space full of implements, wagons,
-and obstacles he had to run around or jump over. He did not see the
-storekeeper. One vault took him over a high board fence into an alley,
-and through this he ran into a street. He headed for the river, running
-fleetly, blind to all around him but the ground flying under his
-feet and the end of the street. He gained that. The river, broad and
-swirling, lay beneath him. Plunging down the bank, he flew toward the
-dock. Upon reaching the dock, Adam espied a skiff, with oars in place,
-with bow pulled up on the sand. One powerful shove sent it, with him
-aboard, out into the stream. He bent the oars in his long, strong
-sweeps, and it took him only a few moments to cross. Not yet had any
-men appeared in pursuit or even to take notice of him. As he jumped out
-on the California shore of the river and began to run north, he found
-that he faced the lone black mountain peak which dominated the rise
-of the desert. The dust was ankle deep. It stifled him, choked him,
-and caked on his sweaty face and hands. He strode swiftly, oppressed
-by the dust and intolerant of the confining borders of yellow brush.
-The frequent bends in the road were at once a relief and a dread.
-They hid him, yet obstructed his own view. He seemed obsessed by a
-great, passionate energy to escape. When he looked back he thought of
-Collishaw, of sure pursuit; when he looked ahead he thought of the
-road, the dust, the brush into which he wanted to hide, the physical
-things to be overcome.
-
-By and by he climbed and passed out of the zone of brush. He was on
-the open gravel ridges, like the ridges of a washboard, up and down,
-and just as bare. Yet, as a whole, there was a distinct slope upward.
-He could not see the level of the desert, but the lone mountain peak,
-close at hand now, red and black and shining, towered bleakly over him.
-
-Adam derived satisfaction from the fact that the hard gravel ridges
-did not take imprint of his boots. Assured now that escape was in
-his grasp, he began to put his mind upon other considerations of his
-flight. He was not such a fool as to underrate the danger of his
-venturing out upon the desert without food, and especially without
-water. Already he was thirsty. These thoughts, and counter ones,
-pressed hard upon him until he surmounted the long slope to the top of
-the desert mesa. Here he looked back.
-
-First he saw clouds of dust puffing up from the brush-covered lowlands,
-and then, in an open space where the road crossed, he espied horsemen
-coming at a gallop. Again, and just as fiercely, did his veins seem to
-freeze, his blood to halt, and then to burst into flame.
-
-“Collishaw--and his men!” gasped Adam, his jaw dropping. “They’ve
-trailed me!... They’re after me--on horses!”
-
-The apparent fact was terrific in its stunning force. Adam reeled; his
-sight blurred. It was a full moment before he could rally his forces.
-Then, gazing keenly, he saw that his pursuers were still miles away.
-
-At first he ran fleetly, with endurance apparently unimpaired, but he
-meant to slow down and husband his strength as soon as he dared. Before
-him stretched a desert floor of fine, shining gravel, like marbles,
-absolutely bare of any vegetation for what seemed hundreds of yards;
-and then began to appear short bunches of low meager brush called
-greasewood, and here and there isolated patches of _ocatilla_. These
-multiplied and enlarged in the distance until they looked as if they
-would afford cover enough to hide Adam from his pursuers. Hot, wet with
-sweat, strong, and panting, he ran another mile, to find the character
-of the desert changing.
-
-Reaching the zone of plant life, he soon placed a thin but effective
-barrier of greasewood and _ocatilla_ behind him. Then he slowed down
-to catch his breath. Before him extended a vast hazy expanse, growing
-darker with accumulated growths in the distance. To the right rose the
-chocolate mountain range, and it ran on to fade in the dim horizon.
-Behind him now stood the lone black peak, and to the left rose a low,
-faint wavering line of white, like billows of a sea. This puzzled him
-until at length he realized it was sand. Sand--and it, like the range,
-faded in the distant horizon.
-
-Adam also made the discovery that as he looked back over his shoulder
-he was really looking down a long, gradual slope. Plainly he could see
-the edge of the desert where he had come up, and often, as he traveled
-along at a jog trot, he gazed around with fearful expectancy. He had
-imagined that his running had given rise to the breeze blowing in his
-face. But this was not so. A rather stiff wind was blowing straight at
-him. It retarded his progress, and little puffs of fine, invisible sand
-or dust irritated his eyes. Then the tears would flow and wash them
-clear again. With all his senses and feelings there mingled a growing
-preponderance of thought or realization of the tremendous openness of
-the desert. He felt as though a door of the universe had opened to him,
-and all before him was boundless. He had no fear of it; indeed, there
-seemed a comfort in the sense of being lost in such a vastness; but
-there was something intangible working on his mind. The wind weighed
-upon him, the coppery sky weighed upon him, the white sun weighed upon
-him, and his feet began to take hold of the ground. How hot the top
-of his head and his face! All at once the sweat appeared less copious
-and his skin drier. With this came a strong thirst. The saliva of his
-mouth was pasty and scant. He swallowed hard and his throat tightened.
-A couple of pebbles that he put into his mouth mitigated these last
-sensations.
-
-Intelligence gave him pause then, and he halted in his tracks. If death
-was relentlessly pursuing him, it was no less confronting him there to
-the fore, if he passed on out of reach of the river. Death from thirst
-was preferable to capture, but Adam was not ready to die. He who had
-loved life clung to it all the more fiercely now that the sin of Cain
-branded his soul. He still felt unlimited strength and believed that
-he could go far. But the sun was hotter than he had ever experienced
-it; the heat appeared to strike up from the earth as well as burn down
-from above; and it was having a strange effect upon him. He had sensed
-a difficulty in keeping to a straight line of travel, and at first had
-put it down to his instinct for zigzagging to his greasewood bush and
-that _ocatilla_ plant to place them behind him. Moving on again, he
-turned toward the chocolate mountain and the river.
-
-It seemed close. He saw the bare gray desert with its green growths
-slope gradually to the rugged base of the range. Somewhere between him
-and there ran the river. He strained his eyesight. How strangely and
-clearly the lines of one ridge merged into the lines of another! There
-must be distance between them. But it could not be seen. The range
-looked larger and farther away the more he studied it--the air more
-full of transparent haze, the red and russet and chocolate hues more
-quiveringly suggestive of illusion.
-
-“Look here,” panted Adam, as he halted once more. “I’ve been told about
-the desert. But I didn’t pay particular attention and now I can’t
-remember.... I only know it’s hot--and this won’t do.”
-
-It was just then that Adam, gazing back down the gray desert, saw puffs
-of dust and horses.
-
-Panic seized him. He ran directly away from his pursuers, bending low,
-looking neither to right nor to left, violent, furious, heedless, like
-an animal in flight. And with no sense of direction, with no use of
-reason, he ran on till he dropped.
-
-Then his breast seemed to split and his heart to lift with terrific
-pressure, agonizing and suffocating. He lay on the ground and gasped,
-with his mouth in the dust. Gradually the paroxysm subsided.
-
-He arose to go on, hot, dry, aching, dizzy, but still strong in his
-stride.
-
-“I’ve--got--away,” he said, “and now--the river--the river.”
-
-Fear of Collishaw had been dulled. Adam could think of little besides
-the heat and his growing thirst, and this thing--the desert--that was
-so strange, so big, so menacing. It did not alarm him that his skin was
-no longer wet with sweat, but the fact struck him singularly.
-
-The wind was blowing sand in his face, obstructing his sight. Suddenly
-his feet dragged in sand. Dimly then he made out low sand dunes with
-hollows between, and farther on larger dunes waving and billowing on to
-rise to what seemed mountains of sand. He saw them as through a veil of
-dust. Turning away, he plodded on, half blinded, fighting the blast of
-wind that was growing stronger. The air cleared somewhat. Sand dunes
-were all around him, and to his right, in the direction he thought was
-wrong, loomed the chocolate range. He went that way, and again the
-flying sand hid a clear view. A low, seeping, silken rustle filled the
-air, sometimes rising to a soft roar. He thought of what he had heard
-about sandstorms, but he knew this was not one. Unwittingly he had
-wandered into the region of the dunes, and the strong gusty wind swept
-up the fine sand in sheets and clouds. He must get out. It could not
-be far to the level desert again. He plodded on, and the way he chose,
-with its intermittent views of the mountains, at last appeared to be
-the wrong one. So he turned again. And as he turned, a stronger wind,
-now at his back, whipped up the sand till all was pale yellow around
-him, thick and opaque and moaning, through which the sun shone with
-strange magenta hue. He did not dare rest or wait. He had to plod on.
-And the way led through soft, uneven sand, always dragging at his feet.
-
-After a while Adam discovered that when he trudged down into the
-hollows between dunes he became enveloped in flying sand that forced
-him to cover mouth and eyes with his scarf and go choking on, but when
-he climbed up over a dune the air became clearer and he could breath
-easier. Thus instinctively he favored the ascents, and thus he lost
-himself in a world of curved and sculptured sand dunes, gray and yellow
-through the flying mists, or steely silver under the gleaming sunlight.
-The wind lulled, letting the sand settle, and then he saw he was lost
-as upon a trackless ocean, with no landmarks in sight. On all sides
-heaved beautiful white mounds of sand, ribbed and waved and laced with
-exquisitely delicate knife-edged curves. And these crests changed like
-the crests of waves, only, instead of flying spray, these were curled
-and shadowed veils of sand blowing from the scalloped crowns. Then
-again the wind, swooping down, whipped and swept the sand in low thick
-sheets on and on over the dunes, until thin rising clouds obscured the
-sky.
-
-Adam climbed on, growing weaker. As the heat had wrought strangely
-upon his blood, so the sand had dragged strength from his legs. His
-situation was grave, but, though he felt the dread and pity of it, a
-certain violence of opposition had left him. That was in his will. He
-feared more the instinctive reaction--the physical resistance that
-was growing in him. Merryvale had told him how men lost on the desert
-could die of thirst in one day. But Adam had scarcely credited that;
-certainly he did not believe it applicable to himself. He realized,
-however, that unless he somehow changed the present condition sun and
-sand would overwhelm him. So when from a high knoll of sand he saw down
-into a large depression, miles across, where clumps of mesquites showed
-black against the silver, he descended toward them and eventually
-reached them, ready indeed to drop into the shade.
-
-Here under a thick-foliaged mesquite he covered his face with a
-handkerchief, his head with his coat, and settled himself to rest and
-wait. It was a wise move. At once he felt by contrast what the fierce
-sun had been. Gradually the splitting headache subsided to a sensation
-that seemed to Adam like a gentle boiling of blood in his brain. He
-could hear it. His dry skin became a little moist; the intolerable burn
-left it; his heart and pulse ceased such labored throbbing; and after a
-time his condition was limited to less pain, a difficulty in breathing,
-and thirst. These were bearable.
-
-From time to time Adam removed the coverings to look about him. The
-sun was westering. When it sank the wind would cease to blow and then
-he could find a way out of this wilderness of sand dunes. Leaning back
-against a low branch of the tree, he stretched out, and such was his
-exhaustion and the restfulness of the posture that he fell asleep.
-
-When he awoke he felt better, though half smothered. He had rested. His
-body was full of dull aches, but no more pain. His mouth did not appear
-so dry or his tongue so swollen; nevertheless, the thirst remained,
-giving his throat a sensation of puckering, such as he remembered he
-used to have after eating green persimmons.
-
-Then Adam, suddenly realizing what covered his head, threw off the
-coat and handkerchief. And his eyes were startled by such a sight as
-they had never beheld--a marvelous unreality of silver sheen and black
-shadow, a starry tracery of labyrinthine streams on a medium as weird
-and beautiful and intangible as a dream.
-
-“O God! am I alive or dead?” he whispered in awe. And his voice proved
-to him that he and his burden had not slipped into the oblivion of the
-beyond.
-
-Night had fallen. The moon had arisen. The stars shone lustrously. The
-sky burned a deep rich blue. And all this unreal beauty that had mocked
-him was only the sculptured world of sand translating the magnificence
-and splendor of the heavens.
-
-More than all else, Adam grew sensitive to the oppressiveness of
-the silence. His first steps were painful, a staggering, halting
-gait, that exercise at length worked into some semblance of his old
-stride. The cold desert air invigorated him, and if it had not been
-for the discomfort of thirst he would have been doing well under the
-circumstances.
-
-A sense of direction that had nothing to do with his intelligence
-prompted him to face east. He obeyed it. And he walked for what seemed
-hours over a moon-blanched sea of sand, to climb at last a high dune
-from which he saw the dark, level floor of the desert, and far across
-the shadowy space a black range of mountains. He thought he recognized
-the rugged contour, and when, sweeping his gaze southward, he saw the
-lone mountain looming like a dark sentinel over the desert gateway,
-then he was sure of his direction. Over there to the east lay the
-river. And he had long hours of the cool night to travel.
-
-From this vantage point Adam looked back over the silver sea of sand
-dunes; and such was the sight of it that even in his precarious
-condition he was stirred to his depths. The huge oblong silver moon
-hung low over that vast heaving stretch of desert. It was a wasteland,
-shimmering with its belts and plains of moonlit sand, blank and
-mysterious in its shadows, an abode of loneliness. An inexplicable
-sadness pervaded Adam’s soul. This wasteland and he seemed identical.
-How strange to feel that he did not want to leave it! Life could not
-be sustained in this sepulcher of the desert. But it was not life that
-his soul yearned for then--only peace. And peace dwelt there in that
-solitude of the sands.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gray dawn found Adam many miles closer to the mountain range. Yet
-it was still far and his former dread returned. On every side what
-interminable distances!
-
-A deepening rose color over the eastern horizon appeared to be
-reflected upon the mountain peaks, and this glow crept down the dark
-slopes. Gray dawn changed to radiant morning with an ethereal softness
-of color. When the blazing disk of the sun shone over the ramparts of
-the east all that desert world underwent a wondrous transfiguration.
-The lord of day had arisen and this was his empire. Red was the hue
-of his authority, emblazoned in long vivid rays over the ranges and
-the wastelands. Then the great orb of fire cleared the horizon and the
-desert seemed aflame.
-
-One moment Adam gave to the marvel and glory of the sunrise, and then
-he looked no more. That brief moment ended in a consciousness of the
-gravity of his flight. For the first touch of sun on face and hands
-burned hot, as if it suddenly aggravated a former burn that the night
-had soothed.
-
-“Got to reach--river soon,” he muttered, thickly, “or never will.”
-
-He walked on while the sun climbed.
-
-Desert vegetation increased. Adam toiled on, breathing hard, careless
-now of the reaching thorns and heedless of the rougher ground.
-
-He was perfectly conscious of a subtle changing of his spirit, but
-because it seemed a drifting farther and farther from thought he could
-not comprehend it. Courage diminished as fear augmented. More and more
-his will and intelligence gave way to sensorial perceptions. More and
-more he felt the urge to hurry, and, though reason warned against the
-folly of this, it was not strong enough to compel him to resist. He did
-hurry more and stumbled along. Like breath of a furnace the heat rose
-from the rocky, sandy soil; and from above there seemed to bear down
-the weight of the leaden fire.
-
-His skin became as dry as dust and began to shrivel. It did not
-blister. The pain now came from burn of the flesh underneath. He felt
-that his blood was drying up. A stinging sensation as of puncture
-by a thousand thorns throbbed in his face and neck. The heat burned
-through his clothes, and the soles of his boots were coals of fire.
-Doggedly he strove forward. A whistle accompanied his panting breaths.
-Most intolerable of all was thirst--the bitter, astringent taste in
-the scant saliva that became pasty and dry, the pain in his swelling
-tongue, the parched constriction in his throat.
-
-At last he reached the base of a low rocky ridge which for long had
-beckoned to him and mocked him. It obstructed sight of the slope to the
-mountain range. Surely between that ridge and the slope ran the river.
-The hope spurred him upward.
-
-As he climbed he gazed up into the coppery sky, but his hot and tired
-eyes could not endure the great white blaze that was the sun. Halfway
-up he halted to rest, and from here he had measureless view of the
-desert. Then his dull brain revived to a final shock. For he seemed to
-see a thousand miles of green-gray barrenness, of lifting heat veils
-like transparent smoke, of wastes of waved sand, and of ranges of
-upheaved rock. How terribly it confronted him! Pitiless mockery of
-false distances on all sides! A sun-blasted world not meant for man!
-
-Then Adam ascended to the summit of the ridge. A glaring void seemed
-flung at him. His chocolate-hued mountain range was not far away. From
-this height he could see all the gray-green level of desert between him
-and the range. He stared. Again there seemed flung in his face a hot
-glare of space. There was no river.
-
-“Where, where’s--the river?” gasped Adam, mistrusting his eyesight.
-
-But the wonderful Rio Colorado, the strange red river beloved by desert
-wanderers, did not flow before him--or to either side--or behind. It
-must have turned to flow on the other slope of this insurmountable
-range.
-
-“God has--forsaken me!” cried Adam, in despair, and he fell upon the
-rocks.
-
-But these rocks, hot as red-hot plates of iron, permitted of no
-contact, even in a moment of horror. Adam was burned to stagger up,
-to plunge and run and fall down the slope, out upon the level, to the
-madness that awaited him.
-
-He must rush on to the river--to drink and drink--to bathe in the cool
-water that flowed down from the snow-fed lakes of the north. Thoughts
-about water possessed his mind--pleasant, comforting, hurrying him
-onward. Memory of the great river made pictures in his mind, and there
-flowed the broad red waters, sullen and eddying and silent. All the
-streams and rivers and lakes Adam had known crowded their images across
-his inward eye, and this recall of the past was sweet. He remembered
-the brook near his old home--the clear green water full of bright
-minnows and gold-sided sunfish; how it used to flow swiftly under the
-willow banks where violets hid by mossy stones, and how it tarried
-in deep dark pools under shelving banks, green and verdant and sweet
-smelling; how the ferns used to bend over in graceful tribute and
-the lilies float white and gold, with great green-backed frogs asleep
-upon the broad leaves. The watering trough on the way to school, many
-and many a time, in the happy days gone by, had he drunk there and
-splashed his brother Guerd. Guerd, who hated water and had to be made
-to wash, when they were little boys! The old well on Madden’s farm with
-its round cobblestoned walls where the moss and lichen grew, and where
-the oaken bucket, wet and dark and green, used to come up bumping and
-spilling, brimful of clear cold water--how vividly he remembered that!
-His father had called it granite water, and the best, because it flowed
-through the cold subterranean caverns of granite rock. Then there was
-the spring in the orchard, sweet, soft water that his mother used to
-send him after, and as he trudged home, burdened by the huge bucket, he
-would spill some upon his bare feet.
-
-Yes, as Adam staggered on, aimlessly now, he was haunted more and more
-by memories of water. That dear, unforgetable time of boyhood when he
-used to love the water, to swim like a duck and bask like a turtle--it
-seemed far back in the past, across some terrible interval of pain,
-vague now, yet hateful. Where was he--and where was Guerd? Something
-like a blade pierced his heart.
-
-Suddenly Adam was startled out of this pleasant reminiscence by
-something blue and bright that danced low down along the desert floor.
-A lake! He halted with an inarticulate cry. There was a lake of blue
-water, glistening, exquisitely clear, with borders of green. He could
-not help but rush forward. The lake shimmered, thinned, shadowed, and
-vanished. Adam halted and, rubbing his eyes, peered hard ahead and
-all around. Behind him shone a strip of blue, streaked up and down
-by desert plants, and it seemed to be another lake, larger, bluer,
-clearer, with a delicate vibrating quiver, as if exquisitely rippled
-by a gentle breeze. Green shores were marvelously reflected in the
-blue. Adam gaped at this. Had he waded through a lake? He had crossed
-that barren flat of greasewood to reach the spot upon which he now
-stood. Almost he was forced to run back. But this must be a deceit of
-the desert or a madness of his sight. He bent low, and the lake of
-blue seemed to lift and quiver upon a thin darkling line of vapor or
-transparent shadow. Adam took two strides back--and the thing vanished!
-Desert magic! A deception of nature! A horrible illusion to a lost man
-growing crazed by thirst!
-
-“Mirage!” whispered Adam, hoarsely. “Blue water! Ha-ha!... Damned
-lie--it sha’n’t fool me!”
-
-But as clear perception failed these mirages of the desert did deceive
-him. All objects took on a hazy hue, tinged by the red of blood in his
-eyes, and they danced in the heat-veiled air. Shadows, glares, cactus,
-and brush stood as immovable as the rocks of ages. Only the illusive
-and ethereal mirages gleamed as if by magic and shimmered and moved in
-that midday trance of the sun-blasted desert.
-
-The time came when Adam plunged toward every mirage that floated so
-blue and serene and mystical in the deceiving atmosphere, until hope
-and despair and magnified sight finally brought on a mental state
-bordering on the madness sure to come.
-
-Then, as he staggered toward this green-bordered pond and that
-crystal-blue lake, already drinking and laving in his mind, he began
-to hear the beautiful sounds of falling rain, of gurgling brooks,
-of lapping waves, of roaring rapids, of gentle river currents, of
-water--water--water sweetly tinkling and babbling, of wind-laden murmur
-of a mountain stream. And he began to wander in a circle.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Consciousness returned to Adam. He was lying under an ironwood tree,
-over branches of which a canvas had been stretched, evidently to shade
-him from the sun. The day appeared to be far spent.
-
-His head seemed to have been relieved of a hot metal band; his tongue
-was no longer bursting in his mouth; the boil of his blood had
-subsided. His skin felt moist.
-
-Then he heard the rough voice of a man talking to animals, apparently
-burros. Movement of body was difficult and somewhat painful; however,
-he managed to sit up and look around. Hide-covered boxes and
-packsaddles, with duffle and utensils of a prospector, were littered
-about, and conspicuous among the articles near him were three large
-canvas-covered canteens, still wet. Upon the smoldering embers of a
-camp fire steamed a black iron pot. A little beyond the first stood a
-very short, broad man, back turned; and he was evidently feeding choice
-morsels of some kind to five eager and jealous burros.
-
-“Spoiled--every darn one of you!” he was saying, and the kindness of
-his voice belied its roughness. “Why, I used to have burros that could
-lick labels off tin cans an’ call it a square meal!”
-
-Then he turned and espied Adam watching him.
-
-“Hullo! You’ve come to,” he said, with interest.
-
-Adam’s gaze encountered an extraordinary-looking man. He could not have
-been taller than five and a half feet, and the enormous breadth of him
-made him appear as wide as he was long. He was not fat. His immense
-bulk was sheer brawn, betokening remarkable strength. His dusty,
-ragged clothes were patched like a crazy-quilt. He had an immense
-head, a shock of shaggy hair beginning to show streaks of gray, and
-a broad face tanned dark as an Indian’s, the lower half of which was
-covered with a scant grizzled beard. His eyes, big, dark, rolling,
-resembled those of an ox. His expression seemed to be one of set
-tranquillity--the impassiveness of bronze.
-
-Adam’s voice was a husky whisper: “Where am--I? Who are you?”
-
-“Young man, my name’s Dismukes,” came the reply, “an’ you’re ninety
-miles from anywhere--an’ alive, which’s more than I’d bet on yesterday.”
-
-The words brought Adam a shock of memory. Out there the desert smoked,
-sweltering in the spent heat of the setting sun. Slowly Adam lay back
-upon the blanket and bundle that had been placed under him for a bed.
-The man sat down on one of the hide-covered boxes, fastening his great
-eyes upon Adam.
-
-“Am I--all right?” whispered Adam.
-
-“Yes, but it was a close shave,” replied the other.
-
-“You said--something about yesterday. Tell me.”
-
-Dismukes fumbled in his patched vest and, fetching forth a stumpy pipe,
-he proceeded to fill it. It was noticeable that he had to use his
-little finger to press down the tobacco into the bowl, as the other
-fingers of his enormous hands were too large. Adam had never before
-seen such scarred, calloused hands.
-
-“It was day before yesterday I run across you,” began Dismukes, after
-a comfortable pull at his pipe. “My burro Jinny has the best eyes of
-the pack outfit. When I seen her ears go up I got to lookin’ hard,
-an’ presently spied you staggerin’ in a circle. I’d seen men do that
-before. Sometimes you’d run, an’ again you’d wag along, an’ then you’d
-fall an’ crawl. I caught you an’ had to tie you with my rope. You were
-out of your head. An’ you looked hard--all dried up--tongue black an’
-hangin’ out. I thought you were done for. I poured a canteen of water
-over your head an’ then packed you over here where there’s wood an’
-water. You couldn’t make a sound, but all the same I knew you were
-ravin’ for water. I fed you water a spoonful at a time, an’ every
-little while I emptied a canteen over you. Was up all night with you
-that night. You recovered awful slow. Yesterday I’d not have gambled
-much on your chances. But to-day you came round. I got you to swallow
-some soft grub, an’ I guess you’ll soon be pretty good. You’ll be weak,
-though. You’re awful thin. I’m curious about how much you weighed. You
-look as if you might have been a husky lad.”
-
-“I was,” whispered Adam. “Hundred and eighty-five--or ninety.”
-
-“So I thought. You’ll not go over one hundred an’ twenty now. You’ve
-lost about seventy pounds.... Oh, it’s a fact! You see, the body is
-’most all water, an’ on this desert in summer a man just dries up an’
-blows away.”
-
-“Seventy--pounds!” exclaimed Adam, incredulously. But when he glanced
-at his shrunken hands he believed the incomprehensible fact. “I must be
-skin--and bones.”
-
-“Mostly bones. But they’re long, heavy bones, an’ if you ever get any
-flesh on them you’ll be a darned big man. I’m glad they’re not goin’
-to bleach white on the desert, where I’ve seen so many these last ten
-years.”
-
-“You saved my life?” suddenly queried Adam.
-
-“Boy, there’s no doubt of that,” returned the other. “Another hour
-would have finished you.”
-
-“I--I thank you.... But--so help me God--I wish you hadn’t,” whispered
-Adam, poignantly.
-
-Dismukes spent a strange gaze upon Adam.
-
-“What’s your name?” he asked.
-
-Adam halted over the conviction that he could never reveal his
-identity; and there leaped to his lips the name the loquacious Regan
-had given him.
-
-“Wansfell,” he replied.
-
-Dismukes averted his gaze. Manifestly he divined that Adam had lied.
-“Well, it’s no matter what a man calls himself in this country,” he
-said. “Only everybody an’ everythin’ has to have a name.”
-
-“You’re a prospector?”
-
-“Yes. But I’m more a miner. I hunt for gold. I don’t waste time tryin’
-to sell claims. Years ago I set out to find a fortune in gold. My limit
-was five hundred thousand dollars. I’ve already got a third of it--in
-banks an’ hid away safe.”
-
-“When you get it--your fortune--what then?” inquired Adam, with
-thrilling curiosity.
-
-“I’ll enjoy life. I have no ties--no people. Then I’ll see the world,”
-replied the prospector, in deep and sonorous voice.
-
-A wonderful passion radiated from him. Adam saw a quiver run over the
-huge frame. This Dismukes evidently was as extraordinary in character
-as in appearance. Adam felt the man’s strangeness, his intelligence,
-and the inflexible will and fiery spirit. Yet all at once Adam felt
-steal over him an emotion of pity that he could not understand. How
-strange men were!
-
-At this juncture the prospector was compelled to drive the burros out
-of camp. Then he attended to his cooking over the fire, and presently
-brought a bowl of steaming food to Adam.
-
-“Eat this slow--with a spoon,” he said, gruffly. “Never forget that a
-man starved for grub or water can kill himself quick.”
-
-During Adam’s long-drawn-out meal the sun set and the mantle of heat
-seemed to move away for the coming of shadows. Adam found that his
-weakness was greater than he had supposed, rendering the effort of
-sitting up one he was glad to end. He lay back on the blankets, wanting
-to think over his situation rather than fall asleep, but he found
-himself very drowsy, and his mind vaguely wandered until it was a
-blank. Upon awakening he saw the first gray of dawn arch the sky. He
-felt better, almost like his old self, except for that queer sensation
-of thinness and lightness, most noticeable when he lifted his hand.
-Dismukes was already astir, and there, a few rods from camp, stood the
-ludicrous burros, as if they had not moved all night. Adam got up and
-stretched his limbs, pleased to find that he appeared to be all right
-again, except for a little dizziness.
-
-Dismukes evinced gladness at the fact of Adam’s improvement. “Good!”
-he exclaimed. “You’d be strong enough to ride a burro to-day. But it’s
-goin’ to be hot, like yesterday. We’d better not risk travelin’.”
-
-“How do you know it’s going to be as hot as yesterday?” inquired Adam.
-
-“I can tell by the feel an’ smell of the air, an’ mostly that dull
-lead-colored haze you see over the mountains.”
-
-Adam thought the air seemed cool and fresh, but he did see a dull pall
-over the mountains. Farther toward the east, where the sunrise lifted
-an immense and wondrous glow, this haze was not visible.
-
-The remark of Dismukes anent the riding of a burro disturbed Adam. This
-kindly prospector meant to take him on to his destination. Impossible!
-Adam had fled to the desert to hide, and the desert must hide him,
-alive or dead. The old, thick, clamoring emotions knocked at his heart.
-Adam felt gratitude toward Dismukes for not questioning him, and that
-forbearance made him want to tell something of his story. Yet how
-reluctant he was to open his lips on that score! He helped Dismukes
-with the simple morning meal, and afterward with odds and ends of
-tasks, all the time cheerful and questioning, putting off what he knew
-was inevitable. The day did come on hot--so hot that life was just
-bearable for men and beasts in the shade of the big ironwood tree. Adam
-slept some of the hours away. He awoke stronger, with more active mind.
-Of the next meal Dismukes permitted Adam to eat heartily. And later,
-while Dismukes smoked and Adam sat before the camp fire, the moment of
-revelation came, quite unexpectedly.
-
-“Wansfell, you’ll not be goin’ to Yuma with me to-morrow,” asserted
-Dismukes quietly.
-
-The words startled Adam. He dropped his head. “No--no! Thank you--I
-won’t--I can’t go,” he replied, trembling. The sound of his voice
-agitated him further.
-
-“Boy, tell me or not, just as you please. But I’m a man you can trust.”
-
-The kindness and a nameless power invested in this speech broke down
-what little restraint remained with Adam.
-
-“I--I can’t go.... I’m an outcast.... I must hide--hide in
-the--desert,” burst out Adam, covering his face with his hands.
-
-“Was that why you came to the desert?”
-
-“Yes--yes.”
-
-“But, boy, you came without a canteen or grub or burro or gun--or
-anythin’. In all my years on the desert I never saw the like of that
-before. An’ only a miracle saved your life. That miracle was Jinny’s
-eyes. You owe your life to a long-eared, white-faced burro. Jinny has
-eyes like a mountain sheep. She saw you--miles off. An’ such luck won’t
-be yours twice. You can’t last on this desert without the things to
-sustain life.... How did it happen that I found you here alone--without
-anythin’?”
-
-“No time. I--I had to run!” panted Adam.
-
-“What’d you do? Don’t be afraid to tell me. The desert is a place for
-secrets, and it’s a lonely place where a man learns to read the souls
-of men--when he meets them. You’re not vicious. You’re no---- But never
-mind--tell me without wastin’ more words. Maybe I can help you.”
-
-“No one can--help me,” cried Adam.
-
-“That’s not so,” quickly spoke up Dismukes, his voice deep and rolling.
-“Some one can help you--an’ maybe it’s me.”
-
-Here Adam completely broke down. “I--I did--something--awful!”
-
-“No crime, boy--say it was no crime,” earnestly returned the prospector.
-
-“O my God! Yes--yes! It was--a crime!” sobbed Adam, shuddering. “But,
-man--I swear, horrible as it was--I’m innocent! I swear that. Believe
-me.... I was driven--driven by wrongs, by hate, by taunts. If I’d
-stood them longer I’d have been a white-livered coward. But I was
-driven and half drunk.”
-
-“Well--well!” ejaculated Dismukes, shaking his shaggy head. “It’s bad.
-But I believe you an’ you needn’t tell me any more. Life is hell! I was
-young once.... An’ now you’ve got to hide away from men--to live on the
-desert--to be one of us wanderers of the wastelands?”
-
-“Yes. I must hide. And I want--I need to live--to suffer--to atone!”
-
-“Boy, do you believe in God?” asked the prospector.
-
-“I don’t know. I think so,” replied Adam, lifting his head and striving
-for composure. “My mother was religious. But my father was not.”
-
-“Well--well, if you believed in God your case would not be hopeless.
-But some men--a few out of the many wanderers--find God out here in
-these wilds. Maybe you will.... Can you tell me what you think you want
-to do?”
-
-“Oh--to go alone--into the loneliest place--to live there for
-years--forever,” replied Adam, with passion.
-
-“Alone. That is my way. An’ I understand how you feel--what you need.
-Are you goin’ to hunt gold?”
-
-“No--no.”
-
-“Have you any money?”
-
-“Yes. More than I’ll ever need. I’d like to throw it all away--or give
-it to you. But it--it was my mother’s.... And I promised her I’d not
-squander it--that I’d try to save.”
-
-“Boy, never mind--an’ I don’t want your money,” interrupted Dismukes.
-“An’ don’t do any fool trick with it. You’ll need it to buy outfits.
-You can always trust Indians to go to the freightin’ posts for you. But
-never let any white men in this desert know you got money. That’s a
-hard comparison, an’ it’s justified.”
-
-“I’m already sick with the love men have for money,” said Adam,
-bitterly.
-
-“An’ now to figure out an’ make good all that brag of mine,” went on
-Dismukes, reflectively. “I’ll need only two days’ grub to get to Yuma.
-There’s one sure water hole. I can give you one of my canteens, an’
-Jinny, the burro that saved your life. She’s tricky, but a blamed good
-burro. An’ by makin’ up enough bread I can spare my oven. So, all told,
-I guess I can outfit you good enough for you to reach a canyon up here
-to the west where Indians live. I know them. They’re good. You can stay
-with them until the hot weather passes. No danger of any white men
-runnin’ across you there.”
-
-“But you mustn’t let me have all your outfit,” protested Adam.
-
-“I’m not. It’s only the grub an’ one burro.”
-
-“Won’t you run a risk--with only two days’ rations?”
-
-“Wansfell, every move you can make on this desert is a risk,” replied
-Dismukes, seriously. “Learn that right off. But I’m sure. Only
-accidents or unforeseen circumstances ever make risks for me now. I’m
-what they call a desert rat.”
-
-“You’re most kind,” said Adam, choking up again, “to help a
-stranger--this way.”
-
-“Boy, I don’t call that help,” declared Dismukes. “That’s just doin’
-for a man as I’d want to be done by. When I talked about help I meant
-somethin’ else.”
-
-“What? God knows I need it. I’ll be grateful. I’ll do as you tell me,”
-replied Adam, with a strange thrill stirring in him.
-
-“You are a boy--no matter if you’re bigger than most men. You’ve got
-the mind of a boy. What a damn pity you’ve got to do this hidin’ game!”
-Under strong feeling the prospector got up, and, emptying his pipe, he
-began to take short strides to and fro in the limited shade cast by the
-ironwood tree. The indomitable force of the man showed in his step, in
-the way he carried himself. Presently he turned to Adam and the great
-ox eyes burned intensely. “Wansfell, if you were a man I’d never feel
-the way I do. But you’re only a youngster--you’re not bad--you’ve had
-bad luck--an’ for you I can break my rule--an’ I’ll do it if you’re in
-earnest. I’ve never talked about the desert--about its secrets--what
-it’s taught me. But I’ll tell you what the desert is--how it’ll be your
-salvation--how to be a wanderer of the wasteland is to be strong, free,
-happy--if you are honest, if you’re big enough for it.”
-
-“Dismukes, I swear I’m honest--and I’ll be big, by God! or I’ll die
-trying,” declared Adam, passionately.
-
-The prospector gave Adam a long, steady stare, a strange gaze such as
-must have read his soul.
-
-“Wansfell, if you can live on the desert you’ll grow like it,” he said,
-solemnly, as if he were pronouncing a benediction.
-
-Adam gathered from this speech that Dismukes meant to unbosom himself
-of many secrets of this wonderful wasteland. Evidently, however, the
-prospector was not then ready to talk further. With thoughtful mien
-and plodding gait he resumed his short walk to and fro. It struck Adam
-then that his appearance was almost as ludicrous as that of his burros,
-yet at the same time his presence somehow conveyed a singular sadness.
-Years of loneliness burdened the wide bowed shoulders of this desert
-man. Adam divined then, in a gust of gratitude, that this plodding
-image of Dismukes would always remain in his mind as a picture, a
-symbol of the actual good in human nature.
-
-The hot day closed without Adam ever venturing out of the shade of
-the tree. Once or twice he had put his hand in a sunny spot to feel
-the heat, and it had burned. The night mantled down with its intense
-silence, all-embracing, and the stars began to glow white. As Dismukes
-sat down near Adam in the glow of the camp fire it was manifest, from
-the absence of his pipe and the penetrating, possession-taking power of
-his eyes, that he was under the dominance of a singular passion.
-
-“Wansfell,” he began, in low, deep voice, “it took me many years to
-learn how to live on the desert. I had the strength an’ the vitality
-of ten ordinary men. Many times in those desperate years was I
-close to death from thirst--from starvation--from poison water--from
-sickness--from bad men--and last, though not least--from loneliness. If
-I had met a man like myself, as I am now, I might have been spared a
-hell of sufferin’. I did meet desert men who could have helped me. But
-they passed me by. The desert locks men’s lips. Let every man save his
-own life--find his own soul. That’s the unwritten law of the wastelands
-of the world. I’ve broken it for you because I want to do by you as I’d
-have liked to be done by. An’ because I see somethin’ in you.”
-
-Dismukes paused here to draw a long breath. In the flickering firelight
-he seemed a squatting giant immovable by physical force, and of a will
-unquenchable while life lasted.
-
-“Men crawl over the desert like ants whose nests have been destroyed
-an’ who have become separated from one another,” went on Dismukes.
-“They all know the lure of the desert. Each man has his own idea of
-why the desert claims him. Mine was gold--is gold--so that some day I
-can travel over the world, rich an’ free, an’ see life. Another man’s
-will be the need to hide--or the longin’ to forget--or the call of
-adventure--or hate of the world--or love of a woman. Another class is
-that of bad men. Robbers, murderers. They are many. There are also
-many men, an’ a few women, who just drift or wander or get lost in
-the desert. An’ out of all these, if they stay in the desert, but few
-survive. They die or they are killed. The Great American Desert is a
-vast place an’ it is covered by unmarked graves an’ bleached bones.
-I’ve seen so many--so many.”
-
-Dismukes paused again while his broad breast heaved with a sigh.
-
-“I was talkin’ about what men think the desert means to them. In my
-case I say gold, an’ I say that as the other man will claim he loves
-the silence or the color or the loneliness. But I’m wrong, an’ so is
-he. The great reason why the desert holds men lies deeper. I feel
-that. But I’ve never had the brains to solve it. I do know, however,
-that life on this wasteland is fierce an’ terrible. Plants, reptiles,
-beasts, birds, an’ men all have to fight for life far out of proportion
-to what’s necessary in fertile parts of the earth. You will learn that
-early, an’ if you are a watcher an’ a thinker you will understand it.
-
-“The desert is no place for white men. An oasis is fit for Indians.
-They survive there. But they don’t thrive. I respect the Indians. It
-will be well for you to live awhile with Indians.... Now what I most
-want you to know is this.”
-
-The speaker’s pause this time was impressive, and he raised one of his
-huge hands, like a monstrous claw, making a gesture at once eloquent
-and strong.
-
-“When the desert claims men it makes most of them beasts. They sink to
-that fierce level in order to live. They are trained by the eternal
-strife that surrounds them. A man of evil nature survivin’ in the
-desert becomes more terrible than a beast. He is a vulture.... On the
-other hand, there are men whom the desert makes like it. Yes--fierce
-an’ elemental an’ terrible, like the heat an’ the storm an’ the
-avalanche, but greater in another sense--greater through that eternal
-strife to live--beyond any words of mine to tell. What such men have
-lived--the patience, the endurance, the toil--the fights with men an’
-all that makes the desert--the wanderin’s an’ perils an’ tortures--the
-horrible loneliness that must be fought hardest, by mind as well as
-action--all these struggles are beyond ordinary comprehension an’
-belief. But I know. I’ve met a few such men, an’ if it’s possible for
-the divinity of God to walk abroad on earth in the shape of mankind,
-it was invested in them. The reason must be that in the development
-by the desert, in case of these few men who did not retrograde, the
-spiritual kept pace with the physical. It means these men never forgot,
-never reverted to mere unthinking instinct, never let the hard, fierce,
-brutal action of survival on the desert kill their souls. Spirit was
-stronger than body. I’ve learned this of these men, though I never had
-the power to attain it. It takes brains. I was only fairly educated.
-An’ though I’ve studied all my years on the desert, an’ never gave up,
-I wasn’t big enough to climb as high as I can see. I tell you all this,
-Wansfell, because it may be your salvation. Never give up to the desert
-or to any of its minions! Never cease to fight! You must fight to
-live--an’ so make that fight equally for your mind an’ your soul! Thus
-you will repent for your crime, whatever that was. Remember--the secret
-is never to forget your hold on the past--your memories--an’ through
-thinkin’ of them to save your mind an’ apply it to all that faces you
-out there.”
-
-Rising from his seat, Dismukes made a wide, sweeping gesture,
-symbolical of a limitless expanse. “An’ the gist of all this talk of
-mine--this hope of mine to do for you as I’d have been done by--is that
-if you fight an’ think together like a man meanin’ to repent of his
-sin--somewhere out there in the loneliness an’ silence you will find
-God!”
-
-With that he abruptly left the camp fire to stride off into the
-darkness; and the sonorous roll of his last words seemed to linger on
-the quiet air.
-
-Every one of his intense words had been burned into Adam’s sensitive
-mind in characters and meanings never to be forgotten. Dismukes had
-found eager and fertile soil for the planting of the seeds of his
-toil-earned philosophy. The effect upon Adam was profound, and so
-wrought upon his emotions that the black and hateful consciousness
-which had returned to haunt him was as but a shadow of his thought.
-Adam stared out into the night where Dismukes had vanished. Something
-great had happened. Was the man Dismukes a fanatic, a religious
-wanderer of the wasteland, who imagined he had found in Adam an apt
-pupil, or who had preached a sermon because the opportunity presented?
-No! The prospector had the faith to give out of his lesson of life on
-the desert. His motive was the same as when he had risked much to
-follow Adam, staggering blindly across the hot sands to his death. And
-as Adam felt the mounting passion of conviction, of gratitude, his
-stirred mind seemed suddenly to burst into a radiant and scintillating
-inspiration of resolve to be the man Dismukes had described, to fight
-and to think and to remember as had no one ever before done on the
-desert. It was all that seemed left for him. Repentance! Expiation!
-True to himself at the last in spite of a horrible and fatal blunder!
-
-“Oh, Guerd! Guerd, my brother!” he cried, shuddering at the whisper of
-that name. “Wherever you are in spirit--hear me!... I’ll rise above
-wrongs and hate and revenge! I’ll remember our boyhood--how I loved
-you! I’ll atone for my crime! I’ll never forget.... I’ll fight and
-think to save my soul--and pray for yours!... Hear me and forgive--you
-who drove me out into the wastelands!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-Adam lay awake for some length of time, waiting for Dismukes to return,
-but he did not come. Adam at length succumbed to drowsiness. It was
-Dismukes’s call that awakened him. The sun already tipped the eastern
-range, rosy red, and all the open land lay fresh and colorful in the
-morning light. Adam felt no severe effects from his hard experience,
-except an inordinate hunger, which Dismukes was more disposed to
-appease. Still he cautioned Adam not to eat too much.
-
-“Now, Wansfell, you must learn all about burros,” began Dismukes. “The
-burro is the most important part of your outfit. This desert would
-still be a blank waste, unknown to white man, if it had not been for
-those shaggy, lazy, lop-eared little donkeys. Whenever you get sore
-at one an’ feel inclined to kill him for some trick or other, just
-remember that you could not get along without him.
-
-“Most burros are alike. They hang near camp, as you see mine, hopin’
-they can steal a bite of somethin’ if you don’t give it to them.
-They’ll eat paper, or ‘most anythin’ except greasewood. They love
-paper off bacon. I had one once that ate my overalls. They never get
-homesick an’ seem contented in the most desolate places. I had a
-burro that was happy in Death Valley, which’s the hell hole of this
-wasteland. Burros are seldom responsive to affection. They’ll stand
-great abuse. Never expect any thanks. Always patient. They are usually
-easy to catch. But they must know you. Only way to catch them is to
-head them off. Then they stop. Young burros are easily broke an’ will
-follow others. They must be driven. Never knew but one that I could
-lead. Don’t forget this. They have the most wonderful endurance--never
-stumble or fall--an’ can exist on practically nothin’. When you turn
-them loose they’ll nibble around awhile, then stop an’ stand like
-rocks, never movin’ for hours an’ hours, as if they were wrapped in
-prehistoric thought. In the mornin’ when you start off on your day’s
-travel the burros are fresh an’ they drive fine. But in the afternoon,
-when they get tired, they think of tricks. They’ll lie down--roll over
-on a pack--knock against a rock or tree. They’ll get together in a
-bunch to tangle the packs. When a burro intends to lie down he humps
-his back an’ wriggles his tail. It’s hard to get burros across streams.
-Scared of water! Strange, isn’t that? I’ve had to carry my burros many
-a time. But they’ll climb or go down the steepest, roughest mountain
-trail without fear. They can slide down a steep slope that a man will
-not stick on. Burros have more patience and good qualities, an’ also
-cussedness, than any other beasts. They pick out pardners an’ stick
-together all the time. A big bunch of burros will pair off regardless
-of sex. Never give each other up! They bray at night--an awful sound
-till you get used to it. Remember this quick some night when you’re
-lifted out of a sleep by a terrible unearthly roar.... Well, I guess
-that’s an introduction to desert burros. It’s all serious fact,
-Wansfell, as you’ll learn, an’ to your cost, unless you remember.”
-
-How singular for Adam to have the closing words of Dismukes reveal the
-absorbing interest of this simple and practical talk about burros! It
-amazed Adam to find that he had even been amused, ready to laugh.
-
-“I’ll remember,” he asserted, with conviction.
-
-“Dare say you will,” replied Dismukes, “but the idea is you must
-remember before you get in trouble, not after. I can’t tell you when to
-know a burro is goin’ to trick you. I’m just givin’ you facts as to the
-nature of burros in general. You must study an’ learn them yourself. A
-man could spend his life studyin’ burros an’ then have lots to learn.
-Most prospectors lose half their time trackin’ their burros. It’s
-tryin’ to find burros that has cost many a desert man his life. An’
-this is why, if you’ve chosen the desert to live in, you must learn the
-habits of the burro. He’s the camel of this Sahara.”
-
-With that the prospector appeared to have talked himself out for the
-present, and he devoted his efforts to a selection of parts of his
-outfit that manifestly he meant to turn over to Adam. At length having
-made the selection to his satisfaction, he went out to wake up the
-burro Jinny. As he led Jinny into camp all the other burros trooped
-along.
-
-“Watch me pack an’ then you try your hand on Jinny,” he said.
-
-Adam was all eyes while the prospector placed in position the old
-ragged pads of skins and blankets, and the packsaddles over them, to
-be buckled carefully. It was all comparatively easy until it came to
-tying the pack on with a rope in what Dismukes called a hitch. However,
-after Dismukes had accomplished it on three of the other burros, Adam
-believed he could make a respectable showing. To this end he began to
-pack Jinny, and did very well indeed till he got to the hitch, which
-was harder to tie than it looked. After several attempts he succeeded.
-During this procedure Jinny stood with one long ear up and the other
-down, as if nothing on earth mattered to her.
-
-“Carry the canteen of water yourself,” said Dismukes, as he led Adam
-out from under the tree and pointed west. “See where that long, low,
-sharp ridge comes down to the desert?... Well, that’s fifty miles.
-Around that point lies a wide canyon. Indians live up that canyon.
-They are good people. Stay with them--work for them till you learn the
-desert.... Now as to gettin’ there. Go slow. Rest often in the shade of
-ironwoods like this one. Take a good rest durin’ the middle of the day.
-As long as you sweat you’re in no danger. But if your skin gets dry
-you need to get out of the sun an’ to drink. There are several springs
-along the base of this range. Chocolate Mountains, they’re called. By
-keepin’ a sharp eye for patches of bright-green brush you’ll see where
-the water is. An’ don’t ever forget that water is the same as life
-blood.”
-
-Adam nodded solemnly as he realized how the mere thought of thirst
-constricted his throat and revived there a semblance of the pain he had
-endured.
-
-“Go slow. Maybe you’ll take two or three days to reach the Indians. By
-keepin’ that ridge in sight you can’t miss them.”
-
-The next move of the prospector was to take Adam around on the other
-side of the tree and wave his hand at the expanse of desert.
-
-“Now follow me an’ get these landmarks in your mind. Behind us lies
-the Chocolate range. You see it runs down almost southeast. That shiny
-black mountain standin’ by itself is Pilot Knob. It’s near Yuma, as of
-course you remember. Now straight across from us a few miles lies a
-line of sand dunes. They run same way as the Chocolates. But they’re
-low--can’t be seen far. Do you make out a dim, gray, strange-lookin’
-range just over the top of them?”
-
-“Yes, I see that clearly. Looks like clouds,” replied Adam.
-
-“That’s the Superstition Mountains. You will hear queer stories about
-them. Most prospectors are afraid to go there, though it’s said Pegleg
-Smith’s lost gold mine is somewhere in there. The Indians think the
-range is haunted. An’ everyone who knows this desert will tell you
-how the Superstition range changes somehow from time to time. It does
-change. Those mountains are giant sand dunes an’ they change their
-shape with the shiftin’ of the winds. That’s the fact, but I’m not
-gainsayin’ how strange an’ weird they are. An’ I, for one, believe
-Pegleg Smith did find gold there. But there’s no water. An’ how can
-a man live without water?... Well, to go on, that dim, purple, high
-range beyond the Superstitions lies across the line in Mexico.... Now,
-lookin’ round to the right of the Superstitions, to the northwest,
-an’ you see how the desert slopes down an’ down on all sides to a
-pale, hazy valley that looks like a lake. It’s the Salton Sink--below
-sea level--an’ it’s death for a man to try to cross there at this
-season. It looks obscured an’ small, but it’s really a whole desert
-in itself. In times gone by the Colorado River has broken its banks
-while in flood an’ run back in there to fill that sink. Miles an’ miles
-of fresh water which soon evaporated! Well, it’s a queer old earth
-an’ this desert teaches much.... Now look straight up the valley. The
-ragged high peak is San Jacinto an’ the other high one farther north is
-San Gorgonio--two hundred miles from here. Prospectors call this one
-Grayback because it has the shape of a louse. These mountains are white
-with snow in the winter. Beyond them lies the Mohave Desert, an immense
-waste, which hides Death Valley in its iron-walled mountains.... Now
-comin’ back down the valley on this side you see the Cottonwood range
-an’ it runs down to meet the Chocolates. There’s a break in the range.
-An’ still farther down there’s a break in the Chocolate range an’
-there’s where your canyon comes out. You’ll climb the pass some day,
-to get on top of the Chuckwalla Mountains, an’ from there you will see
-north to the Mohave an’ east to the Colorado--all stark naked desert
-that seems to hit a man in the face.... An’, well, I guess I’ve done my
-best for you.”
-
-Adam could not for the moment safely trust himself to speak. The
-expanse of desert shown him, thus magnified into its true perspective,
-now stretched out with the nature of its distance and nudity
-strikingly clear. It did seem to glare a menace into Adam’s face. It
-made him tremble. Yet there was fascination in the luring, deceitful
-Superstition range, and a sublimity in the measureless sweep of haze
-and purple slope leading north to the great peaks, and a compelling
-beckoning urge in the mystery and unknown that seemed to abide beyond
-the bronze ridge which marked Adam’s objective point.
-
-“I’ll never forget your--your kindness,” said Adam, finally turning to
-Dismukes.
-
-The prospector shook hands with him, and his grip was something to
-endure.
-
-“Kindness is nothin’. I owed you what a man owes to himself. But don’t
-forget anythin’ I told you.”
-
-“I never will,” replied Adam. “Will you let me pay you for the--the
-burro and outfit?” Adam made this request hesitatingly, because he did
-not know the law of the desert, and he did not want to offer what might
-be an offense.
-
-“Sure you got plenty of money?” queried Dismukes, gruffly.
-
-“Indeed I have,” rejoined Adam, eagerly.
-
-“Then I’ll take what the burro an’ grub cost.”
-
-He named a sum that appeared very small to Adam, and, receiving the
-money in his horny hands, he carefully deposited it in a greasy
-buckskin sack.
-
-“Wansfell, may we meet again,” he said in farewell. “Good luck an’ good
-by.... Don’t forget.”
-
-“Good by,” returned Adam, unable to say more.
-
-With a whoop at the four burros and a slap on the haunch of one of
-them, Dismukes started them southward. They trotted ahead with packs
-bobbing and wagging. What giant strides Dismukes took! He seemed the
-incarnation of dogged strength of manhood, yet something ludicrous
-clung about him in his powerful action as well as in his immense squat
-form. He did not look back.
-
-Adam slapped Jinny on the haunch and started her westward.
-
-The hour was still early morning. A rosy freshness of the sunrise
-still slanted along the bronze slopes of the range and here and there
-blossoms of _ocatilla_ shone red. The desert appeared to be a gently
-rising floor of gravel, sparsely decked with ironwood and mesquite, and
-an occasional cactus, that, so far as Adam could see, did not harbor
-a living creature. The day did not seem to feel hot, but Adam knew
-from the rising heat veils that it was hot. Excitement governed his
-feelings. Actually he was on the move, with an outfit and every hope
-to escape possible pursuers, with the absolute surety of a hard yet
-wonderful existence staring him in the face.
-
-Not until he felt a drag in his steps did he think of his weakened
-condition. Resting awhile in the shade of a tree, he let the burro
-graze on the scant brush, and then went on again. Thus he traveled on,
-with frequent rests, until the heat made it imperative for him to halt
-till afternoon. About the middle of the afternoon he packed and set
-forth again.
-
-A direct line westward appeared to be bringing him closer to the slope
-of the mountain; and it was not long before he saw a thick patch of
-green brush that surely indicated a water hole. The very sight seemed
-to invigorate him. Nevertheless, the promised oasis was far away,
-and not before he had walked till he was weary and rested many times
-did he reach it. To find water and grass was like making a thrilling
-discovery. Adam unpacked Jinny and turned her loose, not, however,
-without some misgivings as to her staying there.
-
-Though he suffered from an extreme fatigue and a weakness that seemed
-to be in both muscle and bone, a kind of cheer came to him with the
-camp-fire duties. Never had he been so famished! The sun set while he
-ate, and, despite his hunger, more than once he had to stop to gaze
-down across the measureless slope, smoky and red, that ended in purple
-obscurity. It struck him suddenly, as he was putting some sticks of
-dead ironwood on the fire, how he had ceased to look back over his
-shoulder toward the south. The fire sputtered, the twilight deepened,
-the silence grew vast and vague. His eyelids were as heavy as lead, and
-all the nerves and veins of his body seemed to run together and to sink
-into an abyss the restfulness of which was unutterably sweet.
-
-Some time during Adam’s slumbers a nightmare possessed him. At the
-moment he was about to be captured he awakened, cold with clammy sweat
-and shaking in every limb. With violent start of consciousness, with
-fearful uncertainty, he raised himself to peer around. The desert
-night encompassed him. It was late, somewhere near the morning hour.
-Low down over the dark horizon line hung a wan distorted moon that
-shone with weird luster. Adam saw the black mountain wall above him
-apparently lifting to the stars, and the thick shadow of gloom filling
-the mouth of the canyon where he lay. He listened. And then he breathed
-a long sigh of relief and lay back in his blankets. The silence was
-that of a grave. There were no pursuers. He had only dreamed. And he
-closed his eyes again, feeling some blessed safeguard in the fact of
-his loneliness.
-
-Dawn roused him to his tasks, stronger physically, eager and keen, but
-more watchful than he had been the preceding day and with less thrill
-than he had felt. He packed in half an hour and was traveling west when
-the sun rose. Gradually with the return of his habit of watchfulness
-came his former instinctive tendency to look back over his shoulder.
-He continually drove this away and it continually returned. The only
-sure banishment of it came through action, with its attendant exercise
-of his faculties. Therefore he rested less and walked more, taxing his
-strength to its utmost that morning, until the hot noon hour forced
-him to halt. Then while Jinny nibbled at the bitter desert plants Adam
-dozed in the thin shade of a mesquite. Close by grew a large _ocatilla_
-cactus covered with red flowers among which bees hummed. Adam never
-completely lost sense of this melodious hum, and it seemed to be trying
-to revive memories that he shunned.
-
-The sun was still high and hot when Adam resumed travel, but it was
-westering and the slanting rays were bearable. After he got thoroughly
-warmed up and sweating freely he did not mind the heat, and was able
-to drive Jinny and keep up a strong stride for an hour at a time. His
-course now led along the base of the mountain wall, and that long low
-ridge which marked his destination began to seem less unattainable. The
-afternoon waned, the sun sank, the heat declined, and Jinny began to
-show signs of weariness. It bothered Adam to keep her headed straight.
-He searched the line where desert slope met the mountain wall for
-another green thicket of brush marking a water hole, but he could not
-see one. Darkness overtook him and he was compelled to make dry camp.
-This occasioned him some uneasiness, not that he did not have plenty
-of water for himself, but because he worried about the burro and the
-possibility of not finding water the next day. Nevertheless, he slept
-soundly.
-
-On the following morning, when he had been tramping along for an hour
-or more, he espied far ahead the unmistakable green patch of thicket
-that heralded the presence of water. The sight stirred him. He walked
-well that morning, resting only a couple of hours at noon; but the
-green patch, after the manner of distant objects on the desert, seemed
-just as far away as when he saw it first. The time came, however, when
-there was no more illusion and he knew he was getting close to the
-place. At last he reached it, a large green thicket that choked the
-mouth of a narrow canyon. He found a spring welling from under the
-mountain base and sending a slender stream out to be swallowed by the
-sand.
-
-Adam gave Jinny a drink before he unpacked her. There was a desirable
-camp site, except that it lacked dead firewood close at hand. Adam
-removed the pack, being careful to put boxes and bags together and to
-cover them with the canvas. Then he started out to look for some dead
-ironwood or mesquite to burn. All the desert growths, mostly greasewood
-and mesquite, were young and green. Adam searched in one direction and
-then in another, without so much as finding a stick. Next he walked
-west along the rocky wall, and had no better success until he came to a
-deep recession in the wall, full of brush; and here with considerable
-labor he collected a bundle of dry sticks. With this he trudged back
-toward camp.
-
-Before long he imagined he saw smoke. “Queer how those smoke trees fool
-a fellow,” he said. And even after he thought he smelled smoke, he was
-sure of deception. But upon nearing the green thicket that hid his camp
-he actually did see thin blue smoke low down against the background of
-rocky wall. The sight alarmed him. The only explanation which offered
-itself to his perplexity was the possibility that a prospector had
-arrived at the spring during his absence and had started a fire. Adam
-began to hurry. His alarm increased to dread.
-
-When he ran around the corner of thicket to his camp site he did see
-a fire. It was about burned out. There was no prospector, no signs of
-packs or burros. And Jinny was gone!
-
-“What--what?” stammered Adam, dropping his bundle of sticks. He was
-bewildered. A sense of calamity beset him. He ran forward.
-
-“Where--where’s my pack?” he cried.
-
-The dying fire was but the smoldering remains of his pack. It had
-been burned. Blankets, boxes, bags had been consumed. Some blackened
-utensils lay on the ground near the charred remains of his canvas. Only
-then did the truth of this catastrophe burst upon him. All his food had
-been burned.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-Some moments elapsed before the stunning effects of this loss had worn
-off enough to permit Adam’s mind to connect the cause of it with the
-disappearance of Jinny.
-
-After careful scrutiny of tracks near where the pack had lain, Adam
-became convinced that Jinny was to blame for his destitution. His
-proofs cumulated in a handful of unburnt matches that manifestly had
-been flung and scattered away from the pack. The tricky burro, taking
-advantage of Adam’s absence, had pulled the canvas off the pack, and in
-tearing around in the boxes for morsels to eat she had bitten into the
-box of matches and set them on fire.
-
-“I didn’t think--I didn’t think!” cried Adam, remembering the advice of
-Dismukes.
-
-Overcome by the shock, he sank upon the ground and fell prey to gloomy
-and hopeless forebodings.
-
-“I’ll lie down and die,” he muttered. But he could not so much as lie
-down. He seemed possessed by a devil who would not admit the idea of
-surrender or death. And this spirit likewise seemed to take him by the
-hair of his head and lift him up to scatter the tears from his eyes.
-“Why can’t I cuss the luck like a man--then look round to see what’s
-got to be done?”
-
-Jinny had made good her escape. When Adam gave up all hope of finding
-the burro the hour was near sunset and it was high time that he should
-decide what to do.
-
-“Go on--to the Indian camp,” he declared, tersely.
-
-He decided to start at once and walk in the cool of night, keeping
-close to the mountain wall so as not to lose his way. His spirits
-rallied. Going back to the camp scene, he carefully gathered up all
-the unburnt matches and placed them with others he carried in his
-pocket. He found his bag of salt only partly consumed, and he made
-haste to secure it. His canteen lay beside the spring.
-
-The ruddy sunset and the stealing down of twilight and the encroaching
-blackness of night had no charms for Adam now. His weariness increased
-as the hours prolonged themselves. Short, frequent rests were more
-advisable than long ones. The canopy of stars seemed in procession
-westward; and many a bright one he watched sink behind the black slope
-of mountain toward which he was bound. There were times when his eyes
-closed involuntarily and all his body succumbed to sleep as he toiled
-on. These drowsy spells always came to a painful end, for he would walk
-into a thorny mesquite. Adam saw a weird, misshapen moon rise late
-over a dark range to blanch the desert with wan light. He walked all
-night, and when dawn showed him landmarks now grown familiar he had a
-moment of exhilaration. The long, low-reaching ridge of mountain loomed
-right before him. When he rounded the sharp, blunt corner his eyes were
-greeted by sight of a deep-mouthed canyon yawning out of the range, and
-full of palms and other green trees. He saw a white stream bed and the
-shine of water, and what he took to be the roofs of palm-thatched huts.
-
-“I’ve got there. This is the Indian canyon--where Dismukes told me
-to stay,” said Adam, with pride in his achievement. A first sight
-of what he took to be habitations cheered him. Again that gloomy
-companion of his mind was put to rout. It looked worth striving and
-suffering for--this haven. The barrenness of the desert all around made
-this green canyon mouth an oasis. It appeared well hidden, too. Few
-travelers passing along the valley would have suspected its presence.
-The long, low ridge had to be rounded before the canyon could be
-detected.
-
-With steps that no longer dragged Adam began his descent of the canyon
-slope. It was a long, gradual incline, rough toward the bottom, and
-the bottom was a good deal farther down than it had seemed. At length
-he reached the wide bed of white boulders, strewn about in profusion,
-where some flood had rolled them. In the center of this bed trickled a
-tiny stream of water, slightly alkaline, Adam decided, judging from the
-white stain on the margin of sand. Following the stream bed, he made
-his way up into the zone of green growths, a most welcome change from
-the open glare of the desert. He plodded on perhaps a mile, without
-reaching the yellow thatch of palms.
-
-“Will I--never--get there?” panted Adam, almost spent.
-
-Finally Adam reached a well-defined trail leading up out of the
-stream bed. He followed it to a level flat covered with willows and
-cottonwoods, all full foliaged and luxuriantly green, and among which
-stately palms, swaddled in huge straw sheaths of their own making,
-towered with lofty tufted crowns. The dust in the trail showed no
-imprints of feet. Adam regarded that as strange. Still, he might be
-far from the camp or village that had looked so close from the slope
-above. Suddenly he emerged from the green covert into an open glade
-that contained palm-thatched huts, and he uttered a little cry of joy.
-But it took only a second glance to convince him that the huts were
-deserted, and his joy was short lived. Hastily he roamed from one
-hut to another. He found ollas, great, clay water jars, and pieces
-of broken pottery, and beds of palm leaves through which the lizards
-rustled, but no Indians, nor any signs of recent habitation.
-
-“Gone! Gone!” he whispered, hoarsely. “Now--I’ll starve--to death!”
-
-His accents of despair contained a note of hardness, of indifference
-born of his extreme fatigue. His eyes refused to stay open, and sleep
-glued them shut. When he opened them again it was to the light of
-another day. Stiff and lame, with a gnawing at the pit of his stomach
-and an oppressed mind, Adam found himself in sad plight. Limping down
-to the stream, he bathed his face and quenched his thirst, and then,
-removing his boots, he saw that his feet were badly blistered. He
-decided to go barefoot, to save his boots as well as to give the raw
-places a chance to heal.
-
-Then without any more reflection he wrought himself into a supreme
-effort of will, and it was so passionate and strong that he believed it
-would hold as long as intelligence governed his actions.
-
-“My one chance is to live here until the Indians come back,” he
-decided. There’s water here and green growths. It’s an oasis where
-animals, birds, living creatures come to drink.... I must eat.”
-
-His first move was to make slow and careful examination of the trails.
-One which led toward the mountain bore faint traces of footprints
-that a recent rain had mostly obliterated. He lost this trail on the
-smooth rock slope. The others petered out in the stones and sage. Then
-he searched along the sand bars of the stream for tracks of living
-creatures; and he found many, from cat tracks to the delicate ones of
-tiny birds. After all, then, the desert was an abode for living things.
-The fact stimulated Adam, and he returned to the glade to exercise
-every faculty he possessed in the invention of instruments or traps or
-snares.
-
-He had a knife and a pair of long leather boot strings. With these,
-and a bundle of arrowweed sticks, and a tough elastic bow of ironwood,
-and strips of bark, and sharp bits of flinty rock Adam set to work
-under the strong, inventive guiding spirit of necessity. As a boy he
-had been an adept at constructing figure-four traps. How marvelous the
-accuracy of memory! He had been the one to build traps for his brother
-Guerd, who had not patience or skill, but who loved to set traps in
-the brier patches for redbirds. Adam’s nimble fingers slacked a little
-as his mind surveyed that best part of his life. To what extremity a
-man could be reduced! The dexterity of his idle youth to serve him
-thus in his terrible hour of need! He remembered then his skill at
-making slings; and following this came the inspired thought of the
-possibility of constructing one. He had a strong rubber band doubled
-round his pocketbook. Sight of it thrilled him. He immediately left off
-experimenting with the bow and went to making a sling. His difficulty
-was to find cords to make connections between the rubbers and a forked
-prong, and also between the rubbers and a carrier of some sort. For the
-latter he cut a triangular piece out of the top of his boot. Always in
-the old days he had utilized leather from cast-off shoes, and had even
-made a collection of old footgear for this purpose. But where to get
-the cords? Bark would not be pliable and strong enough. Somewhere from
-the clothes he wore he must extract cords. The problem proved easy. His
-suspenders were almost new and they were made of linen threads woven
-together. When he began to ravel them he made the discovery that there
-was enough rubber in them to serve for a second sling.
-
-When the instrument was finished he surveyed it with satisfaction. He
-had no doubt that the deadly accuracy he had once been master of with
-this boyish engine of destruction would readily return to him. Then he
-went back to work on the other contrivances he had planned.
-
-A failing of the daylight amazed him. For an instant he imagined a
-cloud had crossed the sun. But the sun had set and darkness was at hand.
-
-“If days fly like this one, life will soon be over,” he soliloquized,
-with a sigh.
-
-In one of the thatched huts he made a comfortable bed of palm leaves.
-They seemed to retain the heat of the day. When Adam lay down to go
-to sleep he experienced a vague, inexplicable sense that the very
-strangeness of the present circumstance was familiar to him. But he
-could not hold the sensation, so did not understand it. He was very
-tired and very sleepy, and there was an uncomfortable empty feeling
-within him. He looked out and listened, slowly aware of a great, soft,
-silent black enveloping of his environment by the desert night.
-There seemed to be an aloofness in the immensity of this approach and
-insulation--a nature that, once comprehended, would be appalling. This
-thought just flashed by. His mind seemed concerned with something
-between worry and fear which persisted till he fell asleep.
-
-In the dim, gray dawn he awoke and realized that it was hunger which
-had awakened him. And he stole out on his imperative quest. He did not
-see the sunrise nor the broadening day. His instinct was to hunt. Doves
-and blackbirds visited the stream, and a covey of desert quail seemed
-tame; but, owing to overeagerness and clumsiness, he did not succeed in
-killing a single one. He followed them from place to place, all over
-the oasis, until he lost sight of them. He baited his two traps with
-cactus fruit and set them, and he prowled into every nook and cranny of
-the canyon oasis. Lizards, rattlesnakes, rats, ground squirrels rustled
-from his stealthy steps. It amazed him how wary they were. He might
-have caught the rattlesnakes, but the idea of eating them was repugnant
-and impossible to him. The day passed more swiftly than had yesterday.
-Its close found him so tired he could scarcely stand, and with gnawing
-hunger growing worse. The moment he lay down sleep claimed him.
-
-Next day he had more and better opportunities to secure meat, but he
-failed through haste and poor judgment and inaccuracy. His lessons were
-severe and they taught him the stern need of perfection. That day he
-saw a hawk poise high over a spot, dart down swiftly, to rise with a
-squealing rat in its claws. Again he saw a shrike, marked dull gray
-and black, sail down from a tree, fly very low along an open space of
-ground to avoid detection, and pounce upon a lizard. Likewise he saw
-a horned toad shoot out an extraordinarily long and almost invisible
-tongue, to snatch a bee from a flower. In these actions Adam divined
-his first proof of the perfection of desert hunters. They did not fail.
-But he was not thus equipped.
-
-All during the hot period of the day, when birds and animals rested,
-Adam practiced with his crude weapons. His grave, serious eagerness
-began to give way to instinctive force, a something of fierceness that
-began to come out in him. It seemed every moment had its consciousness
-of self, of plight, of presaged agony, but only in flashes of thought,
-only fleeting ideas instantly repudiated by the physical. He had given
-a tremendous direction to his mind and it spent its force that way.
-
-The following morning, just at sunrise, he located the covey of desert
-quail. They had sailed down from the sage slopes to alight among the
-willows bordering the stream. Adam crawled on the sand, noiseless as
-a snake, his sling held in readiness. He was breathless and hot. His
-blood gushed and beat in his veins. The very pursuit of meat made the
-saliva drip from his mouth and made his stomach roll with pangs of
-emptiness. Then the strain, the passion of the moment, were beyond
-his will to control, even if there had not been a strange, savage joy
-in them. He glided through the willows, never rustling a branch. The
-plaintive notes of the quail guided him. Then through an opening he
-saw them--gray, sleek, plump birds, some of them with tiny plumes.
-They were picking in the damp sand near the water. Adam, lying flat,
-stretched his sling and waited for a number of the quail to bunch. Then
-he shot. The heavy pebble sped true, making the gray feathers fly. One
-quail lay dead. Another fluttered wildly. The others ran off through
-the willows. Adam rushed upon the crippled quail, plunging down swift
-and hard; and catching it, he wrung its neck. Then he picked up the
-other.
-
-“I got ’em! I got ’em!” he cried, elated, as he felt the warm plump
-bodies. It was a moment of strange sensation. Breathless, hot, wet with
-sweat, shaking all over, he seemed to have reverted to the triumph of
-the boy hunter. But there was more, and it had to do with the physical
-reactions inside his body. It had to do with hunger.
-
-Picking the feathers off these birds required too much time. Adam
-skinned them and cleaned them, and then washed them in the stream.
-That done, he hurried back to his camp to make a fire and cook them. A
-quick method would be to broil them. He had learned how to do this with
-strips of meat. His hunger prevented him from waiting until the fire
-was right, and it also made him hurry the broiling. The salt that he
-had rescued from his pack now found its use, and it was not long before
-he had picked clean the bones of these two quail.
-
-Adam found that this pound or so of meat augmented his hunger. It
-changed the gnawing sensations, in fact modified them, but it induced
-a greedy, hot hunger for more. An hour after he had eaten, as far as
-appetite was concerned, he seemed worse off. Then he set out again in
-quest of meat.
-
-The hours flew, the day ended, night intervened, and another dawn
-broke. Success again crowned his hunt. He feasted on doves. Thereafter,
-day by day, he decimated the covey of tame quail and the flock of tame
-doves until the few that were left grew wary and finally departed. Then
-he hunted other birds. Quickly they learned the peril of the white man;
-and the day came when few birds visited the oasis.
-
-Next to invite Adam’s cunning, were the ground squirrels, the trade
-rats, and the kangaroo rats. He lived off them for days. But they grew
-so wary that he had to dig them out of the ground, and they finally
-disappeared. At this juncture a pair of burros wandered into the oasis.
-They were exceedingly wild. Adam failed to trap one of them. He watched
-for hours from a steep place where he might have killed one by throwing
-down a large rock. But it was in vain. At last, in desperation, holding
-his naked knife in hand, he chased them over stones and through the
-willows and under the thorny mesquites, all to no avail. He dropped
-from exhaustion and weakness, and lay where he had fallen till the next
-morning.
-
-The pangs of hunger now were maddening. He had suffered them, more
-or less, and then alleviated them with meat, and then felt them grow
-keener and stronger until the edge wore off. After a few more meatless
-days the pains gradually subsided. It was a relief. He began to force
-himself to go out and hunt. Then an exceedingly good stroke of fortune
-befell him in that he killed a rabbit. His strength revived, but also
-his pains.
-
-Then he lost track of days, but many passed, and each one of them
-took something from him in effort, in wakefulness, in spirit. His
-aggressiveness diminished daily and lasted only a short while. The time
-came when he fell to eating rattlesnakes and any living creatures in
-the oasis that he could kill with a club.
-
-But at length pain left him, and hunger, and then his peril revealed
-itself. He realized it. The desire to kill diminished. With the
-cessation of activity there returned a mental state in which he could
-think back and remember all that he had done there, and also look
-forward to the inevitable prospect. Every morning he dragged his weary
-body, now merely skin and bones, out to the stream to drink, and then
-around and around in a futile hunt. He chewed leaves and bark; he
-ate mesquite beans and cactus fruit. After a certain number of hours
-the longer he went without meat the less he cared for it, or for
-living. But when, now and then, he did kill something to eat, then his
-instinct to survive flashed up with revived hunger. The process of
-detachment from passion to live was one of agony, infinitely worse than
-starvation. He had come to learn that starvation would be the easiest
-and most painless of deaths. It would have been infinitely welcome but
-for the thought that always followed resignation--that he had sworn to
-fight. That kept him alive.
-
-His skin turned brown and shriveled up like dried parchment wrinkling
-around bones. He did not recognize his hands, and when he lay flat on
-the stones to drink from the stream, he saw reflected there a mummified
-mask with awful eyes.
-
-Longer and longer grew the hours wherein he slept by night and lay
-idle by day, watching, listening, feeling. Something came back to him
-or was born in him during these hours. But the truth of his state
-eluded him. It had to do with peace, with dream, with effacement. He
-seemed no longer real. The hot sun, the pleasant wind, the murmur of
-bees, the tinkle of water, the everlasting processional march of the
-heat veils across the oasis--with all these things his mind seemed
-happily concerned. At dawn when he awoke his old instinct predominated
-and he searched for meat. But unless he had some success this questing
-mood did not last. It departed as weakness and lassitude overbalanced
-the night’s rest. For the other hours of that day he lay in the sun, or
-the shade--it did not matter--and felt or dreamed as he starved.
-
-As he watched thus one drowsy noon hour, seeing the honeybees darting
-to and fro, leaving the flowers to fly in straight line across the
-oasis, there occurred to him the significance of their toil. He watched
-these flying bees come and go; and suddenly it flashed over him that at
-the end of the bee line there must be a hive. Bees made nests in trees.
-If he could find the nest of the bees that were working here he would
-find honey. The idea stimulated him.
-
-Adam had never heard how bee hunters lined bees to their hives, but
-in his dire necessity he instinctively adopted the correct method. He
-watched the bees fly away, keeping them in sight as long as possible,
-then he walked to the point he had marked as the last place he had seen
-them, and here he watched for others. In half an hour the straight bee
-flights led to a large dead cottonwood, hollow at top and bottom, a
-tree he had passed hundreds of times. The bees had a hive in the upper
-chamber of the trunk. Adam set fire to the tree and smoked the bees
-out. Then the problem consisted of felling the tree, for he had not the
-strength to climb it. The trunk was rotten inside and out. It burned
-easily, and he helped along the work by tearing out pieces of the soft
-wood. Nearly all the day was consumed in this toil, but at length
-the tree fell, splitting and breaking to pieces. The hollow chamber
-contained many pounds of honey.
-
-Adam’s struggle then was to listen to an intelligence that warned him
-that if he made a glutton of himself it would cause him great distress
-and perhaps kill him. How desperately hard it was to eat sparingly of
-the delicious honey! He tried, but did not succeed. That restraint was
-beyond human nature. Nevertheless, he stopped far short of what he
-wanted. He stored the honey away in ollas left there by the Indians.
-
-All night and next day he paid in severe illness for the honey of
-which he had partaken. The renewed exercise of internal organs that
-had ceased to function produced convulsions and retching that made him
-roll on the ground as a man poisoned. Life was tenacious in him and he
-recovered; and thereafter, while the honey lasted, he slowly gained
-strength enough to hunt once more for meat. But the fertile oasis was
-now as barren of living creatures as was the naked desert outside.
-Adam’s hope revived with his barely recovered strength. He pitied
-himself in his moments of deluded cheerfulness, of spirit that refused
-to die. Long ago his physical being had resigned itself, but his soul
-seemed beyond defeat. How strange the variations of his moods! His
-intelligence told him that sight of an animal would instantly revert
-him to the level of a beast of prey or a stalking, bloodthirsty savage.
-
-During these days his eyes scanned the bronze slope of mountain where
-the tracks of the Indians had faded. They might return in time to
-save his life. He hoped in spite of himself. In the early time of his
-imprisonment there he had prayed for succor, but he had long since
-ceased that. The desert had locked him in. Every moment, every hour
-that had passed, the ceaseless hunts and then the dreaming spells, held
-their clear-cut niches in his memory. Looked back at, they seemed far
-away in the past, even those as close as yesterday; and every sensation
-was invested by a pang. At night he slept the slumber of weakness, and
-so the mockery of the dark hours did not make their terrible mark upon
-his mind. But the solemn days! They sped swiftly by, yet, remembered,
-they seemed eternities. Desert-bound days--immeasurably silent--periods
-of the dominance of the blasting sun; days of infinite space, beyond
-time, beyond life, as they might have been upon the burned-out moon!
-The stones that blistered unprotected flesh, the sand and the dust, the
-rock-ribbed ranges of bronze and rust--these tangible evidences of the
-earth seemed part of those endless days. There were sky and wind, the
-domain of the open and its master; but these existed for the eagles,
-and perhaps for the spirits that wailed down the naked shingles of the
-desert. A man was nothing. Nature filled this universe and had its
-inscrutable and ruthless laws.
-
-How little the human body required to subsist on! Adam lived long on
-that honey; and he gained so much from it that after it was gone the
-hunger pangs revived a hundred times more fiercely than ever. They
-had been deadened, which fact left him peace; revived by a windfall
-of food, they brought him agony. It drove him out to hunt for meat.
-He became a stalking specter whose keen eye an insect could not have
-escaped. Hunger now beset him with all its terrors magnified. To starve
-was nothing, but to eat while starving was hell! The pangs were as if
-made by a serpent with teeth of fire tearing at his vitals. Tighter and
-tighter he buckled his belt until he could squeeze his waist in his
-long, skinny hands so that his fingers met. Whenever his pains began
-to subside, like worms growing quiet, then a rat or a stray bird or
-a lizard or a scaly little side-winder rattlesnake would fall to his
-cunning, as if in mockery of the death that ever eluded him; and next
-day the old starving pains would convulse his bowels again.
-
-So that he was driven, a gaunt and ever gaunter shadow of a man, up
-and down the beaten trails of the oasis. Soon he would fall and die,
-be sun-dried and blow away like powdered leather on the desert wind.
-By his agonies he measured the inhospitableness and inevitableness
-of the wasteland. Every thought had some connection with his torture
-or some relation to his physical being in its fight for existence. In
-this desert oasis were living things, creatures grown too wary for him
-now, and willows, cacti, sages, that had conquered over the barrenness
-of the desert. On his brain had been etched by words of steel the fact
-that no power to fight was so great and unquenchable as that of man’s.
-He lived on, he staggered on through the solemn, glaring days.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One morning huge columnar clouds, white as fleece, with dark-gray
-shades along their lower borders, blotted out the sun. How strangely
-they shaded the high lights! Usually when clouds formed on the desert
-they lodged round the peaks and hung there. But these were looming
-across the wasteland, promising rain. A fresh breeze blew the leaves.
-
-Adam was making his weary round of the oasis, dragging one foot like a
-dead weight after the other. Once he thought he heard an unusual sound,
-and with lips wide and with bated breath he listened. Only the mocking,
-solemn silence! Often he was haunted by the memory of sounds. Seldom
-indeed did he hear his own voice any more. Then he plodded on again
-with the eyes of a ferret, roving everywhere.
-
-He had proceeded a few rods when a distant but shrill whistle brought
-him to a startled and thrilling halt. It sounded like the neigh of a
-horse. Often he had heard the brays of wild burros. In the intense
-silence, as he strained his ears, he heard only the labored, muffled
-throbs of his heart. Gradually his hopes, so new and strange, subsided.
-Only another mockery of his memory! Or perhaps it was a whistle of the
-wind in a crevice, or of an eagle in flight.
-
-Parting the willows before him as he walked, he went through the
-thicket out into the open where the stream flowed. It was very low,
-just a tiny rill of crystal-clear water. He was about to step forward
-toward the flat rock where he always knelt to drink, when another sound
-checked him. A loud, high buzz, somehow startling! It had life.
-
-Suddenly he espied a huge rattlesnake coiled in the sand, with head
-erect and its rattles quivering like the wings of a poised humming
-bird. The snake had just shed an ugly, brown, scaly skin, and now shone
-forth resplendent, a beautiful clean gray with markings of black. It
-did not show any fear. The flat triangular head, sleek and cunning,
-with its deadly jewel-like eyes, was raised half a foot above the plump
-coils.
-
-Adam’s weary, hopeless hunting instinct sustained a vivifying,
-galvanizing shock. Like a flash he changed, beginning to tremble. He
-dropped his sling as an ineffective weapon against so large a snake.
-His staring eyes quivered like the vibrating point of a compass needle
-as he tried to keep them on the snake and at the same time sight
-a stone or club with which to attack his quarry. A bursting gush
-of blood, hot in its tearing pangs, flooded out all over his skin,
-starting the sweat. His heart lifted high in his breast, almost choking
-him. A terrible excitement animated him and it was paralleled by a cold
-and sickening dread that the snake would escape and pounds of meat be
-lost to him.
-
-Never taking eyes off the snake, Adam stooped down to raise a large
-rock in his hand. He poised it aloft and, aiming with intense keenness,
-he flung the missile. It struck the rattlesnake a glancing blow,
-tearing its flesh and bringing blood. With the buzz of a huge bee
-caught in a trap the snake lunged at Adam, stretching its mutilated
-length on the sand.
-
-It was long, thick, fat. Adam smelled the exuding blood and it inflamed
-him. Almost he became a beast. The savage urge in him then was to fall
-upon his prey and clutch it with his bare hands and choke and tear
-and kill. But reason still restrained such limit as that. Stone after
-stone he flung, missing every time. Then the rattlesnake began to drag
-itself over the sand. Its injury did not retard a swift progress. Adam
-tried to bound after it, but he was so weak that swift action seemed
-beyond him. Still, he headed off the snake and turned it back. Stones
-were of no avail. He could not hit with them, and every time he bent
-over to pick one up he got so dizzy that he could scarcely rise.
-
-“Club! Club! Got--have club!” he panted, hoarsely. And espying one
-along the edge of the stream, he plunged to secure it. This moment gave
-the rattlesnake time to get ahead. Wildly Adam rushed back, brandishing
-the club. His tall gaunt form, bent forward, grew overbalanced as he
-moved, and he made a long fall, halfway across the stream. He got up
-and reached the snake in time to prevent it from escaping under some
-brush.
-
-Then he swung the club. It was not easy to hit the snake crawling
-between stones. And the club was of rotten wood. It broke. With the
-blunt end Adam managed to give his victim a blow that retarded its
-progress.
-
-Adam let out a hoarse yell. Something burst in him--a consummation
-of the instinct to kill and the instinct to survive. There was no
-difference between them. Hot and mad and weak, he staggered after the
-crippled snake. The chase had transformed the whole internal order of
-him. He was starving to death, and he smelled the blood of fresh meat.
-The action infuriated him and the odor maddened him. Not far indeed
-was he then from the actual seizing of that deadly serpent in his bare
-hands.
-
-But he tripped and fell again in a long forward plunge. It brought
-him to the sand almost on top of the snake. And here the rattlesnake
-stopped to coil, scarcely two feet from Adam’s face.
-
-Adam tried to rise on his hands. But his strength had left him. And
-simultaneously there left him the blood madness of that chase to kill
-and eat. He realized his peril. The rattlesnake would strike him.
-Adam had one flashing thought of the justice of it--one sight of the
-strange, cold, deadly jewel eyes, one swift sense of the beauty and
-magnificent spirit of this reptile of the desert, and then horror
-possessed him. He froze to his marrow. The icy mace of terror had
-stunned him. And with it had passed the flashing of his intelligence.
-He was only a fearful animal, fascinated by another, dreading death by
-instinct. And as he collapsed, sagging forward, the rattlesnake struck
-him in the face with the stinging blow of a red-hot iron. Then Adam
-fainted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-When Adam recovered consciousness he imagined he was in a dream.
-
-But a dragging, throbbing pain in his face seemed actuality enough to
-discredit any illusions of slumber. It was shady where he lay or else
-his eyes were dimmed. Presently he made out that he reclined under one
-of the palm-thatched roofs.
-
-“I’ve been moved!” he cried, with a start. And that start, so full of
-pain and queer dragging sensations as of a weighted body, brought back
-memory to him. His mind whirled and darkened. The sickening horror of
-close proximity to the rattlesnake, its smell and color and deadly
-intent, all possessed Adam again. Then it cleared away. What had
-happened to him? His hand seemed to have no feeling; just barely could
-he move it to his face, where the touch of wet cloth bandages told a
-story of his rescue by some one. Probably the Indians had returned. It
-had been the whistle of a horse that had thrilled him.
-
-“I’ve--been--saved!” whispered Adam, and he grew dizzy. His eyes
-closed. Dim shapes seemed to float over the surface of his mind; and
-there were other strange answerings of his being to this singular
-deliverance.
-
-Then he heard voices--some low, and others deep and guttural. Voices of
-Indians! How strong the spirit of life in him! “I--I wasn’t ready--to
-die,” he whispered. Gleams of sunlight low down, slanting on the palm
-leaves, turning them to gold, gave him the idea that the time was near
-sunset. In the corner of the hut stood ollas and bags which had not
-been there before, and on the ground lay an Indian blanket.
-
-A shadow crossed the sunlit gleams. An Indian girl entered. She had
-very dark skin and straight hair as black as night. Upon seeing Adam
-staring at her with wide-open eyes she uttered a cry and ran out. A
-hubbub of low voices sounded outside the shack. Then a tall figure
-entered; it was that of an Indian, dressed in the ragged clothes of a
-white man. He was old, his dark bronze face like a hard, wrinkled mask.
-
-“How?” he asked, gruffly, as he bent over Adam. He had piercing black
-eyes.
-
-“All right--good,” replied Adam, trying to smile. He sensed kindliness
-in this old Indian.
-
-“White boy want dig gold--get lost--no grub--heap sick belly?” queried
-the Indian, putting a hand on Adam’s flat abdomen.
-
-“Yes--you bet,” replied Adam.
-
-“Hahh! Me Charley Jim--heap big medicine man. Me fix um. Snake bite no
-hurt.... White boy sick bad--no heap grub--long time.”
-
-“All right--Charley Jim,” replied Adam.
-
-“Hahh!” Evidently this exclamation was Charley Jim’s expression for
-good. He arose and backed away to the opening that appeared blocked by
-dark-skinned, black-haired Indians. Then he pointed at one of them.
-Adam saw that he indicated the girl who had first come to him. She
-appeared very shy. Adam gathered the impression that she had been the
-one who had saved him.
-
-“Charley Jim, who found me--who saved me from that rattlesnake?”
-
-The old Indian understood Adam well enough. He grinned and pointed
-at the young girl, and pronounced a name that sounded to Adam like,
-“Oella.”
-
-“When? How long ago? How many days?” asked Adam.
-
-Charley Jim held up three fingers, and with that he waved the other
-Indians from the opening and went out himself.
-
-Adam was left to the bewildered thoughts of a tired and hazy mind. He
-had no strength at all, and the brief interview, with its excitement,
-and exercise of voice, brought him near the verge of unconsciousness.
-He wavered amid dim shadows of ideas and thoughts. When that condition
-passed, he awoke to dull, leaden pain in his head. And his body felt
-like an empty sack the two sides of which were pasted together flat.
-
-The sunlit gleams vanished and the shades of evening made gloom
-around him. He smelled fragrant wood smoke, and some other odor, long
-unfamiliar, that brought a watery flow to his mouth and a prickling as
-of many needles. Then in the semidarkness one of the Indians entered
-and knelt beside him. Adam distinguished the face of the girl, Oella.
-She covered him with a blanket. Very gently she lifted his head, and
-moved her body so that it would support him. The lifting hurt Adam;
-he seemed to reel and sway, and a blackness covered his sight. The
-girl held him and put something warm and wet between his lips. She
-was trying to feed him with a stick or a wooden spoon. The act of
-swallowing made his throat feel as if it was sore. What a slow process!
-Adam rather repelled than assisted his nurse, but his antagonism was
-purely physical and involuntary. Whatever the food was, it had no taste
-to him. The heat of it, however, and the soft, wet sensation, grew
-pleasant. He realized when hunger awakened again in him, for it was
-like a shot through his vitals.
-
-Then the girl laid him back, spread the blanket high, and left him.
-The strange sensation of fullness, of movement inside Adam’s breast,
-occupied his mind until drowsiness overcame him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another day awakened Adam to the torture of reviving hunger and its
-gnawing pains, so severe that life seemed unwelcome. The hours were
-weary and endless. But next day was not so severe, and thereafter
-gradually he grew better and was on the road to a slow recovery.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Indians that had befriended Adam were of a family belonging to the
-Coahuila tribe. Charley Jim appeared to be a chief of some degree,
-friendly toward the whites, and nomadic in spirit, as he wandered from
-oasis to oasis. He knew Dismukes, and told Adam that the prospector
-and he had found gold up this canyon. Charley Jim’s family consisted
-of several squaws, some young men, two girls, of whom Oella was the
-younger, and a troop of children, wild as desert rats.
-
-Adam learned from Charley Jim that the head of this canyon contained
-a thicket of mesquite trees, the beans of which the Indians prized
-as food. Also there were abundant willows and arrowweeds, with which
-wood the Indians constructed their huge, round, basket granaries. The
-women of the family pounded the mesquite beans into meal or flour,
-which was dampened and put away for use. Good grass and water in this
-remote canyon were further reasons why Charley Jim frequented it. But
-he did not appear to be a poor Indian, for he had good horses, a drove
-of burros, pack outfits that were a mixture of Indian and prospector
-styles, and numerous tools, utensils, and accouterments that had been
-purchased at some freighting post.
-
-Adam was so long weak, and dependent upon Oella, that when he did
-grow strong enough to help himself the Indian girl’s habit of waiting
-upon him and caring for him was hard to break. She seemed to take it
-for granted that she was to go on looking after him; and the fineness
-and sensitiveness of her, with the strong sense of her delight in
-serving him, made it impossible for Adam to offend her. She was shy and
-reserved, seldom spoke, and always maintained before him a simplicity,
-almost a humility, as of servant to master. With acquaintance, too, the
-still, dark, impassive face of her had become attractive to look at,
-especially her large, black, inscrutable eyes, soft as desert midnight.
-They watched Adam at times when she imagined he was unaware of her
-scrutiny, and the light of them then pleased Adam, and perturbed him
-also, reminding him of what an old aunt had told him once, “Adam, my
-boy, women will always love you!” The prophecy had not been fulfilled,
-Adam reflected with sadness, and in Oella’s case he concluded his
-fancies were groundless.
-
-Still, he had to talk to somebody or grow into the desert habit of
-silence, and so he began to teach Oella his language and to learn hers.
-The girl was quick to learn and could twist her tongue round his words
-better than he could round hers. Moreover, she learned quickly anything
-he cared to teach her; and naturally even in the desert there were
-customs into which Adam preferred to introduce something of the white
-man’s way. Indians were slovenly and dirty, and Adam changed this in
-Oella’s case. The dusky desert maiden had little instinctive vanities
-that contact with him developed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One day, when the summer was waning and Adam was getting about on his
-feet, still a gaunt and stalking shadow of his former self, but gaining
-faster, the old Indian chief said:
-
-“White man heap strong--ride--go away soon?”
-
-“No, Charley Jim, I want stay here,” replied Adam.
-
-“Hahh!” replied the Indian, nodding.
-
-“Me live here--work with Indian. White man no home--no people. He like
-Indian. He work--hunt meat for Indian.”
-
-“Heap sheep,” replied Charley Jim, with a slow, expressive wave of his
-hand toward the mountain peaks.
-
-“Charley Jim take white man’s money, send to freight post for gun,
-shells, clothes, flour, bacon--many things white man need?”
-
-“Hahh!” The chief held up four fingers and pointed west, indicating
-what Adam gathered was four days’ ride to a freighting post.
-
-“Charley Jim no tell white men about me.”
-
-The Indian took the money with grave comprehension, and also shook the
-hand Adam offered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Indian boys who rode away to the freighting post on the river were
-two weeks in returning. To celebrate the return of the boys Adam
-suggested a feast and that he would bake the bread and cook the bacon.
-Oella took as by right the seat of honor next to Adam, and her habitual
-shyness did not inhibit a rather hearty appetite. On this occasion Adam
-finally got the wild little half-naked dusky children to come to him.
-They could not resist sweets.
-
-A shining new rifle, a Winchester .44, was the cynosure of all eyes in
-that Indian encampment. When Adam took it out to practice, the whole
-family crowded around to watch, with the intense interest of primitive
-people who marveled at the white man’s weapon. Only the little children
-ran from the sharp reports of the rifle, and they soon lost their fear.
-Whenever Adam made a good shot it was Oella who showed pride where the
-others indicated only their wonder.
-
-Thus the days of simplicity slipped by, every one of which now added
-to Adam’s fast-returning strength. Flour and bacon quickly built up
-his reduced weight; and as for rice and dried fruits, they were so
-delicious to Adam that he feared it would not be a great while before
-he must needs send for more. He remembered the advice of Dismukes anent
-the value of his money.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hot summer became a season of the past. The withering winds ceased
-to blow. In the early autumn days Adam began his hunting. Charley Jim
-led the way, keeping behind a fringe of mesquite, out to a gray expanse
-of desert, billowy and beautiful in the ruddy sunlight. They crawled
-through sage to the height of a low ridge, and from here the chief
-espied game. He pointed down a long gray slope, but Adam could see only
-a monotonous beauty, spotted by large tufts of sage and here and there
-a cactus. Then the Indian took Adam’s sombrero, and the two scarfs
-he had, one red and one blue, and tied them round the hat, which he
-elevated upon a stick. After that he bent his falcon gaze on the slope.
-Adam likewise gazed, with infinite curiosity, thrill, and expectation.
-
-“Hahh!” grunted Charley Jim, presently, and his sinewy dark hand
-clutched Adam. Far down vague gray spots seemed to move. Adam strained
-his eyes. It seemed a long time till they approached close enough to
-distinguish their species.
-
-“Antelope, by jiminy!” ejaculated Adam, in excitement.
-
-“Heap jiminy--you bet!” responded Charley Jim.
-
-Adam was experiencing that thrill to its utmost, and also other
-sensations of wonder and amaze. Was it possible these wild-looking
-desert creatures were actually so curious about the brightly decked
-sombrero that they could not resist approaching it to see what it was?
-There they came, sleek, tawny-gray, alert, deerlike animals, with
-fine pointed heads, long ears, and white rumps. The bold leader never
-stopped at all. But some of his followers hesitated, trotted to and
-fro, then came on. How graceful they were! How suggestive of speed and
-wildness! Adam’s finger itched to shoot off the gun and scare them to
-safety. “Fine hunter, I am!” he muttered. “This is murder.... Why on
-earth does a man have to eat meat?” The Indian beside him was all keen
-and strung with his instincts and perhaps they were truer to the needs
-of human life.
-
-Soon, however, all of Adam’s sensations were blended in a thrilling
-warmth of excitement. The antelope were already within range, and had
-it not been for Charley Jim’s warning hand Adam would not have been
-able to resist the temptation to fire. Perhaps he would have missed
-then, for he certainly shook in every muscle, as a man with the ague.
-Adam forced himself to get the better of this spell of nerves.
-
-“Heap soon!” whispered Charley Jim, relaxing the pressure of his hand
-on Adam. The leader approached to within fifty feet, with several
-other antelope close behind, when the Indian whistled. Like statues
-they became. Then Adam fired. The leader fell, and also one of those
-behind him. The others flashed into gray speeding shapes, with rumps
-darting white; and Adam could only stare in admiring wonder at their
-incomparable swiftness.
-
-“Hahh!” ejaculated the chief, in admiration. “White man heap
-hunter--one shoot--two bucks. Him eye like eagle!”
-
-Thus did a lucky shot by Adam, killing two antelope when he had aimed
-at only one, initiate him into his hunting on the desert and win for
-him the Indian sobriquet of Eagle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And so began Adam’s desert education. He had keen appreciation of
-his good fortune in his teacher. The Coahuila chief had been born on
-that desert and he must have been nearly sixty years old. As a hunter
-he had the eye of a mountain sheep, the ear of a deer, the nose of a
-wolf. He had been raised upon meat. He loved the stalking of game.
-Thus Adam, through this old Indian’s senses and long experience and
-savage skill, began to see the life of the desert. It unfolded before
-his eyes, manifold in its abundance, infinitely strange and marvelous
-in its ferocity and ability to survive. Adam learned to see as the
-Indian, and had his own keen mind to analyze and weigh and ponder. But
-his knowledge came slowly, painfully, hard earned, in spite of its
-thrilling time-effacing quality.
-
-In those wonderful autumn days Adam learned that the antelope could
-go long without water, that nature had endowed it with great speed to
-escape the wolves and cats of the desert, that from its prominent eyes
-it could see in any direction, that its coloring was the protective
-gray of the sage plains.
-
-He learned that the lizard could change its color like the chameleon,
-adapting itself to the color of the rock upon which it basked in the
-sun, that it could dart across the sands almost too swiftly for the eye
-to follow.
-
-He learned that the gray desert wolf was a king of wolves, living high
-in the mountains and coming down to the flats; and there, by reason of
-his wonderfully developed strength and speed, chasing and killing his
-prey in the open.
-
-He learned that the coyote was an eater of carrion, of rabbits and
-rats, of bird’s eggs, of mesquite beans, of anything that happened to
-come its way--a gray, skulking, cunning beast, cowardly as the wolf was
-brave, able, like the antelope and the jack rabbit, to live without
-water, and best adapted of all beasts to the desert.
-
-He learned that the jack rabbit survived through the abnormal
-development of his ears and legs--the first extraordinarily large
-organs built to catch sound, and the latter long, strong members that
-enable him to run with ease away from his foes. And he learned that the
-cottontail rabbit lived in thickets near holes into which he could pop,
-and that his fecundity in reproducing his kind saved his species from
-extinction.
-
-Adam learned about the desert ants, the kangaroo rats, the trade rats,
-the horned toads, the lizards, the snakes, the spiders, the bees, the
-wasps--the way they lived and what they lived upon. How marvelously
-nature adapted them to their desert environment, each perfect, each
-in its place, each fierce and self-sufficient, each fulfilling its
-mysterious destiny of sacrificing its individual life to the survival
-of its species! How cruel nature was to the individual--how devoted to
-the species!
-
-Adam learned that the same fierce life of all desert creatures was
-likewise manifested in the life of the plants. By thorns and poison
-sap and leafless branches, and by roots penetrating far and deep, and
-by organs developed to catch and store water, so the plants of the
-desert outwitted the beasts and endured the blasting sun and drought.
-How beyond human comprehension was the fact that a cactus developed a
-fluted structure less exposed to heat--that a tree developed a leaf
-that never presented its broad surface to the sun!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The days passed, with ruddy sunrises, white, glaring, solemn noons,
-and golden sunsets. The simplicity and violence of life on the desert
-passed into Adam’s being. The greatness of stalking game came to him
-when the Indian chief took him to the heights after bighorn sheep; but
-it was not the hunting and killing of this wariest and finest of wild
-beasts, wonderful as it was, that constituted for Adam something great.
-It was the glory of the mountain heights. All his life he had dreamed
-of high places, those to which he could climb physically and those that
-he aspired to spiritually. Lost indeed were hopes of the latter, but of
-the former he had all-satisfying fulfillment. Adam dated his changed
-soul from the day he first conquered the heights. There, on top of the
-Chocolate range, his keen sight, guided by the desert eyes of the old
-Indian, ranged afar over the gray valleys and red ranges to the Rio
-Colorado, down the dim wandering line of which he gazed, to see at last
-Picacho, a dark, purple mass above the horizon. From the moment Adam
-espied this mountain he suffered a return of memory and a sleepless
-and eternal remorse. The terrible past came back to him; never again,
-he divined, to fade while life lasted. His repentance, his promise to
-Dismukes, his vow to himself, began there on the heights with the winds
-sweet and strong in his face and the dark blue of the sky over his
-head, and beneath the vast desert, illimitable on all sides, lonely and
-grand, the abode of silence.
-
-The days passed into months. Far to the north the dominating peaks
-of San Jacinto and San Gorgonio took on the pure-white caps of snow,
-that slowly spread, as the days passed, down the rugged slopes. Winter
-abided up there. But on the tops of the Chocolate and Chuckwalla ranges
-no snow fell, although the winter wind sometimes blew cold and bleak.
-Adam loved the wind of the heights. How cold and pure, untainted by
-dust or life or use! He grew to have the stride of a mountaineer. And
-the days passed until that one came in which the old Indian chief let
-Adam hunt alone. “Go, Eagle!” he said, with sorrow for his years and
-pride in the youth of his white friend. “Go!” And the slow gestures of
-his long arms were as the sailing movement of the wings of an eagle.
-
-The days passed, and few were they that did not see Adam go out in the
-sweet, cool dawn, when the east glowed like an opal, to climb the
-bronze slope, sure footed as a goat, up and up over the bare ridges
-and through the high ravines where the lichens grew and a strange,
-pale flower blossomed, on and on over the jumble of weathered rock
-to the heights. And there he would face the east with its glorious
-burst of golden fire, and spend the last of that poignant gaze on the
-sunrise-crowned glory of old Picacho. The look had the meaning of a
-prayer to Adam, yet it was like a blade in his heart. In that look he
-remembered his home, his mother, his brother, and the vivid days of
-play and love and hope, his fateful journey west, his fall and his
-crime and his ruin. Alone on the heights, he forced that memory to be
-ever more vivid and torturing. Hours he consecrated to remorse, to
-regret, to suffering, to punishment. He lashed his soul with bitter
-thoughts, lest he forget and find peace. Life and health and strength
-had returned to him in splendid growing measure which he must use to
-pay his debt.
-
-But there were others hours. He was young. Red blood throbbed in
-his veins, and action sent that blood in a flame over his eager
-body. To stride along the rocky heights was something splendid. How
-free--alone! It connected Adam’s present hour with a remote past he
-could not comprehend. He loved it. He was proud that the Indians
-called him Eagle. For to watch the eagles in their magnificent flights
-became a passion with him. The great blue condors and the grisly
-vultures and the bow-winged eagles--all were one and the same to him,
-indistinguishable from one another as they sailed against the sky,
-sailing, sailing so wondrously, with never a movement of wings, or
-shooting across the heavens like thunderbolts, or circling around and
-upward to vanish in the deep blue. There were moments when he longed
-to change his life to that of an eagle, to find a mate and a nest on
-a lofty crag, and there, ringed by the azure world above and with the
-lonely barren below, live with the elements.
-
-Here on the heights Adam was again visited by that strange sensation,
-inexplicable and illusive and fast fleeting, which had been born in
-him one lonely hour in the desert below. Dismukes had told him how men
-were lured by the desert and how they all had their convictions as to
-its cause, and how they missed the infinite truth.
-
-“It will come to me!” cried Adam as he faced the cool winds.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Stalking mountain sheep upon the mighty slopes was work to make a man.
-It was a wild and perilous region of jagged ridges and bare slants and
-loose slopes of weathered rocks. The eyes of the sheep that lived at
-this height were like telescopes; they had the keenest sight of all
-wild beasts. The marvelous organ of vision stood out on the head as if
-it were the half of a pear, so that there was hardly an angle of the
-compass toward which a sheep could not see. Like the antelope, mountain
-sheep were curious and could be lured by a bright color and thereby
-killed. But Adam learned to abhor this method. He pitted his sight and
-his strength and endurance against those of the sheep. In this way he
-magnified the game of hunting. His exhaustion and pain and peril he
-welcomed as lessons to the end that his knowledge and achievement must
-be in a measure what Dismukes might have respected. Failure to Adam was
-nothing but a spur to renewed endeavor. The long climb, the crumbling
-ledge, the slipping rock, the deceitful distance, the crawl over sharp
-rocks, the hours of waiting--these too he welcomed as one who had set
-himself limitless tasks. Then when he killed a ram and threw it over
-his shoulder to carry it down the mountain, he found labor which was
-harder even than the toil of the gold mill at Picacho. To stride erect
-with a rifle in one hand, and a hold upon a heavy sheep with the other,
-down the slippery ledges, across the sliding banks, over the cracked
-and rotten lava, from the sunset-lighted heights to the gloomy slopes
-below--this was how in his own estimation he must earn and keep the
-respect of the Indians. They had come to look up to the white man they
-called Eagle. He taught them things to do with their hands, work of
-white men which bettered their existence, and he impressed them the
-more by his mastery of some of their achievements.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The days passed into months. Summer came again and the vast oval bowl
-of desert glowed in the rosy sunrise, glared in the white noon hours,
-and burned at sunset. The moving heat veils smoked in rippling clouds
-over the Salton Sink; the pale wavering line of the Superstition
-Mountains changed mysteriously with each day; the fog clouds from
-the Pacific rolled over to lodge against the fringed peaks. Time did
-not mean anything to the desert, though it worked so patiently and
-ceaselessly in its infinite details. The desert might have worked for
-eternity. Its moments were but the months that were growing into years
-of Adam’s life. Again he saw San Jacinto and San Gorgonio crowned with
-snow that gleamed so white against the blue.
-
-Once Charley Jim showed Adam a hole in the gravel and sand of a gulley,
-where Dismukes had dug out a pocket of gold. Adam gathered that the
-Indian had brought Dismukes here. “White man gold mad,” said the chief.
-“No happy, little gold. Want dig all--heap hog--dam’ fool!”
-
-So Charley Jim characterized Dismukes. Evidently there had been some
-just cause, which he did not explain, for his bringing Dismukes into
-this hidden canyon. And also there was some significance in his
-bringing Adam there. Many had been the rewards of Charley Jim and his
-family for saving and succoring Adam.
-
-“Indian show Eagle heap gold,” said Charley Jim, and led him to another
-gully opening down into the canyon. In the dry sand and gravel of this
-wash Adam found gold. The discovery gave him a wonderful thrill. But it
-did not drive him mad. Adam divined in the dark, impassive face of his
-guide something of the Indian’s contempt for a white man’s frenzy over
-gold.
-
-Then the chief said in his own tongue that the Indian paid his debt to
-friend and foe, good for good and evil for evil--that there were white
-men to whom he could trust the secret treasures of the desert.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The day came when something appeared to stimulate the wandering spirit
-of the Coahuila chief. Taking his family and Adam, he began a nomadic
-quest for change of scene and work and idleness. The life suited Adam,
-for he knew Charley Jim did not frequent the trails of white men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-No time so swiftly fleeting as days and nights out in new and strange
-places of the desert! Adam kept track of time by the coming and going
-of the white crowns of snow on the peaks, and by the green and gold and
-then barren gray of the cottonwoods.
-
-Like coming home was it to get back to the oasis in the canyon of the
-Chocolate range. Adam loved the scene of his torture. Every stone,
-every tree, was a familiar friend, and seemed to whisper welcome to
-him. Here also had passed the long, long months of mental anguish.
-On this flat rock he had sat a whole day in hopeless pain. In this
-sandy-floored aisle of palms he had walked hour by hour, through many
-weary days, possessed by the demon of remorse.
-
-Best of all, out there reached the gray, endless expanse of desert, so
-lonely and melancholy and familiar, extending away to the infinitude
-of purple distance; and there loomed the lofty, bare heights of rock
-which, when he scaled them as an Indian climbing to meet his spirits,
-seemed to welcome him with sweet, cold winds in his face. How he
-thrilled at sight of the winding gleam of the Rio Colorado! What a
-shudder, as keen and new a pang as ever, wrenched him at sight of
-Picacho! It did not change. Had he expected that? It towered there in
-the dim lilac colors of the desert horizon, colossal and commanding,
-immutable and everlasting, like the sin he had committed in its shadow.
-
-Somewhere in the shadow of that doomed and turreted peak lay the grave
-of his brother Guerd.
-
-“I’ll go back some day!” whispered Adam, and the spoken words seemed
-the birth of a long-germinating idea. Picacho haunted him. It called
-him. It was the place that had given the gray color and life to his
-destiny. And suddenly into his memory flashed an image of Margarita.
-Poor, frail, dusky-eyed girl! She had been but the instrument of his
-doom. He held her guiltless--long ago he had forgiven her. But memory
-of her hurt. Had she not spoken so lightly of what he meant to hold
-sacred? “Ah, señor--so long ago and far away!” Faithless, mindless,
-soulless! Adam would never forget. Never a sight of a green _palo
-verde_ but a pang struck through his breast!
-
-At sunset the old chief came to Adam, somber and grave, but with
-dignity and kindness tempering the seriousness of his aspect. He spoke
-the language of his people.
-
-“White man, you are of the brood of the eagle. Your heart is the heart
-of an Indian. Take my daughter Oella as your wife.”
-
-Long had Adam feared this blow, and now it had fallen. He had tried to
-pay his debt, but it could not be paid.
-
-“No, chief, the white man cannot marry Oella. He has blood upon his
-hands--a price on his head. Some day--he might have to hang for his
-crime. He cannot be dishonest with the Indian girl who saved him.”
-
-Perhaps the chief had expected that reply, but his inscrutable face
-showed no feeling. He made one of his slow, impressive gestures--a wave
-of his hand, indicating great distance and time; and it meant that Adam
-was to go.
-
-Adam dropped his head. That decree was irrevocable and he knew it was
-just. While he packed for a long journey twilight stole down upon the
-Indian encampment. Adam knew, when he faced Oella in the shadow of the
-palms, that she had been told. Was this the Indian maiden who had been
-so shy, so strange? No, this seemed a woman of full, heaving breast,
-whose strong, dark face grew strained, whose magnificent eyes, level
-and piercing, searched his soul. How blind he had been! All about
-her seemed eloquent of woman’s love. His heart beat with quick, heavy
-throbs.
-
-“Oella, your father has ordered me away,” said Adam. “I am an outcast.
-I am hunted. If I made you my wife it might be to your shame and
-sorrow.”
-
-“Stay. Oella is not afraid. We will hide in the canyons,” she said.
-
-“No. I have sinned. I have blood on my hands. But, Oella, I am not
-dishonorable. I will not cheat you.”
-
-“Take me,” she cried, and the soft, deep-toned, passionate voice shook
-Adam’s heart. She would share his wanderings.
-
-“Good-by, Oella,” he said, huskily. And he strode forth to drive his
-burro out into the lonely, melancholy desert night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-The second meeting between Adam and the prospector Dismukes occurred at
-Tecopah, a mining camp in the Mohave Desert.
-
-The mining camp lay in a picturesque valley where green and gray
-growths marked the course of the gravel-lined creek, and sandy benches
-spread out to dark, rocky slopes, like lava, that heaved away in the
-bleak ranges.
-
-It was in March, the most colorful season in the Mohave, that Adam
-arrived at Tecopah to halt on a grassy bench at the outskirts of the
-camp. A little spring welled up here and trickled down to the creek. It
-was drinking water celebrated among desert men, who had been known to
-go out of their way to drink there. The telltale ears of Adam’s burros
-advised him of the approach of some one, and he looked up from his camp
-tasks to find a familiar figure approaching him. He rubbed his eyes.
-Was that strange figure the same as the one so vividly limned on his
-memory? Squat, huge, grotesque, the man coming toward him was Dismukes!
-His motley, patched garb, his old slouch hat, his boots yellow with
-clay and alkali, appeared the same he had worn on the memorable day
-Adam’s eyes had unclosed to see them.
-
-Dismukes drove his burros up to the edge of the bench, evidently having
-in mind the camp site Adam occupied. When he espied Adam he hesitated
-and, gruffly calling to the burros, he turned away.
-
-“Hello, Dismukes!” called Adam. “Come on. Plenty room to camp here.”
-
-The prospector halted stolidly and slowly turned back. “You know me?”
-he asked, gruffly, as he came up.
-
-“Yes, I know you, Dismukes,” replied Adam, offering his hand.
-
-“You’ve got the best of me,” said Dismukes, shaking hands. He did not
-seem a day older, but perhaps there might have been a little more
-gray in the scant beard. His great ox eyes, rolling and dark, bent a
-strange, curious glance over Adam’s lofty figure.
-
-“Look close. See if you can recognize a man you befriended once,”
-returned Adam. The moment was fraught with keen pain and a melancholy
-assurance of the changes time had made. Strong emotion of gladness,
-too, was stirring deep in him. This was the man who had saved him and
-who had put into his mind the inspiration and passion to conquer the
-desert.
-
-Dismukes was perplexed, and a little ashamed. His piercing gaze was
-that of one who had befriended many men and could not remember.
-
-“Stranger, I give it up. I don’t know you.”
-
-“Wansfell,” said Adam, his voice full.
-
-Dismukes stared. His expression changed, but it was not with
-recognition.
-
-“Wansfell! Wansfell!” he ejaculated. “I know that name.... Hell, yes!
-I’ve heard of you all over the Mohave!... I’m sure glad to meet you....
-But, I never met you before.”
-
-The poignancy of that meeting for Adam reached a climax in the absolute
-failure of Dismukes to recognize him. Last and certain proof of
-change! The desert years had transformed Adam Larey, the youth, into
-the man Wansfell. For the first moment in all that time did Adam feel
-an absolute sense of safety. He would never be recognized, never be
-apprehended for his crime. He seemed born again.
-
-“Dismukes, how near are you to getting all your five hundred thousand?”
-queried Adam, with a smile. There seemed to be a sad pleasure in thus
-baffling the old prospector.
-
-“By Gad! how’d you know about that?” exclaimed Dismukes.
-
-“You told me.”
-
-“Say, Wansfell! Am I drunk or are you a mind reader?” demanded the
-prospector, bewildered. “Comin’ along here I was thinkin’ about that
-five hundred thousand. But I never told anyone--except a boy once--an’
-he’s dead.”
-
-“How about your white-faced burro Jinny--the one that used to steal
-things out of your pack?” asked Adam, slowly.
-
-“Jinny! Jinny!” ejaculated Dismukes, with a start. His great ox eyes
-dilated and something of shock ran through his huge frame. “That burro
-I never forgot. I gave her away to a boy who starved on the desert. She
-came back to me. Tracked me to Yuma.... An’ you--you--how’d you know
-Jinny?... Man, who are you?”
-
-“Dismukes, I was the boy you saved--down under the Chocolates--ninety
-miles from Yuma. Remember ... it was Jinny saw me wandering in a
-circle, mad with thirst. You saved me--gave me Jinny and a pack--told
-me how to learn the desert--sent me to the Indians.... Dismukes, I was
-that boy. I am now--Wansfell.”
-
-The prospector seemed to expand with the increased strain of his gaze
-into Adam’s eyes, until the instant of recognition.
-
-“By God! I know you now!” he boomed, and locked his horny hands on Adam
-in a gladness that was beyond the moment and had to do, perhaps, with
-a far-past faith in things. “I thought you died on the desert. Jinny’s
-comin’ back seemed proof of that.... But you lived! You--that boy, tall
-as a mescal plant--with eyes of agony.... I never forgot.... An’ now
-you’re Wansfell!”
-
-“Yes, my friend. Life is strange on the desert,” replied Adam. “And
-now unpack your burros. Make camp with me here. We’ll eat and talk
-together.”
-
-A sunset, rare on the Mohave, glowed over the simple camp tasks of
-these men who in their wanderings had met again. Clouds hung along the
-mountain tops, colored into deeper glory as the sun sank. The dark
-purples had an edge of silver, and the fleecy whites turned to pink
-and rose, while golden rays shot up from behind the red-hazed peaks.
-Over the valley fell a beautiful and transparent light, blending and
-deepening until a shadow as blue as the sea lay on Tecopah.
-
-While the men ate their frugal repast they talked, each gradually
-growing used to a situation that broke the desert habit of
-silence. There was an unconscious deference of each man toward the
-other--Wansfell seeing in Dismukes the savior of his life and a teacher
-who had inspired him to scale the heights of human toil and strife;
-Dismukes finding in Wansfell a development of his idea, the divine
-spirit of man rising above the great primal beasts of the desert,
-self-preservation and ferocity.
-
-“Wansfell, have you kept track of time?” asked Dismukes, reflectively,
-as he got out a black, stumpy pipe that Adam remembered.
-
-“No. Days and weeks glide into years--that’s all I can keep track of,”
-replied Adam.
-
-“I never could, either. What is time on the desert? Nothin’.... Well,
-it flies, that’s sure. An’ it must be years since I met you first down
-there in the Colorado. Let’s see. Three times I went to Yuma--once to
-Riverside--an’ twice to San Diego. Six trips inside. That’s all I’ve
-made to bank my money since I met you. Six years. But, say, I missed a
-year or so.”
-
-“Dismukes, I’ve seen the snows white on the peaks eight times. Eight
-years, my friend, since Jinny cocked her ears that day and saved me.
-How little a thing life is in the desert!”
-
-“Eight years!” echoed Dismukes, and wagged his huge shaggy head. “It
-can’t be.... Well, well, time slips away.... Wansfell, you’re a young
-man, though I see gray over your temples. And you can’t have any more
-fear because of that--that crime you confessed to me. Lord! man, no one
-would ever know you as that boy!”
-
-“No fear that way any more. But fear of myself, Dismukes. If I went
-back to the haunts of men I would forget.”
-
-“Ah yes, yes!” sighed Dismukes. “I understand. I wonder how it’ll be
-with me when my hour comes to leave the desert. I wonder.”
-
-“Will that be long?”
-
-“You can never tell. I might strike it rich to-morrow. Always I dream
-I’m goin’ to. It’s the dream that keeps a prospector nailed to the
-lonely wastes.”
-
-Indeed, this strange man was a dreamer of dreams. Adam understood him
-now, all except that obsession for just so much gold. It seemed the
-only flaw in a great character. But the fidelity to that purpose was
-great as it was inexplicable.
-
-“Dismukes, you had a third of your stake when we met years ago. How
-much now?”
-
-“More than half, Wansfell, safe in banks an’ some hid away,” came the
-answer, rolling and strong. What understanding of endless effort abided
-in that voice!
-
-“A quarter of a million! My friend, it is enough. Take it and
-go--fulfill your cherished dream. Go before it’s too late.”
-
-“I’ve thought of that. Many times when I was sick an’ worn out with the
-damned heat an’ loneliness I’ve tempted myself with what you said. But,
-no. I’ll never do that. It’s the same to me now as if I had no money at
-all.”
-
-“Take care, Dismukes,” warned Adam. “It’s the gaining of gold--not what
-it might bring--that drives you.”
-
-“Ah! _Quien sabe_, as the Mexicans say?... Wansfell, have you learned
-the curse--or it may be the blessing--of the desert--what makes us
-wanderers of the wastelands?”
-
-“No. I have not. Sometimes I feel it’s close to me, like the feeling
-of a spirit out there on the lonely desert at night. But it’s a great
-thing, Dismukes. And it is linked to the very beginnings of us. Some
-day I’ll know.”
-
-Dismukes smoked in silence, thoughtful and sad. The man’s forceful
-assurance and doggedness seemed the same, yet Adam sensed a subtle
-difference in him, beyond power to define. The last gold faded from the
-bold domes of the mountains, the clouds turned gray, the twilight came
-on as a stealthy host. And from across the creek came discordant sounds
-of Tecopah awakening to the revelry of a gold diggings by night.
-
-“How’d you happen along here?” queried Dismukes, presently.
-
-“Tecopah was just a water hole for me,” replied Adam.
-
-“Me, too. An’ I’m sure sayin’ that I like to fill my canteens here.
-Last year I camped here, an’ when I went on I kept one of my canteens
-so long the water spoiled.... Found some gold trace up in the Kingston
-range, but my supplies ran low an’ I had to give up. My plan now is
-to go in there an’ then on to the Funeral Mountains. They’re full of
-mineral. But a dry, hard, poison country for a prospector. Do you know
-that country?”
-
-“I’ve been on this side of the range.”
-
-“Bad enough, but the _other_ side of the Funerals is Death Valley. That
-gash in summer is a blastin’, roarin’ hell. I’ve crossed it every month
-in the year. None but madmen ever tackle Death Valley in July, in the
-middle of the day. I’ve seen the mercury go to one hundred and forty
-degrees. I’ve seen it one hundred and twenty-five at midnight, an’,
-friend, when them furnace winds blow down the valley at night sleep
-or rest is impossible. You just gasp for life.... But strange to say,
-Wansfell, the fascination of the desert is stronger in Death Valley
-than at any other place.”
-
-“Yes, I can appreciate that,” replied Adam, thoughtfully. “It must be
-the sublimity of death and desolation--the terrible loneliness and
-awfulness of the naked earth. I am going there.”
-
-“So I reckoned. An’ see here, Wansfell, I’ll get out my pencil an’ draw
-you a little map of the valley, showin’ my trails an’ water holes.
-I know that country better than any other white man. It’s a mineral
-country. The lower slope of the Funerals is all clay, borax, soda,
-alkali, salt, niter, an’ when the weather’s hot an’ that stuff blows on
-the hot winds, my God! it’s a horror! But you’ll want to go through it
-all an’ you’ll go back again.”
-
-“Where do you advise me to go in?”
-
-“Well, I’d follow the Amargosa. It’s bad water, but better than none.
-Go across an’ up into the Panamints, an’ come back across again by
-Furnace Creek. I’ll make you a little map. There’s more bad water than
-good, an’ some of it’s arsenic. I found the skeletons of six men near
-an arsenic water hole. Reckon they’d come on this water when bad off
-for thirst an’ didn’t know enough to test it. An’ they drank their
-fill an’ died in their tracks. They had gold, too. But I never could
-find out anythin’ about these men. No one ever heard of them an’ I was
-the only man who knew of the tragedy. Well, well, it’s common enough
-for me, though I never before run across so many dead men. Wansfell,
-I reckon you’ve found that common, too, in your wanderings--dried-up
-mummies, yellow as leather, or bleached bones an’ grinnin’ skull, white
-in the sun?”
-
-“Yes, I’ve buried the remains of more than one poor devil,” replied
-Adam.
-
-“Is it best to bury them? I let them lay as warnin’ to other poor
-devils. No one but a crazy man would drink at a water hole where there
-was a skeleton.... Well, to come back to your goin’ to Death Valley.
-I’d go in by the Amargosa. It’s a windin’ stream an’ long, but safe.
-An’ there’s firewood an’ a little grass. Now when you get across the
-valley you’ll run into prospectors an’ miners an’ wanderers at the
-water holes. An’ like as not you’ll meet some of the claim jumpers
-an’ robbers that live in the Panamints. From what I hear about you,
-Wansfell, I reckon a meetin’ with them would be a bad hour for them,
-an’ somethin’ of good fortune to honest miners. Hey?”
-
-“Dismukes, I don’t run from men of that stripe,” replied Adam, grimly.
-
-“Ahuh! I reckon not,” said Dismukes, just as grimly. “Well, last time I
-was over there--let’s see, it was in September, hotter ’n hell, an’ I
-run across two queer people up in a canyon I’d never prospected before.
-Didn’t see any sign of any other prospectors ever bein’ in there....
-Two queer people--a man an’ a woman livin’ in a shack they’d built
-right under the damnedest roughest slope of weathered rock you ever saw
-in your life. Why, it was a plain case of suicide, an’ so I tried to
-show them! Every hour you could hear the crack of a rollin’ bowlder or
-the graty slip of an avalanche, gettin’ oneasy an’ wantin’ to slide.
-But the woman was deathly afraid of her husband an’ he was a skunk an’
-a wolf rolled into a man, if I ever saw one. I couldn’t do anythin’
-for the poor woman, an’ I couldn’t learn any more than I’m tellin’
-you. That’s not much. But, Wansfell, she wasn’t a common sort. She’d
-been beautiful once. She had the saddest face I ever saw. I got two
-feelin’s, one that she wasn’t long for this earth, an’ the other that
-the man hated her with a terrible hate.... I meet with queer people
-an’ queer situations as I wander over this desert, but here’s the beat
-of all my experience. An’, Wansfell, I’d like to have you go see that
-couple. I reckon they’ll be there, if alive yet. He chose a hidden
-spot, an’ he has Shoshone Indians pack his supplies in from the ranches
-way on the other side of the Panamints. A queer deal, horrible for that
-poor woman, an’ I’ve been haunted by her face ever since. I’d like you
-to go there.”
-
-“I’ll go. But why do you say that, Dismukes?” asked Adam, curiously.
-
-“Well--you ought to know what your name means to desert men,” replied
-Dismukes, constrainedly, and he looked down at the camp fire, to push
-forward a piece of half-burnt wood.
-
-“No, I never heard,” said Adam. “I’ve lived ’most always alone. Of
-course I’ve had to go to freighting posts and camps. I’ve worked in
-gold diggings. I’ve guided wagon trains across the Mohave. Naturally,
-I’ve been among men. But I never heard that my name meant anything.”
-
-“Wansfell! I remember _now_ that you called yourself Wansfell. I’ve
-heard that name. Some of your doings, Wansfell, have made camp-fire
-stories. See here, Wansfell, you won’t take offense at me.”
-
-“No offense, friend Dismukes,” replied Adam, strangely affected. Here
-was news that forced him to think of himself as a man somehow related
-to and responsible to his kind. He had gone to and fro over the trails
-of the desert, and many adventures had befallen him. He had lived
-them, with the force the desert seemed to have taught him, and then
-had gone his way down the lonely trails, absorbed in his secret. The
-years seemed less than the blowing sand. He had been an unfortunate boy
-burdened with a crime; he was now a matured man, still young in years,
-but old with the silence and loneliness and strife of the desert, gray
-at the temples, with that old burden still haunting him. How good to
-learn that strange men spoke his name with wonder and respect! He had
-helped wanderers as Dismukes had helped him; he had meted out desert
-violence to evil men who crossed his trail; he had, doubtless, done
-many little unremembered deeds of kindness in a barren world where
-little deeds might be truly overappreciated; but the name Wansfell
-meant nothing to him, the reputation hinted by Dismukes amazed him,
-strangely thrilled him; the implication of nobility filled him with
-sadness and remorse. What had he done with the talents given him?
-
-“Wansfell, you see--you’re somethin’ of the man I might have been,”
-said Dismukes, hesitatingly.
-
-“Oh no, Dismukes,” protested Adam. “You are a prospector, honest and
-industrious, and wealthy now, almost ready to enjoy the fruits of
-your long labors. Your life has a great object.... But I--I am only a
-wanderer of the wasteland.”
-
-“Aye, an’ therein lies your greatness!” boomed the prospector, his
-ox eyes dilating and flaring. “I am a selfish pig--a digger in the
-dirt for gold. My passion has made me pass by men, an’ women, too, who
-needed help. Riches--dreams!... But you--you, Wansfell--out there in
-the loneliness an’ silence of the wastelands--you have found God!... I
-said you would. I’ve met other men who had.”
-
-“No, no,” replied Adam. “You’re wrong. I don’t think I’ve found God.
-Not yet!... I have no religion, no belief. I can’t find any hope out
-there in the desert. Nature is pitiless, indifferent. The desert is but
-one of her playgrounds. Man has no right there. No, Dismukes, I have
-not found God.”
-
-“You have, but you don’t know it,” responded Dismukes, with more
-composure, and he began to refill a neglected pipe. “Well, I didn’t
-mean to fetch up such talk as that. You see, when I do fall in with a
-prospector once in a month of Sundays I never talk much. An’ then it’d
-be to ask him if he’d seen any float lately or panned any color. But
-you’re different. You make my mind work. An’, Wansfell, sometimes I
-think my mind has been crowded with a million thoughts all cryin’ to
-get free. That’s the desert. A man’s got to fight the desert with his
-intelligence or else become less than a man. An’ I always did think a
-lot, if I didn’t talk.”
-
-“I’m that way, too,” replied Adam. “But a man should talk when he gets
-a chance. I talk to my burros, and to myself, just to hear the sound of
-my voice.”
-
-“Ah! Ah!” exclaimed Dismukes, with deep breath. He nodded his shaggy
-head. Adam’s words had struck an answering chord in his heart.
-
-“You’ve tried for gold here?” queried Adam.
-
-“No. I was here first just after the strike, an’ often since. Water’s
-all that ever drew me. I’d starve before I’d dig for gold among a pack
-of beasts. I may be a desert wolf, but I’m a lone one.”
-
-“They’re coyotes and you’re the gray wolf. I liken ’most every man I
-meet to some beast or creature of the desert.”
-
-“Aye, you’re right. The desert stamps a man. An’, Wansfell, it’s
-stamped you with the look of a desert eagle. Ha-ha! I ain’t flatterin’
-to either of us, am I? Me a starved gray wolf, huntin’ alone, mean an’
-hard an’ fierce! An’ you a long, lean-headed eagle, with that look
-of you like you were about to strike--_pong!_... Well, well, there’s
-no understandin’ the work of the desert. The way it develops the
-livin’ creatures! They all have to live, an’ livin’ on the desert is a
-thousand times harder than anywhere else. They all have to be perfect
-machines for destruction. Each seems so swift that he gets away, yet
-each is also so fierce an’ sure that he catches his prey. They live
-on one another, but the species doesn’t die out. That’s what stumps
-me about the desert. Take the human creatures. They grow fiercer than
-animals. Maybe that’s because nature did not intend man to live on the
-desert. An’ it is no place for man. Nature intended these classes of
-plants an’ these species of birds an’ beasts to live, fight, thrive,
-an’ reproduce their kind on the desert. But men can’t thrive nor
-reproduce their kind here.”
-
-“How about the Indians who lived in the desert for hundreds of years?”
-asked Adam.
-
-“What’s a handful of Indians? An’ what’s a few years out of the
-millions of years that the desert’s been here, just as it is now?
-Nothin’--nothin’ at all! Wansfell, there will be men come into the
-desert, down there below the Salton Sink, an’ in other places where
-the soil is productive, an’ they’ll build dams an’ storage places for
-water. Maybe a lot of fools will even turn the Colorado River over
-the desert. They’ll make it green an’ rich an’, like the Bible says,
-blossom as a rose. An’ these men will build ditches for water, an’
-reservoirs an’ towns an’ cities, an’ cross the desert with railroads.
-An’ they’ll grow rich an’ proud. They’ll think they’ve conquered it.
-But, poor fools! they don’t know the desert! Only a man who has lived
-with the desert much of his life can ever know. Time will pass an’ men
-will grow old, an’ their sons an’ grandsons after them. A hundred an’
-a thousand years might pass with fruitfulness still in the control of
-man. But all that is only a few grains of time in all the endless sands
-of eternity. The desert’s work will have been retarded for a little
-while. But the desert works ceaselessly an’ with infinite patience.
-The sun burns, the frost cracks, the avalanche rolls, the rain
-weathers. Slowly the earth crust heaves up into mountains an’ slowly
-the mountains wear down, atom by atom, to be the sands of the desert.
-An’ the winds--how they blow for ever an’ ever! What can avail against
-the desert winds? They blow the sand an’ sift an’ seep an’ bury....
-Men will die an’ the places that knew them will know them no more. An’
-the desert will come back to its own. That is well, for it is what God
-intended.”
-
-“God and nature, then, with you are one and the same?” queried Adam.
-
-“Yes. Twenty years sleepin’ on the sand with the stars in my face has
-taught me that. Is it the same with you?”
-
-“No. I grant all that you contend for the desert and for nature. But I
-can’t reconcile nature and God. Nature is cruel, inevitable, hopeless.
-But God must be immortality.”
-
-“Wansfell, there’s somethin’ divine in some men, but not in all, nor
-in many. So how can that divinity be God? The immortality you speak
-of--that is only your life projected into another life.”
-
-“You mean if I do not have a child I will not have immortality?”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“But what of my soul?” demanded Adam, solemnly.
-
-Dismukes drooped his shaggy head. “I don’t know. I don’t know. I’ve
-gone so deep, but I can’t go any deeper. That always stumps me. I’ve
-never found my soul! Maybe findin’ my soul would be findin’ God. I
-don’t know.... An’ you, Wansfell--once I said you had the spirit an’
-mind to find God on the desert. Did you?”
-
-Adam shook his head. “I’m no farther than you, Dismukes, though I
-think differently about life and death.... I’ve fought to live on
-this wasteland, but I’ve fought hardest to think. It seems that always
-nature strikes me with its terrible mace! I have endless hours to
-look at the desert and I see what you see--the strange ferocity of it
-all--the fierce purpose. No wonder you say the desert stamps a man!”
-
-“Aye! An’ woman, too! Take this she-devil who runs a place here in
-Tecopah--Mohave Jo is the name she bears. Have you seen her?”
-
-“No, but I’ve heard of her. At Needles I met the wife of a miner,
-Clark, who’d been killed here at Tecopah.”
-
-“Never heard of Clark. But I don’t doubt the story. It’s common
-enough--miners bein’ killed an’ robbed. There’s a gang over in the
-Panamints who live on miners.”
-
-“I’m curious to see Mohave Jo,” said Adam.
-
-“Well, speakin’ of this one-eyed harridan reminds me of a man I met
-last trip across the Salton flats, down on the Colorado. Met him at
-Walters--a post on the stage line. He had only one eye, too. There was
-a terrible scar where his eye, the right one, had been. He was one of
-these Texans lookin’ for a man. There seems to be possibilities of a
-railroad openin’ up that part of the desert. An’ this fellow quizzed
-me about water holes. Of course, if any one gets hold of water in that
-country he’ll strike it rich as gold, if the country ever opens up.
-It’s likely to happen, too. Well, this man had an awful face. He’d been
-a sheriff in Texas, some one said, an’ later at Ehrenberg. Hell on
-hangin’ men!... Of course I never asked him how he lost his eye. But
-he told me--spoke of it more than once. The deformity had affected his
-mind. You meet men like that--sort of crazy on somethin’. He was always
-lookin’ for the fellow who’d knocked out his eye. To kill him!”
-
-“Do you--recall his--name?” asked Adam, his voice halting with a thick
-sensation in his throat. The past seemed as yesterday.
-
-“Never was much on rememberin’ names,” responded Dismukes,
-scratching his shaggy head. “Let’s see--why, yes, he called himself
-Collis--Collis--haw. That’s it--Collishaw. Hard name to remember. But
-as a man he struck me easy to remember.... Well, friend Wansfell, I’ve
-had enough talkin’ to do me for a spell. I’m goin’ to bed.”
-
-While Adam sat beside the fire, motionless, pondering with slow,
-painful amaze over what he had just heard, Dismukes prepared for his
-night’s rest. He unrolled a pack, spread a ragged old canvas, folded
-a blanket upon it, and arranged another blanket to pull up over him,
-together with the end of the canvas. For a pillow he utilized an old
-coat that lay on his pack. His sole concession to man’s custom of
-undressing for bed was the removal of his old slouch hat. Then with
-slow, labored movement he lay down to stretch his huge body and pull
-the coverlets over him. From his cavernous breast heaved a long, deep
-sigh. His big eyes, dark and staring, gazed up at the brightening
-stars, and then they closed.
-
-Adam felt tempted to pack and move on to a quiet and lonely place
-off in the desert, where he could think without annoyance. Keen and
-bitterly faithful as had been his memory, it had long ceased to revive
-thoughts of Collishaw, the relentless sheriff and ally of Guerd. How
-strange and poignant had been the shock of recollection! It had been
-the blow Adam had dealt--the savage fling of his gun in Collishaw’s
-face--that had destroyed an eye and caused a hideous disfigurement.
-And the Texan, with that fatality characteristic of his kind, was ever
-on the lookout for the man who had ruined his eyesight. Perhaps that
-was only one reason for his thirst for revenge. Guerd! Had Collishaw
-not sworn to hang Adam? “You’ll swing for this!” he had yelled in
-his cold, ringing voice of passion. And so Adam lived over again the
-old agony, new and strange in its bitter mockery, its vain hope of
-forgetfulness. Vast as the desert was, it seemed small now to Adam, for
-there wandered over it a relentless and bloodthirsty Texan, hunting to
-kill him. The past was not dead. The present and the future could not
-be wholly consecrated to atonement. A specter, weird and grotesque
-as a yucca tree, loomed out there in the shadows of the desert night.
-Death stalked on Adam’s trail. The hatred of men was beyond power to
-understand. Work, fame, use, health, love, home, life itself, could
-be sacrificed by some men just to kill a rival or an enemy. Adam
-remembered that Collishaw had hated him and loved Guerd. Moreover,
-Collishaw had that strange instinct to kill men--a passion which grew
-by what it fed on--a morbid mental twist that drove him to rid himself
-of the terrible haunting ghost of his last victim by killing a new one.
-Added to that was a certain leaning toward the notorious.
-
-“We’ll meet some day,” soliloquized Adam. “But he would never recognize
-me.”
-
-The comfort of that fact did not long abide in Adam’s troubled mind. He
-would recognize Collishaw. And that seemed to hold something fatalistic
-and inevitable. “When I meet Collishaw I’ll tell him who I am--and I’ll
-kill him!” That fierce whisper was the desert voice in Adam--the desert
-spirit. He could no more help that sudden bursting flash of fire than
-he could help breathing. Nature in the desert did not teach men to meet
-a threat with forgiveness, nor to wait until they were struck. Instinct
-had precedence over intelligence and humanity. In the eternal strife
-to keep alive on the desert a man who conquered must have assimilated
-something of the terrible nature of the stinging _cholla_ cactus, and
-the hard, grasping tenacity of the mesquite roots, and the ferocity of
-the wildcat, and the cruelty of the hawk--something of the nature of
-all that survived. It was a law. It forced a man to mete out violence
-in advance of that meant for him.
-
-“To fight and to think were to be my blessings,” soliloquized Adam, and
-he shook his head with a long-familiar doubt. Then he had to remember
-that no blessings of any kind whatsoever could be his. Stern and
-terrible duty to himself!
-
-So he rolled in his blankets and stretched his long body to the
-composure of rest. Sleep did not drop with soft swiftness upon his
-eyes, as it had upon those of Dismukes. He had walked far, but he was
-not tired. He never tired any more. There seemed to be no task of a
-single day that could weary his strength. And for long he lay awake,
-listening to the deep breathing of his companion, and the howl of the
-coyotes, and the sounds of Tecopah, so unnatural in the quiet of the
-desert. A sadness weighed heavily upon Adam. At first he was glad to
-have met Dismukes, but now he was sorry. A tranquillity, a veil seemed
-to have been rent. The years had not really changed the relation of his
-crime, nor materially the nature of his sin. But they had gradually,
-almost imperceptibly, softened his ceaseless and eternal remorse. By
-this meeting with Dismukes he found that time effaced shocks, blows,
-stains, just as it wore away the face of the desert rock. That, too,
-was a law; and in this Adam divined a blessing that he could not
-deny. Dismukes had unleashed a specter out of the dim glow of the
-past. Eight years! So many, and yet they were as eight days! There
-were the bright stars, pitiless and cold, and the dark bold mountains
-that had seemed part of his strength. In the deep-blue sky above and
-in the black shadow below Adam saw a white face, floating, fading,
-reappearing, mournful and accusing and appalling--a face partaking
-of the old boyish light and joy and of the godlike beauty of perfect
-manhood--the haunting face of his brother Guerd. It haunted Adam, and
-the brand of Cain burned into his brain. The old resurging pangs in
-his breast, the long sighs, the oppressed heart, the salt tears, the
-sleepless hours--these were Adam’s again, as keen as in the first days
-of his awakening down on the Colorado Desert, where from the peaks of
-the Chocolate Mountains he had gazed with piercing eyes far south to
-the purple peak--Picacho, the monument, towering above his brother’s
-grave. “Some day I’ll go back!” whispered Adam, as if answering to an
-imperative and mysterious call.
-
-The long night wore on with the heavens star-fired by its golden train,
-and the sounds at last yielding to the desert silence. Adam could see
-Dismukes, a wide, prone figure, with dark face upturned to the sky,
-a man seemingly as strange and strong as the wastelands he talked so
-much about, yet now helpless in sleep, unguarded, unconscious, wrapped
-in his deep dreams of the joy and life his gold was to bring him.
-Adam felt a yearning pity for this dreamer. Did he really love gold
-or was his passion only a dream? Whatever that was and whatever the
-man was, there rested upon his ragged, dark face a shadow of tragedy.
-Adam wondered what his own visage would reflect when he lay asleep,
-no more master of a mind that never rested? The look of an eagle? So
-Dismukes had said, and that was not the first time Adam had heard
-such comparison. He had seen desert eagles, dead and alive. He tried
-to recall how they looked, but the images were not convincing. The
-piercing eye, clear as the desert air, with the power of distance in
-the gray depths; the lean, long lines; the wild poise of head, bitter
-and ruthless and fierce; the look of loneliness--these characters
-surely could not be likened to his face. What a strange coincidence
-that Dismukes should hit upon the likeness of an eagle--the winged
-thunderbolt of the heights--the lonely bird Adam loved above all desert
-creatures! And so Adam wandered in mind until at last he fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-When Adam awoke he saw that Dismukes had breakfast steaming on the fire.
-
-“I’m on my way to-day,” announced the prospector. “What’ll you do?”
-
-“Well, I’ll hang around Tecopah as long as I can stand it,” replied
-Adam.
-
-“Humph! That won’t be long, unless you got in mind somethin’ like you
-did at the Donner Placers, down in the Providence Mountains.”
-
-“Friend, what do you know about that?” queried Adam.
-
-“Nothin’. I only heard about it.... Wansfell, do you pan any gold?”
-
-“Sometimes, when I happen to run across it,” replied Adam, “but that
-isn’t often.”
-
-“Do you work?”
-
-“Yes, I’ve worked a good deal, taking it all together. In the mines,
-on the river at Needles, driving mule teams and guiding wagon trains.
-Never got paid much, though.”
-
-“How do you live?” asked Dismukes, evidently curious.
-
-“Oh, I fare well enough to keep flesh on my bones.”
-
-“You’ve got flesh--or I reckon it’s muscle. Wansfell, you’re the
-best-built man I ever saw on the desert. Most men dry up an’ blow
-away.... Will you let me give you--lend you some money?”
-
-“Money! So that’s why you’re so curious?” responded Adam. “Thanks, my
-friend. I don’t need money. I had some, you know, when you ran across
-me down in the Chocolates. I used about a thousand dollars while I
-lived with the Coahuila Indians. And I’ve got nine thousand left.”
-
-“Say, you don’t pack all that money along with you?”
-
-“Yes. Where else would I keep it?”
-
-“Wansfell, some of these robbers will murder you.”
-
-“Not if I see them first. My friend, don’t be concerned. Surely I don’t
-look sick.”
-
-“Humph! Well, just the same, now that you’re headin’ up into this
-country, I advise you to be careful. Don’t let anybody see you with
-money. I’ve been held up an’ robbed three times.”
-
-“Didn’t you make a fight for your gold?”
-
-“No chance. I was waylaid--had to throw up my hands.... They tell me
-you are ready with a gun, Wansfell?”
-
-“Dismukes, you seem to have heard much about me.”
-
-“But you didn’t throw a gun on Baldy McKue,” said Dismukes, with a dark
-flare from his rolling eyes.
-
-“No--I did not,” replied Adam.
-
-“You killed McKue with your bare hands,” flashed Dismukes. A red stain
-appeared to come up under his leathery skin. “Wansfell, will you tell
-me about that?”
-
-“I’d rather not, Dismukes. There are _some_ things I forget.”
-
-“Well, it meant a good deal to me,” replied Dismukes. “McKue did
-me dirt. He jumped claims of mine down here near Soda Sink. An’ he
-threatened to kill me--swore the claims were his--drove me off. I met
-him in Riverside, an’ there he threatened me with arrest. He was a
-robber an’ a murderer. I believe he ambushed prospectors. McKue was
-like most men who stick to the desert--he went down to the level of the
-beast. I hated him.... This stranger who told me--he swore there wasn’t
-an uncracked bone left in McKue’s body.... Wansfell, if you did that to
-McKue you’ve squared accounts. Is it true?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Dismukes rubbed his huge hands together and his ox eyes rolled and
-dilated. A fierce and savage grimness distorted his hard face for an
-instant and passed away.
-
-“What’d you kill him for?”
-
-“Because he’d have killed me.”
-
-“Didn’t you look him up on purpose to kill him?”
-
-“No.... A year before that time I went to Goffs. Some one took me into
-an old tent where a woman lay dying. I could do little for her. She
-denounced McKue; she blamed him that she lay there, about to die. She
-did die and I buried her. Then I kept an eye open for McKue.”
-
-“I wondered--I wondered,” said Dismukes. “It struck me deep. Lord knows
-fights are common out here. An’ death--why, on the desert every way
-you turn you see death. It’s the life of the desert. But the way this
-was told me struck me deep. It was what I’d like to have done myself.
-Wansfell, think of the wonderful meetin’s of men on the desert--an’,
-aye, meetin’ of men with women, too! They happen different out here.
-Think of the first time we met! An’ this time! Wansfell, we’ll meet
-again. It’s written in those trails of sand out there, wanderin’ to an’
-fro across the desert.”
-
-“Dismukes, the desert is vast. Sometimes you will not meet a man in
-months of travel--and not in years will you meet a woman. But when you
-do meet them life seems intensified. The desert magnifies.”
-
-“Wansfell, I want you to go across into Death Valley,” declared
-Dismukes, with the deep boom in his voice. “That woman in the shack!
-Her eyes haunt me. Somethin’ terrible wrong! That man who keeps her
-there--if he’s not crazy, he’s worse than a gorilla. For a gorilla
-kills a woman quick.... Wansfell, I’d give a lot to see you handle this
-man like you handled McKue!”
-
-“_Quien sabe_, as you say?” replied Adam. “Draw that map of your trails
-in Death Valley. I’ve got a little book here, and a pencil.”
-
-It was singular to see the gold digger labor with his great, stumpy,
-calloused fingers. He took long to draw a few lines, and make a few
-marks, and write a few names in the little book. But when he came to
-talk of distance and direction, of trails and springs, of flat valley
-and mountain range--then how swift and fluent he was! All that country
-lay clearly in his mind, as if he were a great desert condor gazing
-down from the heights upon the wasteland which was his home.
-
-“Now, I’ll be goin’ down into the Funerals soon,” concluded Dismukes.
-“You see here’s Furnace Creek where it runs into Death Valley. You’ll
-cross here an’ come up Furnace Creek till you strike the yellow clay
-hills on the right. It’s a hell of a jumble of hills--absolutely bare.
-I think there’s gold. You’ll find me somewhere.”
-
-It seemed settled then that Adam and Dismukes were to meet in some
-vague place at some vague time. The desert had no limitations. Time,
-distance, and place were thought of in relation to their adaptation to
-desert men.
-
-“Well, it’s gettin’ late,” said Dismukes, looking up at the white flare
-of sun. “I’ll pack an’ go on my way.”
-
-While Dismukes strode out to drive in his burros Adam did the camp
-chores. In a short time his companion appeared with the burros trotting
-ahead of him. And the sight reminded Adam of the difference between
-prospectors. Dismukes was not slow, easy, careless, thoughtless. He had
-not suffered the strange deterioration so common to his class. He did
-not belong to the type who tracked his burros all day so that he might
-get started _mañana_. Adam helped him pack.
-
-“Wansfell, may we meet again,” said Dismukes, as they shook hands.
-
-“All trails cross on the desert. I hope you strike it rich.”
-
-“Some day--some day. Good-by,” returned Dismukes, and with vigorous
-slaps he started the burros.
-
-Adam was left to his own devices. After Dismukes passed out of sight in
-the universal gray of the benches Adam spent a long while watching a
-lizard on a stone. It was a chuckwalla, a long, slim, greenish-bronze
-reptile, covered with wonderful spots of vivid color, and with eyes
-like jewels. Adam spent much time watching the living things of the
-desert, or listening to the silence. He had discovered that watching
-anything brought its reward--sometimes in a strange action or a
-phenomenon of nature or a new thought.
-
-Later he walked down to the creek bottom where the smelter was in
-operation. Laborers were at a premium there, and he was offered work.
-He said he would consider it. But unless there turned out to be some
-definite object to keep him in Tecopah, Adam would not have bartered
-his freedom to the dust-clouded mill for all the gold it mined. These
-clanging mills and hot shafts and dark holes oppressed him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-The long-deferred hour at last arrived in which Adam, on a ruddy-gold
-dawn in early April, drove his burros out into the lonesome desert
-toward the Amargosa. He did not look back. Tecopah would not soon
-forget Wansfell! That was his grim thought.
-
-The long, drab reaches of desert, the undulating bronze slopes waving
-up to the dark mountains, called to him in a language that he felt. If
-Adam Larey--or Wansfell, wanderer of the wasteland, as he had come to
-believe himself--had any home, it was out in the vast open, under the
-great white flare of sunlight and the star-studded canopy of night.
-
-This was a still morning in April, and the lurid sun, bursting above
-the black escarpment to the east, promised a rising temperature. Day
-by day the heat had been increasing, and now, at sunrise, the smoky
-heat veils were waving up from the desert floor. For Adam the most
-torrid weather had no terrors, and the warmth of a morning like this
-felt pleasant on his cheek. He had been confined to one place, without
-action, for so long that now, as he began to feel the slow sweat burn
-pleasantly on his body, there came a loosening of his muscles, a
-relaxing of tension, a marshaling, as it were, of his great forces of
-strength and endurance. The gray slopes beyond did not daunt him. His
-stride was that of a mountaineer, and his burros had to trot to keep
-ahead of him.
-
-And as Adam’s body gradually responded to this readjustment to the
-desert and its hard demands, so his mind seemed to slough off, layer
-by layer, the morbid, fierce, and ruthless moods that like lichens
-had fastened upon it. The dry, sweet desert air seemed to permeate
-his brain and clear it of miasmas and shadows. He was free. He was
-alone. He was self-sufficient. The desert called. From far beyond
-that upheaved black and forbidding range, the Funeral Mountains,
-something strange, new, thrilling awaited his coming. The strife of the
-desert had awakened in him a craving to find the unattainable. He had
-surmounted all physical obstacles. He would conquer Death Valley; he
-would see it in all its ghastliness; he would absorb all its mysteries;
-he would defy to the limit of endurance its most fatal menaces to life.
-
-In the afternoon Adam rounded a corner of a league-long sloping
-mesa and gazed down into the valley of the Amargosa. It looked the
-bitterness, the poison, and the acid suggested by its Spanish name. The
-narrow meandering stream gleamed like silver in the sunlight. Mesquite
-and other brush spotted its gravelly slopes and sandy banks. Adam
-headed down into the valley. The sun was already westering, and soon,
-as he descended, it hung over the ragged peaks. He reached the creek.
-The burros drank, but not with relish. Adam gazed at the water of the
-Amargosa with interest. It was not palatable, yet it would save life.
-
-Adam set about the camp tasks long grown second nature with him, and
-which were always congenial and pleasant. He built a fire of dead
-mesquite. Then he scoured his oven with sand, and greased it. He had
-a heavy pan which did duty as a gold-pan, a dish-pan, and a wash-pan.
-This he half filled with flour, and, adding water, began to mix the
-two. He had gotten the dough to about the proper consistency when a
-rustling in the brush attracted his attention. He thought he caught a
-glimpse of a rabbit. Such opportunity for fresh meat was rare on the
-desert. Hastily wiping his hands, he caught up his gun and stole out
-into the aisle between the mesquites. As luck would have it, he did
-espy a young cottontail, and was fortunate enough to make a good shot.
-Returning to camp, he made sudden discovery of a catastrophe.
-
-Jennie had come out of her nap, if, indeed, she had not been shamming
-sleep, and she had her nose in the dish-pan. She was eating the dough.
-
-“Hyar, you camp robber!” yelled Adam, making for her.
-
-Jennie jerked up her head. The dough stuck to her nose and the pan
-stuck to the dough. She eluded Adam, for she was a quick and nimble
-burro. The pan fell off, but the ball of dough adhered to her mouth
-and nose, and as she ran around camp in a circle it was certain that
-she worked her jaws, eating dough as fast as she could. Manifestly for
-Jennie, here was opportunity of a lifetime. When finally Adam did catch
-her the dough was mostly eaten. He gave her a cuff and a kick which she
-accepted meekly, and, drooping her ears, she apparently fell asleep
-again.
-
-While Adam was at his simple meal the sun set, filling the valley with
-red haze and tipping with gold the peaks in the distance. The heat
-had gone with the sun. He walked to and fro in the lonely twilight.
-Jennie had given up hope of any more opportunity to pilfer, and had
-gone to grazing somewhere down the stream. There was absolutely no
-sound. An infinite silence enfolded the solitude. It was such solitude
-as only men of Adam’s life could bear. To him it was both a blessing
-and a curse. But to-night he had an all-pervading and all-satisfying
-power. He seemed to be growing at one with the desert and its elements.
-After a while the twilight shadows shaded into the blackness of night,
-and the stars blazed. Adam had been conscious all day of the gradual
-relaxing of strain, and now in the lonely solitude there fell away from
-him the feelings and thoughts engendered at Tecopah.
-
-“Loneliness and silence and time!” he soliloquized, as he paced his
-sandy beat. “These will cure any trouble--any disease of mind--any
-agony of soul. Ah! I know. I never forget. But how different now to
-remember!... That must be the secret of the power of the desert over
-men. It is the abode of solitude and silence. It is like the beginning
-of creation. It is like an eternity of time.”
-
-By the slow healing of the long-raw wound in his heart Adam had come
-to think of time’s relation to change. Memory was still as poignant as
-ever. But a change had begun in him--a change he divined only after
-long months of strife. Dismukes brought a regurgitation of the old
-pain; yet it was not quite the same. Eight years! How impossible to
-realize that, until confronted by physical proofs of the passing of
-time! Adam saw no clear and serene haven for his wandering spirit, but
-there seemed to be a nameless and divine promise in the future. His
-steps had not taken hold of hell. He had been driven down the naked
-shingles of the desert, through the storms of sand, under the infernal
-heat and bitter cold, like a man scourged naked, with screaming furies
-to whip the air at his ears. And, lo! time had begun to ease his
-burden, soften the pain, dim the past, change his soul.
-
-The moment was one of uplift. “I have my task,” he cried, looking high
-to the stars. “Oh, stars--so serene and pitiless and inspiring--teach
-me to perform that task as you perform yours!”
-
-He would go on as he had begun, fighting the desert and its barrenness,
-its blasting heat, its evil influences, wandering over these wastelands
-that must be his home; and he would stake the physical prowess of
-him to yet harder, fiercer tasks of toil, driving his spirit to an
-intenser, whiter flame. If the desert could develop invincible energy
-of strength in a man, he would earn it. If there were a divinity
-in man, infinitely beyond the beasts of the desert and the apes of
-the past, a something in mysterious affinity with that mighty being
-he sensed out there in the darkness, then he would learn it with a
-magnified and all-embracing consciousness.
-
-Adam went to his bed on the warm sands complete in two characters--a
-sensing, watching, listening man like the savage in harmony with the
-nature of the elements around him, and a feeling, absorbed, and
-meditating priest who had begun to divine the secrets beyond the
-dark-shadowed, starlit desert waste.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam’s first sight of Death Valley came at an early morning hour, as he
-turned a last curve in the yawning canyon he had descended.
-
-He stood in awe.
-
-“Oh, desolation!” he cried. And it seemed that, as the shock of the
-ghastliness beneath him passed, he remembered with flashing vividness
-all that had come to him in his long desert wanderings, which seemed
-now to cumulate its terrible silence, desolation, death, and decay in
-this forbidding valley.
-
-He remembered the origin of that name--Death Valley. In 1849, when
-the California gold frenzy had the world in its grip, seventy Mormon
-gold seekers had wandered into this red-walled, white-floored valley,
-where sixty-eight of them perished. The two that escaped gave this
-narrow sink so many hundred feet below sea level the name Death Valley!
-Many and many another emigrant and prospector and wanderer, by his
-death from horrible thirst and blasting heat and poison-dusted wind
-and destroying avalanche and blood-freezing cold, had added to the
-significance of that name and its dreadful fame. On one side the valley
-was shadowed by the ragged Funeral range; on the other by the red and
-gloomy Panamints. Furnace Creek, the hot stream that came down from the
-burning slopes; and Ash Meadow, the valley floor, gray and dead, like
-the bed of a Dead Sea; and the Devil’s Chair, a huge seat worn by the
-elements in the red mountain wall, where the death king of the valley
-watched over his fiends--these names were vivid in Adam’s mind along
-with others given by prospectors in uncouth or eloquent speech. “She’s
-a hummer in July,” said one; and another, “Salty lid of hell”; and
-still another, “Valley of the white shadow of death.”
-
-Death Valley was more than sixty miles long and from seven to twelve
-wide. No two prospectors had ever agreed on these dimensions, although
-all had been in perfect harmony as to its hellish qualities. Death
-was the guardian of the valley and the specter that patrolled its
-beat. Mineral wealth was the irresistible allurement which dared men
-to defy its terrors. Gold! Dismukes himself had claimed there were
-ledges of gold quartz, and Dismukes was practical and accurate. Many
-fabulous stories of gold hung on the lips of wandering prospectors.
-The forbidding red rocks held jewels in their hard confines--garnets,
-opals, turquoises; there were cliffs of marble and walls of onyx. The
-valley floor was a white crust where for miles and miles there was
-nothing but salt and borax. Beds of soda, of gypsum, of niter, of
-sulphur, abounded in the vaster fields of other minerals. It was a
-valley where nature had been prodigal of her treasures and terrible
-in her hold upon them. But few springs and streams flowed down into
-this scoriac sink, and of these all were heavily impregnated with
-minerals, all unpalatable, many sour and sulphuric, some hot, a few of
-them deadly poison. In the summer months the heat sometimes went to
-one hundred and forty-five degrees. The furnace winds of midnight were
-withering to flesh and blood. And sometimes the air carried invisible
-death in shape of poison gas or dust. In winter, sudden changes of
-temperature, whirling icy winds down upon a prospector who had gone to
-sleep in warmth, would freeze him to death. Avalanches rolled down the
-ragged slopes and cloudbursts carried destruction.
-
-Adam got his bearings, according to the map made by Dismukes, and set
-out from the mouth of the canyon to cross the valley. A long sandy
-slope dotted by dwarfed mesquites extended down to the bare, crinkly
-floor of the valley, from which the descent to a lower level was
-scarcely perceptible. When Adam’s burros early in the day manifested
-uneasiness and weariness there was indeed rough going. The sand had
-given way to a hard crust of salt or borax, and little dimples and
-cones made it difficult to place a foot on a level. Some places the
-crust was fairly hard; in others it cracked and crunched under foot.
-The color was a mixture of a dirty white and yellow. Far ahead Adam
-could see a dazzling white plain that resembled frost on a frozen river.
-
-Adam proceeded cautiously behind the burros. They did not like the
-travel, and, wary little beasts that they were, they stepped gingerly
-in places, as if trying their weight before trusting it upon the
-treacherous-looking crust. Adam felt the beat of the sun upon him,
-and the reflection of heat from the valley floor. He had been less
-oppressed upon hotter days than this. The sensations he began to have
-here were similar to those he had experienced in the Salton Sink,
-where he had gone below sea level. The oppression seemed to be a blood
-pressure, as if the density of the air closed tighter and heavier
-around his body.
-
-At last the burros halted. Adam looked up from the careful task of
-placing his feet to see that he had reached a perfectly smooth bed of
-salt, glistening as if it were powdered ice. This was the margin of
-the place that from afar had looked like a frozen stream. Stepping
-down upon it, Adam found that it trembled and heaved with his weight,
-but upheld him. There was absolutely no sign to tell whether the next
-yard of surface would hold him or not. Still, from what he had gone
-over he believed he could trust the rest. As he turned to retrace his
-steps he saw his tracks just as plainly in the salt as if they had been
-imprinted in snow. He led Jennie out, and found that, though her hoofs
-sank a little, she could make it by stepping quickly. She understood as
-well as he, and when released went on of her own accord, anxious to get
-the serious job over. Adam had to drive the other burro. The substance
-grew softer as Adam progressed, and in the middle of that glistening
-stream it became wet and sticky. The burros labored through this lowest
-level of the valley, which fortunately was narrow.
-
-On the other side of it extended a wide flat of salt and mud, very
-rough, upheaved as if it had boiled and baked to a crust, then cracked
-and sunk in places. Full of holes and pitfalls, and rising in hummocks
-gnarled and whorled like huge sea shells, it was an exceedingly
-toilsome and dangerous place to travel. The crust continually crumpled
-under the hoofs of the burros, and gave forth hollow sounds, as if a
-bottomless cavern ran under the valley floor. As Adam neared the other
-side he encountered thin streams of water that resembled acid. It was
-necessary to find narrow places in these and leap across. Beyond these
-ruts in the crust began an almost imperceptible rise of the valley
-floor, which in the course of a couple of miles led out of the broken,
-choppy sea of salt to a sand-and-gravel level. How relieved Adam was
-to reach that! He had been more concerned for the safety of the burros
-than for his own.
-
-It was now hot enough for Adam to imagine something of what a
-formidable place this valley would be in July or August. On all sides
-the mountains stood up dim and obscure and distant in a strange haze.
-Low down, the heat veils lifted in ripples, and any object at a
-distance seemed illusive. The last hour taxed Adam’s endurance, though
-he could have gone perhaps as far again across the lavalike crust. When
-he reached the slope that led up to the base of the red mountains he
-halted the burros for a rest. The drink he took then was significant,
-for it was the fullest he had taken in years. He was hot and wet; his
-eyes smarted and his feet burned.
-
-When Adam had rested he consulted the map, and found that he must
-travel up the slope and to the west to gain the black buttress of rock
-that was his objective point. And considering how dim it looked through
-the haze, he concluded he had better be starting. One moment, however,
-he gave to a look at the Funeral range which he had come through, and
-which now loomed above the valley, a magnificent and awe-inspiring
-upheaval of the earth. The lower and nearer heights were marked on
-Dismukes’ map as the Calico Mountains, and indeed their many colors
-justified the name. Beyond and above them towered the Funerals,
-spiked and peaked, ragged as the edge of a saw, piercing the blue sky,
-a gloomy and black-zigzagged and drab-belted range of desolation and
-grandeur. Adam’s gaze slowly shifted westward to the gulf, a hazy void,
-a vast valley with streaked and ridged and canyoned slopes inclosing
-the abyss into which veils of rain seemed dropping. Broken clouds had
-appeared in the west, pierced by gold and red rays, somewhat dulled by
-the haze. Adam was amazed to realize the day was far spent. That scene
-up the valley of death was confounding. He gazed spellbound, and every
-second saw more and different aspects. How immense, unreal, weird!
-
-He got up from the stone seat that had almost burned through his
-clothes, and bent his steps westward, driving the wearying burros
-ahead of him. Three miles toward the black buttressed corner he wanted
-to gain before dark--so his experienced desert eyes calculated the
-distance. But this was Death Valley. No traveler of the desert had ever
-correctly measured distance in this valley of shadows and hazes and
-illusions. He was making three miles an hour. Yet at the end of an hour
-he seemed just as far away as ever. Another hour was full of deceits
-and misjudgments. But at the end of the third he reached the black
-wall, and the line that had seemed a corner was the mouth of a canyon.
-
-Adam halted, as if at the gateway of the unknown. The sun was setting
-behind the mountains that now overhung him, massive and mighty, a
-sheer, insurmountable world of rock which seemed to reach to the ruddy
-sky. Wonderful shadows were falling, purple and blue low down, rosy and
-gold above; and the canyon smoked with sunset haze.
-
-The map of Dismukes marked the canyon, and a spring of water just
-beyond its threshold, and also the shack where the strange man and
-woman lived under the long slant of weathered rock. Adam decided not to
-try to find the location that night, so he made dry camp.
-
-Darkness found him weary and oppressed. The day had seemed short, but
-the distance long. Tired and sleepy as he was, when he lay down in his
-bed he felt a striking dissimilarity of this place to any other he
-had known on the desert. How profound the silence! Had any sound ever
-pervaded it? All was gloom and shadow below, with black walls rising to
-star-fretted sky as blue as indigo. The valley seemed to be alive. It
-breathed, yet invisibly and silently. Indeed, there was a mighty being
-awake out there in the black void. Adam could not believe any man and
-woman lived up this canyon. Dismukes had dreamed. Had not Adam heard
-from many prospectors how no white woman could live in Death Valley? He
-had been there only a day, yet he felt that he could understand why it
-must be fatal to women. But it was not so because of heat and poison
-wind and cataclysms of nature, for women could endure those as well as
-men. But no woman could stand the alterations of terror and sublimity,
-of beauty and horror. That which was feminine in Adam shuddered at a
-solitude that seemed fitting to a burned-out world. He was the last of
-his race, at the end of its existence, the strongest finally brought to
-his doom, and to-morrow the earth would be sterile--thus Adam’s weary
-thoughts passed into dreams.
-
-He awakened somewhat later than usual. Over the Funeral range the sun
-was rising, a coalescing globule of molten fire, enormous and red,
-surrounded by a sky-broad yellow flare. This sunrise seemed strangely
-closer to the earth and to him than any sunrise he had ever watched.
-The valley was clear, still, empty, a void that made all objects
-therein look small and far away. After breakfast Adam set out to find
-his burros.
-
-This high-walled opening did not appear to be a canyon, but a space
-made by two mountain slopes running down to a wash where water flowed
-at some seasons. Beyond the corners there opened what seemed to be a
-gradually widening and sloping field, gray with rocks and sand and
-stunted brush, through the center of which straggled a line of gnarled
-mesquites, following the course of the wash. Adam found his burros
-here, Jennie asleep as usual, and Jack contentedly grazing.
-
-The cracking of a rock rolling down a rough slope thrilled Adam. He
-remembered what Dismukes had said about the perilous location of the
-shack where the man and woman lived under the shadow of a weathering
-mountain. Adam turned to look across the space in the direction whence
-the sound had come.
-
-There loomed a mighty mountain slope, absolutely destitute of plants,
-a gray, drab million-faceted ascent of rocks. Adam strode toward it,
-gradually getting higher and nearer through the rock-strewn field. It
-had looked so close as to seem magnified. But it was a goodly distance.
-Presently he espied a rude shack. He halted. That could not be what he
-was searching for. Still, it must be. Adam had not expected the place
-to be so close to Death Valley. It was not a quarter of a mile distant
-from the valley and not a hundred feet higher than the lowest sink
-hole, which was to say that this crude, small structure lay in Death
-Valley and below sea level.
-
-Adam walked on, growing more curious and doubtful. Surely this hut
-had been built and abandoned by some prospector. Yet any prospector
-could have built a better abode than this. None but a fool or a knave
-would have selected that perilous location. The ground began to slope
-a little and become bare of brush, and was dotted here and there with
-huge bowlders that looked as if they had rolled down there recently.
-No sign of smoke, no sign of life, no sign of labor--absence of these
-strengthened Adam’s doubt of people living there. Suddenly he espied
-the deep track of a man’s foot in the sand. Adam knelt to study it.
-“Made yesterday,” he said.
-
-He rose with certainty. Dismukes had been accurate as to direction,
-though his distances had been faulty. Adam gazed beyond the shack, to
-right, and then left. He espied a patch of green mesquites and hummocks
-of grass. There was the water Dismukes had marked. Then Adam looked up.
-
-A broad belt of huge bowlders lay beyond the shack, the edge of the
-talus, the beginning of the base of a mountain-side, wearing down,
-weathering away, cracking into millions of pieces, every one of which
-had both smooth and sharp surfaces. This belt was steep and fan
-shaped, spreading at the bottom. As it sloped up it grew steeper,
-and the rocks grew smaller. It had the flow of a glacier. It was an
-avalanche, perhaps sliding inch by inch and foot by foot, all the
-time. The curved base of the fan extended for a couple of miles, in
-the distance growing rounded and symmetrical in its lines. It led up
-to a stupendous mountain abutment, dull red in color, and so seamed
-and cracked and fissured that it had the crisscross appearance of a
-rock of net, or numberless stones of myriad shapes pieced together by
-some colossal hand, and now split and broken, ready to fall. Yet this
-rugged, bold, uneven surface of mountain wall shone in the sunlight.
-It looked as if it had been a solid mass of granite shattered by some
-cataclysm of nature. Above this perpendicular splintered ruin heaved
-up another slope of broken rocks, hanging there as if by magic, every
-one of the endless heaps of stones leaning ready to roll. Frost and
-heat had disintegrated this red mountain. What history of age was
-written there! How sinister that dull hue of red! No beauty shone
-here, though the sun gleamed on the millions of facets. The mountain
-of unstable rock towered dark and terrible and forbidding even in the
-broad light of day. What held that seamed and lined and sundered mass
-of rock together! For what was it waiting? Only time, and the law of
-the desert! Even as Adam gazed a weathered fragment loosened from the
-heights, rolled off the upper wall, pitched clear into the air, and
-cracked ringingly below, to bound and hurtle down the lower slope,
-clapping less and less until it ceased with a little hollow report.
-That was the story of the mountain. By atom and by mass it was in
-motion, working down to a level. Bowlders twice as large as the shack,
-weighing thousands of tons, had rolled down and far out on the field.
-Any moment another might topple off the rampart and come hurtling down
-to find the shack in its path. Some day the whole slope of loose rock,
-standing almost on end, would slide down in avalanche.
-
-“Well,” muttered Adam, darkly, “any man who made a woman live there was
-either crazy or meant her to have an awful death.”
-
-Adam strode on to the shack. It might afford shelter from sun, but not
-from rain or dust. Packsaddles and boxes were stacked on one side;
-empty cans lay scattered everywhere; a pile of mesquite, recently cut,
-stood in front of the aperture that evidently was a door; and on the
-sand lay blackened stones and blackened utensils, near the remains of a
-still smoldering fire.
-
-“Hello, inside,” called Adam, as he halted at the door. No sound
-answered. He stooped to look in, and saw bare sand floor, a rude, low
-table made of box boards, flat stones for seats, utensils and dishes,
-shelves littered with cans and bags. A flimsy partition of poles and
-canvas, with a door, separated this room from another and larger one.
-Adam saw a narrow bed of blankets raised on poles, an old valise on the
-sandy floor, woman’s garments hanging on the brush walls. He called
-again, louder this time. He saw a flash of something gray through the
-torn canvas, then heard a low cry--a woman’s voice. Adam raised his
-head and stepped back.
-
-“Elliot!... You’ve come back!” came the voice, quick, low, and
-tremulous, betokening relief from dread.
-
-“No. It’s a stranger,” replied Adam.
-
-“Oh!” The hurried exclamation was followed by soft footfalls. A woman
-in gray appeared in the doorway--a woman whose proportions were noble,
-but frail. She had a white face and large, deep eyes, strained and sad.
-“Oh--who are you?”
-
-“Ma’am, my name’s Wansfell. I’m a friend of Dismukes, the prospector
-who was here. I’m crossing Death Valley and I thought I’d call on you.”
-
-“Dismukes? The little miner, huge, like a frog?” she queried, quickly,
-with dilating eyes. “I remember. He was kind, but-- And you’re his
-friend?”
-
-“Yes, at your service, ma’am.”
-
-“Thank--God!” she cried, brokenly, and she leaned back against the
-door. “I’m in trouble. I’ve been alone--all--all night. My husband left
-yesterday. He took only a canteen. He said he’d be back for supper....
-But--he didn’t come. Oh, something has happened to him.”
-
-“Many things happen in the desert,” said Adam. “I’ll find your husband.
-I saw his tracks out here in the sand.”
-
-“Oh, can you find him?”
-
-“Ma’am, I can track a rabbit to its burrow. Don’t worry any more. I
-will track your husband and find him.”
-
-The woman suddenly seemed to be struck with Adam’s tone, or the
-appearance of him. It was as if she had not particularly noticed him
-at first. “Once he got lost--was gone two days. Another time he was
-overcome by heat--or something in the air.”
-
-“You’ve been alone before?” queried Adam, quick to read the pain of the
-past in her voice.
-
-“Alone?... Many--many lonely nights,” she said. “He’s left
-me--alone--often--purposely--for me to torture my soul here in the
-blackness.... And those rolling rocks--cracking in the dead of
-night--and----” Then the flash of her died out, as if she had realized
-she was revealing a shameful secret to a stranger.
-
-“Ma’am, is your husband just right in his mind?” asked Adam.
-
-She hesitated, giving Adam the impression that she wished to have him
-think her husband irrational, but could not truthfully say so.
-
-“Men do strange things in the desert,” said Adam. “May I ask, ma’am,
-have you food and water?”
-
-“Yes. We’ve plenty. But Elliot makes me cook--and I never learned how.
-So we’ve fared poorly. But he eats little and I less!”
-
-“Will you tell me how he came to build your hut here where, sooner or
-later, it’ll be crushed by rolling stones?”
-
-A tragic shadow darkened in the large, dark-blue eyes that Adam now
-realized were singularly beautiful.
-
-“I--He-- This place was near the water. He cut the brush here--he
-didn’t see--wouldn’t believe the danger,” she faltered. She was telling
-a lie, and did not do it well. The fine, sensitive, delicate lips,
-curved and soft, sad with pain, had not been fashioned for falsehood.
-
-“Perhaps I can make him see,” replied Adam. “I’ll go find him. Probably
-he’s lost. The heat is not strong enough to be dangerous. And he’s not
-been gone long. Don’t worry. My camp is just below. I’ll fetch him back
-to-day--or to-morrow at farthest.”
-
-She murmured some incoherent thanks. Adam was again aware of her
-penetrating glance, staring, wondering even in her trouble. He strode
-away with bowed head, searching the sand for the man’s tracks.
-Presently he struck them and saw that they led down toward the valley.
-
-To follow such a plain trail was child’s play for Adam’s desert sight,
-that had received its early training in the preservation of his life.
-He who had trailed lizards to their holes, and snakes to their rocks,
-to find them and eat or die--he was as keen as a wolf on the scent.
-This man’s trail led straight down to the open valley, out along the
-western bulge of slope, to a dry water hole.
-
-From there the footprints led down to the parapet of a wide bench,
-under which the white crust began its level monotony toward the other
-side of the valley. Different here was it from the place miles below
-where Adam had crossed. It was lower--the bottom of the bowl. Adam
-found difficulty in breathing, and had sensations like intermittent
-rushes of blood to his head. The leaden air weighed down, and, though
-his keen scent could not detect any odor, he knew there was impurity of
-some kind on the slow wind. It reminded him that this was Death Valley.
-He considered a moment. If the man’s tracks went on across the valley,
-Adam would return to camp for a canteen, then take up the trail again.
-But the tracks led off westward once more, straggling and aimless.
-Adam’s stride made three of one of these steps. He did not care about
-the heat. That faint hint of gas, however, caused him concern. For
-miles he followed the straggling tracks, westward to a heave of valley
-slope that, according to the map of Dismukes, separated Death Valley
-from its mate adjoining--Lost Valley. On the left of this ridge the
-tracks wandered up the slope to the base of the mountain and followed
-it in wide scallops. The footmarks now showed the dragging of boots,
-and little by little they appeared fresher in the sand. This wanderer
-had not rested during the night.
-
-The tracks grew deeper, more dragging, wavering from side to side. Here
-the man had fallen. Adam saw the imprints of his hands and a smooth
-furrow where evidently he had dragged a canteen across the sand. Then
-came the telltale signs of where he had again fallen and had begun to
-crawl.
-
-“Looks like the old story,” muttered Adam. “I’ll just about find him
-dying or dead.... Better so--for that woman who called him husband!...
-I wonder--I wonder.”
-
-Adam’s year of wandering had led him far from the haunts of men,
-along the lonely desert trails and roads where only a few solitary
-humans like himself dared the elements, or herded in sordid and hard
-camps; but, nevertheless, by some virtue growing out of his strife and
-adversity, he had come to sense something nameless, to feel the mighty
-beat of the heart of the desert, to hear a mourning music over the
-silent wastes--a still, sad music of humanity. It was there, even in
-the gray wastelands.
-
-He strode on with contracted eyes, peering through the hot sunlight. At
-last he espied a moving object. A huge land turtle toiling along! No,
-it was a man crawling on hands and knees.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-Adam ran with the strides of a giant. And he came up to a man, ragged
-and dirty, crawling wearily along, dragging a canteen through the sand.
-
-“Say, hold on!” called Adam, loudly.
-
-The man halted, but did not lift his head. Adam bent down to peer at
-him.
-
-“What ails you?” queried Adam, sharply.
-
-“Huh!” ejaculated the man, stupidly. Adam’s repeated question,
-accompanied by a shake, brought only a grunt.
-
-Adam lifted the man to his feet and, supporting him, began to lead
-him over the sand. His equilibrium had been upset, and, like all men
-overcome on the desert, he wanted to plunge off a straight line. Adam
-persevered, but the labor of holding him was greater than that of
-supporting him.
-
-At length Adam released the straining fellow, as much out of curiosity
-to see what he would do as from a realization that time could not
-be wasted in this manner. He did not fall, but swayed and staggered
-around in a circle, like an animal that had been struck on the head.
-The texture of his ragged garments, the cut of them, the look of the
-man, despite his soiled and unkempt appearance, marked him as one not
-commonly met with in the desert.
-
-The coppery sun stood straight overhead and poured down a strong and
-leaden heat. Adam calculated that they were miles from camp and would
-never reach it at this rate. He pondered. He must carry the man.
-Suiting action to thought, he picked him up and, throwing him over his
-shoulder, started to plod on. The weight was little to one of Adam’s
-strength, but the squirming and wrestling of the fellow to get down
-made Adam flounder in the sand.
-
-[Illustration: BUT AT LENGTH THE BURDEN OF A HEAVY WEIGHT, AND THE
-DRAGGING SAND, AND THE HOT SUN, BROUGHT ADAM TO A PASS WHERE REST WAS
-IMPERATIVE]
-
-“You poor devil!” muttered Adam, at last brought to a standstill.
-“Maybe I can’t save your life, anyway.”
-
-With that he set the man down and, swinging a powerful blow, laid him
-stunned upon the sand. Whereupon it was easy to lift him and throw him
-over a shoulder like an empty sack. Not for a long distance over the
-sand did that task become prodigious. But at length the burden of a
-heavy weight and the dragging sand and the hot sun brought Adam to a
-pass where rest was imperative. He laid the unconscious man down while
-he recovered breath and strength. Then he picked him up and went on.
-
-After that he plodded slower, rested oftener, weakened more
-perceptibly. Meanwhile the hours passed, and when he reached the huge
-gateway in the red iron mountain wall the sun was gone and purple
-shadows were mustering in the valley. When he reached the more level
-field where the thick-strewn bowlders lay, all before his eyes seemed
-red. A million needles were stinging his nerves, running like spears of
-light into his darkened sight.
-
-The limit that he had put upon his endurance was to reach the shack. He
-did so, and he was nearly blind when the woman’s poignant call thrilled
-his throbbing ears. He saw her--a white shape through ruddy haze. Then
-he deposited his burden on the sand.
-
-“Oh!” the woman moaned. “He’s dead!”
-
-Adam shook his head. Pity, fear, and even terror rang in her poignant
-cry, but not love.
-
-“Ah!... You’ve saved him, then.... He’s injured--there’s a great
-bruise--he breathes so heavily.”
-
-While Adam sat panting, unable to speak, the woman wiped her husband’s
-face and worked over him.
-
-“He came back once--and fell into a stupor like this, but not so deep.
-What can it be?”
-
-“Poison--air,” choked Adam.
-
-“Oh, this terrible Death Valley!” she cried.
-
-Adam’s sight cleared and he saw the woman, clad in a white robe
-over her gray dress, a garment clean and rich, falling in thick
-folds--strange to Adam’s sight, recalling the past. The afterglow of
-sunset shone down into the valley, lighting her face. Once she must
-have been beautiful. The perfect lines, the noble brow, the curved
-lips, were there, but her face was thin, strained, tragic. Only the
-eyes held beauty still.
-
-“You saved him?” she queried, with quick-drawn breath.
-
-“Found him--miles and miles--up the--valley--crawling on--his hands and
-knees,” panted Adam. “I had--to carry him.”
-
-“You carried him!” she exclaimed, incredulously. Then the large eyes
-blazed. “So that’s why you were so livid--why you fell?... Oh, you
-splendid man! You giant!... He’d have died out there--alone. I thank
-you with all my heart.”
-
-She reached a white worn hand to touch Adam’s with an exquisite
-eloquence of gratitude.
-
-“Get water--bathe him,” said Adam. “Have you ammonia or whisky?” And
-while he laboriously got to his knees the woman ran into the shack.
-He rose, feeling giddy and weak. All his muscles seemed beaten and
-bruised, and his heart pained. Soon the woman came hurrying out, with
-basin and towel and a little black satchel that evidently contained
-medicines. Adam helped her work over her husband, but, though they
-revived him, they could not bring him back to intelligent consciousness.
-
-“Help me carry him in,” said Adam.
-
-Inside the little shack it was almost too dark to see plainly.
-
-“Have you a light?” he added.
-
-“No,” she replied.
-
-“I’ll fetch a candle. You watch over him while I move my camp up here.
-You might change his shirt, if he’s got another. I’ll be back right
-away, and I’ll start a fire--get some supper for us.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-By the time Adam had packed and moved his effects darkness had settled
-down between the slopes of the mountains. After he had unpacked near
-the shack, his first move was to light a candle and take it to the door.
-
-“Here’s a light, ma’am,” he called.
-
-She glided silently out of the gloom, her garments gleaming ghostlike
-and her white face with its luminous eyes, dark and strange as
-midnight, looking like a woman’s face in tragic dreams. As she took the
-candle her hand touched Adam’s.
-
-“Thank you,” she said. “Please don’t call me ma’am. My name is
-Magdalene Virey.”
-
-“I’ll try to remember.... Has your husband come to yet?”
-
-“No. He seems to have fallen into a stupor. Won’t you look at him?”
-
-Adam followed her inside and saw that she marked his lofty height. The
-shack had not been built for anyone of his stature.
-
-“How tall you are!” she murmured.
-
-The candle did not throw a bright light, yet by its aid Adam made out
-the features of the man whose life he had saved. It seemed to Adam to
-be the face of a Lucifer whose fiendish passions were now restrained by
-sleep. Whoever this man was, he had suffered a broken heart and ruined
-life.
-
-“He’s asleep,” said Adam. “That’s not a trance or stupor. He’s worn
-out. I believe it’d be better not to wake him.”
-
-“You think so?” she replied, with quick relief.
-
-“I’m not sure. Perhaps if you watch him awhile you can tell.... I’ll
-get some supper and call you.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam’s habitual dexterity over camp tasks failed him this evening.
-Presently, however, the supper was ready, and he threw brush on the
-fire to make a light.
-
-“Mrs. Virey,” he called at the door, “come and eat now.”
-
-When had the camp fire of his greeted such a vision, except in his
-vague dreams? Tall, white-gowned, slender, and graceful, with the
-poise of a woman aloof and proud and the sad face of a Madonna--what
-a woman to sit at Adam’s camp fire in Death Valley! The shadowed and
-thick light hid the ravages that had by day impaired her beauty. Adam
-placed a canvas pack for her to sit upon, and then he served her, with
-something that was not wholly unconscious satisfaction. Of all men, he
-of the desert could tell the signs of hunger; and the impression had
-come to him that she was half starved. The way she ate brought home to
-Adam with a pang the memorable days when he was starving. This woman
-sitting in the warm, enhancing glow of the camp fire had an exquisitely
-spiritual face. She had seemed all spirit. But self-preservation was
-the first instinct and the first law of human nature, or any nature.
-
-“When have I eaten so heartily!” she exclaimed at last. “But, oh! it
-all tasted so good.... Sir, you are a capital cook.”
-
-“Thank you,” replied Adam, much gratified.
-
-“Do you always fare so well?”
-
-“No. I’m bound to confess I somewhat outdid myself to-night. You see, I
-seldom have such opportunity to serve a woman.”
-
-She rested her elbows on her knees, with her hands under her chin, and
-looked at him with intense interest. In the night her eyes seemed very
-full and large, supernaturally bright and tragic. They were the eyes
-of a woman who still preserved in her something of inherent faith in
-mankind. Adam divined that she had scarcely looked at him before as an
-individual with a personality, and that some accent or word of his had
-struck her singularly.
-
-“It was that miner, Dis--Dis----”
-
-“Dismukes,” added Adam.
-
-“Yes. It was he who sent you here. Are you a miner, too?”
-
-“No. I care little for gold.”
-
-“Ah!... What are you, then?”
-
-“Just a wanderer. Wansfell, the Wanderer, they call me.”
-
-“They? Who are they?”
-
-“Why, I suppose they are the other wanderers. Men who tramp over the
-desert--men who seek gold or forgetfulness or peace or solitude--men
-who are driven--or who hide. These are few, but, taken by the years,
-they seem many.”
-
-“Men of the desert have passed by here, but none like you,” she
-replied, with gravity, and her eyes pierced him. “_Why_ did you come?”
-
-“Years ago my life was ruined,” said Adam, slowly. “I chose to fight
-the desert. And in all the years the thing that helped me most was
-not to pass by anyone in trouble. The desert sees strange visitors.
-Life is naked here, like those stark mountain-sides.... Dismukes is
-my friend--he saved me from death once. He is a man who knows this
-wasteland. He told me about your being here. He said no white woman
-could live in Death Valley.... I wondered--if I might--at least advise
-you, turn you back--and so I came.”
-
-His earnestness deeply affected her.
-
-“Sir, your kind words warm a cold and forlorn heart,” she said. “But I
-cannot be turned back. It’s too late.”
-
-“No hour is ever too late.... Mrs. Virey, I’ll not distress you with
-advice or importunities. I know too well the need and the meaning
-of peace. But the fact of your being here--a woman of your evident
-quality--a woman of your sensitiveness and delicate health--why, it is
-a terrible thing! This is Death Valley. The month is April. Soon it
-will be May--then June. When midsummer comes you cannot survive here.
-I know nothing of _why_ you are here--I don’t seek to know. But you
-cannot stay. It would be a miracle for your husband to find gold here,
-if that is what he seeks. Surely he has discovered that.”
-
-“Virey does not seek gold,” the woman said.
-
-“Does he know that a white woman absolutely cannot live here in Death
-Valley? Even the Indians abandon it in summer.”
-
-“He knows. There are Shoshone Indians up on the mountains now. They
-pack supplies to us. They have warned him.”
-
-Adam could ask no more, yet how impossible not to feel an absorbing
-interest in this woman’s fate. As he sat with bowed head, watching the
-glowing and paling of the red embers, he felt her gaze upon him.
-
-“Wansfell, you must have a great heart--like your body,” she said,
-presently. “It is blessed to meet such a man. Your kindness, your
-interest, soften my harsh and bitter doubt of men. We are utter
-strangers. But there’s something in this desert that bridges time--that
-bids me open my lips to you ... a man who traveled this ghastly valley
-to serve me!... My husband, Virey, knows that Death Valley is a hell on
-earth. So do I. That is why he brought me ... that is why I came!”
-
-“My God!” breathed Adam, staring incredulously at her. Dismukes had
-prepared him for tragedy; the desert had shown him many dark and
-terrible calamities, misfortunes, mysteries; he had imagined he could
-no longer be thrown off his balance by amaze. But that a sad-eyed,
-sweet-voiced woman, whose every tone and gesture and look spoke of
-refinement and education, of a life infinitely removed from the wild
-ruggedness of the desert West--that she could intimate what seemed in
-one breath both murder and suicide--this staggered Adam’s credulity.
-
-Yet, as he stared at her, realizing the tremendous passion of will,
-of spirit, of something more than emanated from her, divining how in
-her case intellect and culture had been added to the eternal feminine
-of her nature, he knew she spoke the truth. Adam had met women on the
-desert, and all of them were riddles. Yet what a vast range between
-Margarita Arallanes and Magdalene Virey!
-
-“Won’t your husband leave--take you away from here?” asked Adam, slowly.
-
-“No.”
-
-“Well--I have a way of forcing men to see things. I suppose I----”
-
-“Useless! We have traveled three thousand miles to get to Death
-Valley. Years ago Elliot Virey read about this awful place. He was
-always interested. He learned that it was the most arid, ghastly,
-desolate, and terrible place of death in all the world.... Then,
-when he got me to Sacramento--and to Placerville--he would talk with
-miners, prospectors, Indians--anyone who could tell him about Death
-Valley.... Virey had a reason for finding a hell on earth. We crossed
-the mountains, range after range--and here we are.... Sir, the hell of
-which we read--even in its bottommost pit--cannot be worse than Death
-Valley.”
-
-“You will let me take you home--at least out of the desert?” queried
-Adam, with passionate sharpness.
-
-“Sir, I thank you again,” she replied, her voice thrilling richly.
-“But no--no! You do not understand--you cannot--and it’s impossible to
-explain.”
-
-“Ah! Yes, some things are.... Suppose you let me move your camp higher
-up, out of this thick, dead air and heat--where there are trees and
-good water?”
-
-“But it is not a beautiful and a comfortable camp that Virey--that we
-want,” she said, bitterly.
-
-“Then let me move your shack across the wash out of danger. This spot
-is the most forbidding I ever saw. That mountain above us is on the
-move. The whole cracked slope is sliding like a glacier. It is an
-avalanche waiting for a jar--a slip--something to start it. The rocks
-are rolling down all the time.”
-
-“Have I not heard the rocks--cracking, ringing--in the dead of night!”
-she cried, shuddering. Her slender form seemed to draw within itself
-and the white, slim hands clenched her gown. “Rocks! How I’ve learned
-to hate them! These rolling rocks are living things. I’ve heard them
-slide and crack, roll and ring--hit the sand with a thump, and then
-with whistle and thud go by where I lay in the dark.... People who live
-as I have lived know nothing of the elements. I had no fear of the
-desert--nor of Death Valley. I dared it. I laughed to scorn the idea
-that any barren wild valley, any maelstrom of the sea, any Sodom of a
-city could be worse than the chaos of my soul.... But I didn’t know.
-I am human. I’m a woman. A woman is meant to bear children. Nothing
-else!... I learned that I was afraid of the dark--that such fear had
-been born in me. These rolling rocks got on my nerves. I wait--I listen
-for them. And I pray.... Then the silence--that became so dreadful.
-It is insupportable. Worse than all is the loneliness.... Oh, this
-God-forsaken, lonely Death Valley! It will drive me mad.”
-
-As Adam had anticipated, no matter what strength of will, what sense
-of secrecy bound this woman’s lips, she had been victim to the sound
-of her own voice, which, liberated by his sympathy, had spoken, and a
-word, as it were, had led to a full, deep, passionate utterance.
-
-“True. All too terribly true,” replied Adam. “And for a woman--for
-you--these feelings will grow more intense.... I beg of you, at least
-let me move your camp back out of danger.”
-
-“No! Not a single foot!” she blazed, as if confronted with something
-beyond his words. After that she hid her face in her hands. A long
-silence ensued. Adam, watching her, saw when the tremble and heave
-of her breast subsided. At length she looked up again, apparently
-composed. “Perhaps I talked more than I should have. But no matter.
-It was necessary to tell you something. For you came here to help an
-unknown woman. Not to anyone else have I breathed a word of the true
-state of my feelings. My husband watches me like a hawk, but not yet
-does he know my fears. I’ll thank you, when you speak to him, if you
-stay here so long, not to tell him anything I’ve said.”
-
-“Mrs. Virey, I’ll stay as long as you are here,” said Adam, simply.
-
-The simplicity of his speech, coupled with the tremendous suggestion
-in the fact of his physical presence, his strength and knowledge to
-serve her despite her bitter repudiation, seemed again to knock at the
-heart of her femininity. In the beginning of human life on the earth,
-and through its primal development, there was always a man to protect
-a woman. But subtly and inevitably there had been in Adam’s words an
-intimation that Magdalene Virey stood absolutely alone. More, for with
-spirit, if not with body, she was fighting Death Valley, and also some
-terrible relation her husband bore to her.
-
-“Sir--you would stay here--on a possible chance of serving me?” she
-whispered.
-
-“Yes,” replied Adam.
-
-“Virey will not like that.”
-
-“I’m not sure, but I suspect it’ll not make any difference to me what
-he likes.”
-
-“If you are kind to me he will drive you away,” she went on, with
-agitation.
-
-“Well, as he’s your husband he may prevent me from being kind, but he
-can’t drive me away.”
-
-“But suppose I ask you to go?”
-
-“If that’s the greatest kindness I can do you--well, I’ll go.... But do
-you ask me?”
-
-“I--I don’t know. I may be forced to--not by _him_, but by my pride,”
-she said, desperately. “Oh, I’m unstrung! I don’t know what to say....
-After all, just the sound of a kind voice makes me a coward. O God!
-if people in the world only knew the value of kindness! I never did
-know.... This desert of horrors teaches the truth of life.... Once I
-had the world at my feet!... Now I break and bow at the sympathy of a
-stranger!”
-
-“Never mind your pride,” said Adam, in his slow, cool way. “I
-understand. I’ve a good deal of a woman in me. Whatever brought you
-to Death Valley, whatever nails you here, is nothing to me. Even if
-I learn it, what need that be to you? If you do not want me to stay
-to work for you, watch over your husband--why, let me stay for my own
-sake.”
-
-She rose and faced him, with soul-searching eyes. She could not escape
-her nature. Emotion governed her.
-
-“Sir, you speak nobly,” she replied, with lips that trembled. “But I
-don’t understand you. Stay here--where I am--for your sake! Explain,
-please.”
-
-“I have my burden. Once it was even more terrible than yours. Through
-that I can feel as you feel now. I have lived the loneliness--the
-insupportable loneliness--of the desert--the silence, the heat, the
-hell. But my burden still weighs on my soul. If I might somehow help
-your husband, who is going wrong, blindly following some road of
-passion--change him or stop him, why that would ease my burden. If I
-might save you weariness, or physical pain, or hunger, or thirst, or
-terror--it would be doing more for myself than for you.... We are in
-Death Valley. You refuse to leave. We are, right here, two hundred
-feet below sea level. When the furnace heat comes--when the blasting
-midnight wind comes--it means either madness or death.”
-
-“Stay--Sir Knight,” she said, with a hollow, ringing gayety. “Who shall
-say that chivalry is dead?... Stay! and know this. I fear no man. I
-scorn death.... But, ah, the woman of me! I hate dirt and vermin.
-I’m afraid of pain. I suffer agonies even before I’m hurt. I miss so
-unforgettably the luxuries of life. And lastly, I have a mortal terror
-of going mad. Spare me that and you will have my prayers in this
-world--and beyond.... Good night.”
-
-“Good night,” replied Adam.
-
-She left him to the deepening gloom and the dying camp fire. Adam soon
-grew conscious of extreme fatigue in mind and body. Spreading his
-blankets on the sands, he stretched his weary, aching body without even
-an upward glance at the stars, and fell asleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Daylight again, as if by the opening of eyelids! The rose color was
-vying with the blue of the sky and a noble gold crowned the line of
-eastern range which Adam could see through the V-shaped split that
-opened into the valley.
-
-He pulled on his boots, and gave his face an unusual and detrimental
-luxury in the desert. Water was bad for exposed flesh in arid country.
-The usual spring and buoyancy of his physical being was lacking this
-day. Such overstrain as yesterday’s would require time to be remedied.
-So Adam moved slowly and with caution.
-
-First Adam went to the spring. He found a bubbling gush of
-velvet-looking water pouring out of a hole and running a few rods to
-sink into the sand. The color of it seemed inviting--so clear and soft
-and somehow rich. The music of its murmur, too, was melodious. Adam was
-a connoisseur of waters. What desert wanderer of years was not? Before
-he tasted this water, despite its promise, he knew it was not good. Yet
-it did not have exactly an unpleasant taste. Dismukes had said this
-water was all right, yet he seldom stayed long enough in one locality
-to learn the ill effects of the water. Adam knew he too could live on
-this water. But he was thinking of the delicate woman lost here in
-Death Valley with an idiot or a knave of a husband.
-
-The spring was located some two hundred yards or more from the shack
-and just out of line of the rock-strewn slope. Spreading like a fan,
-this weathered slant of stones extended its long, curved length in
-the opposite direction. Adam decided to pitch his permanent camp,
-or at least sleeping place, here on the grass. Here he erected a
-brush-and-canvas shelter to make shade, and deposited his effects under
-it. That done, he returned to the shack to cook breakfast.
-
-There appeared to be no life in the rude little misshapen hut. Had the
-man who built it ever been a boy? There were men so utterly helpless
-and useless out in the wilds, where existence depended upon labor of
-hands, that they seemed foreign to the descendants of Americans. Adam
-could not but wonder about the man lying in there, though he tried hard
-to confine his reflections to the woman. He did not like the situation.
-Of what avail the strong arm, the desert-taught fierceness to survive?
-If this man and woman had ever possessed instincts to live, to fight,
-to reproduce their kind, to be of use in the world, they had subverted
-them to the debasements of sophisticated and selfish existence. The
-woman loomed big to Adam, and he believed she had been dragged down by
-a weak and vicious man.
-
-Leisurely Adam attended to the preparation of breakfast, prolonging
-tasks that always passed swiftly through his hands.
-
-“Good morning, Sir Wansfell,” called a voice with something of mockery
-in it, yet rich and wistful--a low-pitched contralto voice full of
-music and pathos and a pervading bitterness.
-
-It stirred Adam’s blood, so sluggish this morning. It seemed to carry
-an echo from his distant past. Turning, he saw the woman, clad in
-gray, with a girdle of cord twisted around her slender waist. Soft and
-clean and fleecy, that gray garment, so out of place there, so utterly
-incongruous against the background of crude shack and wild slope,
-somehow fitted her voice as it did her fragile shape, somehow set her
-infinitely apart from the women Adam had met in his desert wanderings.
-She came from the great world outside, a delicate spark from the solid
-flint of class, a thoroughbred whom years before the desert might have
-saved.
-
-“Good morning, Mrs. Virey,” returned Adam. “How are you--and did your
-husband awake?”
-
-“I slept better than for long,” she replied, “and I think I know
-why.... Yes, Virey came to. He’s conscious, and asked for water. But
-he’s weak--strange. I’d like you to look at him presently.”
-
-“Yes, I will.”
-
-“And how are you after your tremendous exertions of yesterday?” she
-inquired.
-
-“Not so spry,” said Adam, with a smile. “But I’ll be myself in a day or
-so. I believe the air down in the valley affected me a little. My lungs
-are sore.... I think it would be more comfortable for you if we had
-breakfast in your kitchen. The sun is hot.”
-
-“Indeed yes. So you mean to--to do this--this camp work for me--in
-spite of----”
-
-“Yes. I always oppose women,” he said. “And that is about once every
-two or three years. You see, women are scarce on the desert.”
-
-“Last night I was upset. I am sorry that I was ungracious. I thank
-you, and I am only too glad to accept your kind service,” she said,
-earnestly.
-
-“That is well. Now, will you help me carry in the breakfast?”
-
-Unreality was not unusual to Adam. The desert had as many unrealities,
-illusions, and specters as it had natural and tangible things. But
-while he sat opposite to this fascinating woman, whose garments exuded
-some subtle fragrance of perfume, whose shadowed, beautiful face shone
-like a cameo against the drab wall of the brush shack, he was hard put
-to it to convince himself of actuality. She ate daintily, but she was
-hungry. The gray gown fell in graceful folds around the low stone seat.
-The rude table between them was a box, narrow and uneven.
-
-“Shall I try to get Virey to eat?” she asked, presently.
-
-“That depends. On the desert, after a collapse, we are careful with
-food and water.”
-
-“Will you look at him?”
-
-Adam followed her as she swept aside a flap of the canvas partition.
-This room was larger and lighter. It had an aperture for a window.
-Adam’s quick glance took this in, and then the two narrow beds of
-blankets raised on brush cots. Virey lay on the one farther from the
-door. His pallid brow and unshaven face appeared drawn into terrible
-lines, which, of course, Adam could not be sure were permanent or the
-result of the collapse in the valley. He inclined, however, to the
-conviction that Virey’s face was the distorted reflection of a tortured
-soul. Surely he had been handsome once. He had deep-set black eyes, a
-straight nose, and a mouth that betrayed him, despite its being half
-hidden under a mustache. Adam, keen and strung in that moment as he
-received his impressions of Virey, felt the woman’s intensity as if
-he had been studying her instead of her husband. How singular women
-were! How could it matter to her what opinion he formed of her husband?
-Adam knew he had been powerfully prejudiced against this man, but he
-had held in stern abeyance all judgment until he could look at him.
-For long years Adam had gazed into the face of the desert. Outward
-appearance could not deceive him. As the cactus revealed its ruthless
-nature, as the tiny inch-high flower bloomed in its perishable but
-imperative proof of beauty as well as life, as the long flowing sands
-of the desert betrayed the destructive design of the universe--so
-the face of any man was the image of his soul. And Adam recoiled
-instinctively, if not outwardly, at what he read in Virey’s face.
-
-“You’re in pain?” queried Adam.
-
-“Yes,” came the husky whisper, and Virey put a hand on his breast.
-
-“It’s sore here,” said Adam, feeling Virey. “You’ve breathed poisoned
-air down in the valley. It acts like ether.... You just lie quiet for a
-while. I’ll do the work around camp.”
-
-“Thank you,” whispered Virey.
-
-The woman followed Adam outside and gazed earnestly up at him,
-unconscious of herself, with her face closer than it had ever been
-to him and full in the sunlight. It struck Adam that the difference
-between desert flowers and the faces of beautiful women was one of
-emotion. How much better to have the brief hour of an unconscious
-flower, wasting its fragrance on the desert air!
-
-“He’s ill, don’t you think?” queried the woman.
-
-“No. But he recovers slowly. A man must have a perfect heart and
-powerful lungs to battle against the many perils in this country. But
-Virey will get over this all right.”
-
-“You never give up, do you?” she inquired.
-
-“Come to think of that, I guess I never do,” replied Adam.
-
-“Such spirit is worthy of a better cause. You are doomed here to
-failure.”
-
-“Well, I’m not infallible, that’s certain. But you can never tell.
-The fact of my standing here is proof of the overcoming of almost
-impossible things. I can’t make Death Valley habitable for you, but I
-can lessen the hardships. How long have you been here?”
-
-“Several months. But it’s years to me.”
-
-“Who brought you down? How did you get here?”
-
-“We’ve had different guides. The last were Shoshone Indians, who
-accompanied us across a range of mountains, then a valley, and last
-over the Panamints. They left us here. I rode a horse. Virey walked
-the last stages of this journey to Death Valley--from which there will
-be no return. We turned horse and burros loose. I have not seen them
-since.”
-
-“Are these Shoshones supposed to visit you occasionally?”
-
-“Yes. Virey made a deal with them to come every full moon. We’ve
-had more supplies than we need. The trouble is that Virey has
-the inclination to eat, but I have not the skill to prepare food
-wholesomely under these rough conditions. So we almost starved.”
-
-“Well, let me take charge of camp duties. You nurse your husband
-and don’t neglect yourself. It’s the least you can do. You’ll have
-hardship and suffering enough, even at best. You’ve suffered, I can
-see, but not physically. And you never knew what hardship meant until
-you got into the desert. If you _live_, these things will cure you of
-any trouble. They’ll hardly cure Virey, for he has retrograded. Most
-men in the desert follow the line of least resistance. They sink. But
-_you_ will not.... And let me tell you. There are elemental pangs of
-hunger, of thirst, of pain that are blessings in disguise. You’ll learn
-what rest is and sleep and loneliness. People who live as you have
-lived are lopsided. What do they know of life close to the earth? Any
-other life is false. Cities, swarms of men and women, riches, luxury,
-poverty--these were not in nature’s scheme of life.... Mrs. Virey, if
-anything _can_ change your soul it will be the desert.”
-
-“Ah, Sir Wansfell, so you have philosophy as well as chivalry,” she
-replied, with the faint accent that seemed to be mockery of herself.
-“Change my soul if you can, wanderer of the desert! I am a woman, and
-a woman is symbolical of change. Teach me to cook, to work, to grow
-strong, to endure, to fight, to look up at those dark hills whence
-cometh your strength.... I am here in Death Valley. I will never leave
-it in body. My bones will mingle with the sands and molder to dust....
-But my soul--ah! that black gulf of doubt, of agony, of terror, of
-hate--change _that_ if you can.”
-
-These tragic, eloquent words chained Adam to Death Valley as if they
-had been links of steel; and thus began his long sojourn there.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Work or action was always necessary to Adam. They had become second
-nature. He planned a brush shelter from the sun, a sort of outside
-room adjoining the shack, a stone fireplace and table and seats, a low
-stone wall to keep out blowing sand, and a thick, heavy stone fence
-between the shack and the slope of sliding rocks. When these tasks were
-finished there would be others, and always there would be the slopes to
-climb, the valley to explore. Idleness in Death Valley was a forerunner
-of madness. There must be a reserve fund of long work and exercise,
-so that when the blazing, leaden-hazed middays of August came, with
-idleness imperative, there would be both physical force and unclouded
-mind to endure them. The men who succumbed to madness in this valley
-were those who had not understood how to combat it.
-
-That day passed swiftly, and the twilight hour seemed to have less of
-gloom and forbidding intimations. That might well have been due to his
-eternal hope. Mrs. Virey showed less gravity and melancholy, and not
-once did she speak with bitterness or passion. She informed Adam that
-Virey had improved.
-
-Two more days slipped by, and on the third Virey got up and came forth
-into the sunlight. Adam happened to be at work near by. He saw Virey
-gaze around at the improvements that had been made and say something
-about them to his wife. He looked a man who should have been in
-the prime of life. Approaching with slow gait and haggard face, he
-addressed Adam.
-
-“You expect pay for this puttering around?”
-
-“No,” replied Adam, shortly.
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Well, when men are used to the desert, as I am, they lend a hand where
-it is needed. That’s not often.”
-
-“But I didn’t want any such work done round my camp.”
-
-“I know, and I excuse you because you’re ignorant of desert ways and
-needs.”
-
-“The question of excuse for me is offensive.”
-
-Adam, rising abreast of the stone wall he was building, fixed his
-piercing eyes upon this man. Mrs. Virey stood a little to one side,
-but not out of range of Adam’s gaze. Did a mocking light show in her
-shadowy eyes? The doubt, the curiosity in her expression must have
-related to Adam. That slight, subtle something about her revealed to
-Adam the inevitableness of disappointment in store for him if he still
-entertained any hopes of amenable relations with Virey.
-
-“We all have to be excused sometimes,” said Adam, deliberately. “Now I
-had to excuse you on the score of ignorance of the desert. You chose
-this place as a camp. It happens to be the most dangerous spot I ever
-saw. Any moment a stone may roll down that slope to kill you. Any
-moment the whole avalanche may start. That slope is an avalanche.”
-
-“It’s my business where I camp,” rejoined Virey.
-
-“Were you aware of the danger here?”
-
-“I am indifferent to danger.”
-
-“But you are not alone. You have a woman with you.”
-
-Manifestly, Virey had been speaking without weighing words and looking
-at Adam without really seeing him. The brooding shade passed out of
-his eyes, and in its place grew a light of interest that leaped to the
-crystal-cold clearness of a lens.
-
-“You’re a prospector,” he asserted.
-
-“No. I pan a little gold dust once in a while for fun, because I happen
-across it.”
-
-“You’re no miner, then--nor hunter, nor teamster.”
-
-“I’ve been a little of all you name, but I can’t be called any one of
-them.”
-
-“You might be one of the robbers that infest these hills.”
-
-“I might be, only I’m not,” declared Adam, dryly. The fire in his
-depths stirred restlessly, but he kept a cool, smothering control over
-it. He felt disposed to be lenient and kind toward this unfortunate
-man. If only the woman had not stood there with that half-veiled
-mocking shadow of doubt in her eyes!
-
-“You’re an educated man!” ejaculated Virey, incredulously.
-
-“I might claim to be specially educated in the ways of the desert.”
-
-“And the ways of women, are _they_ mysteries to you?” queried Virey,
-with scorn. His interrogation seemed like a bitter doubt flung out of
-an immeasurable depth of passion.
-
-“I confess that they are,” replied Adam. “I’ve lived a lonely life. Few
-women have crossed my trail.”
-
-“You don’t realize your good fortune--if you tell the truth.”
-
-“I would not lie to any man,” returned Adam, bluntly.
-
-“Bah! Men are all liars, and women make them so.... You’re hanging
-round my camp, making a bluff of work.”
-
-“I deny that. Heaving these stones is work. _You_ lift a few of them in
-this hot sun.... And my packing you on my back for ten miles over the
-floor of Death Valley--was that a bluff?”
-
-“You saved my life!” exclaimed the man, stung to passion. There
-seemed to be contending tides within him--a fight of old habits of
-thought, fineness of feeling, against an all-absorbing and dominating
-malignancy. “Man, I can’t thank you for that.... You’ve done me no
-service.”
-
-“I don’t want or expect thanks. I was thinking of the effort it cost
-me.”
-
-“As a man who was once a gentleman, I do thank you--which is a courtesy
-due my past. But now that you have put me in debt for a service I
-didn’t want, why do you linger here?”
-
-“I wish to help your wife.”
-
-“Ah! that’s frank of you. That frankness is something for which I
-really thank you. But you’ll pardon me if I’m inclined to doubt the
-idealistic nature of your motive to help her.”
-
-Adam pondered over this speech without reply. Words always came
-fluently when he was ready to speak. And he seemed more concerned over
-Virey’s caustic bitterness than over his meaning. Then, as he met the
-magnificent flash in Magdalene Virey’s eyes, he was inspired into
-revelation of Virey’s veiled hint and into a serenity he divined would
-be kindest to her pride.
-
-“Go ahead and help her,” Virey went on. “You have my sincere
-felicitations. My charming wife is helpless enough. I never knew how
-helpless till we were thrown upon our own resources. She cannot even
-cook a potato. And as for baking bread in one of those miserable black
-ovens, stranger, if you eat some of it I will not be long annoyed by
-your attentions to her.”
-
-“Well, I’ll teach her,” said Adam.
-
-His practical response irritated Virey excessively. It was as if
-he wished to insult and inflame, and had not considered a literal
-application to his words.
-
-“Who are you? What’s your name?” he queried, yielding to a roused
-curiosity.
-
-“Wansfell,” replied Adam.
-
-“Wansfell?” echoed Virey. The name struck a chord of memory--a
-discordant one. He bent forward a little, at a point between curiosity
-and excitement. “Wansfell?... I know that name. Are you the man who in
-this desert country is called Wansfell the Wanderer?”
-
-“Yes, I’m that Wansfell.”
-
-“I heard a prospector tell about you,” went on Virey, his haggard face
-now quickened by thought. “It was at a camp near a gold mine over here
-somewhere--I forget where. But the prospector said he had seen you kill
-a man named Mc something--McKin--no, McKue. That’s the name.... Did he
-tell the truth?”
-
-“Yes, I’m sorry to say. I killed Baldy McKue--or rather, to speak as I
-feel, I was the means by which the desert dealt McKue the death justly
-due him.”
-
-Virey now glowed with excitement, changing the man.
-
-“Somehow that story haunted me,” he said. “I never heard one like
-it.... This prospector told how you confronted McKue in the street of a
-mining camp. In front of a gambling hell, or maybe it was a hotel. You
-yelled like a demon at McKue. He turned white as a sheet. He jerked his
-gun, began to shoot. But you bore a charmed life. His bullets did not
-hit you, or, if they did, to no purpose. You leaped upon him. His gun
-flew one way, his hat another.... Then--then you killed him with your
-hands!... Is that true?”
-
-Adam nodded gloomily. The tale, told vividly by this seemingly
-galvanized Virey, was not pleasant. And the woman stood there,
-transfixed, with white face and tragic eyes.
-
-“My God! You killed McKue by sheer strength--with your bare hands!...
-I had not looked at your hands. I see them now.... So McKue was your
-enemy?”
-
-“No. I never saw him before that day,” replied Adam.
-
-Virey slowly drew back wonderingly, yet with instinctive shrinking.
-Certain it was that his lips stiffened.
-
-“Then why did you kill him?”
-
-“He ill-treated a woman.”
-
-Adam turned away as he replied. He did not choose then to show in
-his eyes the leaping thought that had been born of the memory and of
-Virey’s strange reaction. But he heard him draw a quick, sharp breath
-and step back. Then a silence ensued. Adam gazed up at the endless
-slope, at the millions of rocks, all apparently resting lightly in
-their pockets, ready to plunge down.
-
-“So--so that was it,” spoke up Virey, evidently with effort. “I always
-wondered. Wild West sort of story, you know. Strange I should meet
-you.... Thanks for telling me. I gather it wasn’t pleasant for you.”
-
-“It’s sickening to recall, but I have no regrets,” replied Adam.
-
-“Quite so. I understand. Man of the desert--ruthless--inhuman sort of
-thing.”
-
-“Inhuman?” queried Adam, and he looked at Virey, at last stung. Behind
-Virey’s pale, working face and averted eyes Adam read a conscience in
-tumult, a spirit for the moment terrorized. “Virey, you and I’d never
-agree on meanings of words.... I broke McKue’s arms and ribs and legs,
-and while I cracked them I told him what an inhuman dastard he had
-been--to ruin a girl, to beat her, to abandon her and her baby--to
-leave them to die. I told him how I had watched them die ... then I
-broke his neck!... McKue was the inhuman man--not I.”
-
-Virey turned away, swaying a little, and his white hand, like a
-woman’s, sought the stone wall for support, until he reached the shack,
-which he entered.
-
-“I’m sorry, Mrs. Virey, that story had to come up,” said Adam,
-confronting her with reluctance. But she surprised him again. He
-expected to find her sickened, shrinking from him as a bloody monster,
-perhaps half fainting; he found, however, that she seemed serene,
-controlling deep emotions which manifested themselves only in the
-marble whiteness of her cheek, the strained darkness of her eye.
-
-“The story was beautiful. I had not heard it,” she said, and the rich
-tremor of her voice thrilled Adam. “What woman would not revel in such
-a story?... Wansfell the Wanderer. It should be Sir Wansfell, Knight
-of the Desert!... Don’t look at me so. Have you not learned that the
-grandest act on earth is when a man fights for the honor or love or
-happiness or life of a woman?... I am a woman. Many men have loved
-me. Virey’s love is so strong that it is hate. But no man ever yet
-thought of _me_--no man ever yet heard the little songs that echoed
-through my soul--no man ever fought to save _me_!... My friend, I dare
-speak as you speak, with the nakedness of the desert. And so I tell
-you that just now I watched my husband--I listened to the words which
-told his nature, as if that was new to me. I watched you stand there--I
-listened to you.... And so I dare to tell you--if you come to fight
-my battles I shall have added to my life of shocks and woes a trouble
-that will dwarf all the others ... the awakening of a woman who has
-been blind!... The facing of my soul--perhaps its salvation! A crowning
-agony--a glory come too late!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-At sunset Adam cooked supper for the Vireys, satisfying his own needs
-after they had finished. Virey talked lightly, even joked about the
-first good meal he had sat down to on the desert. His wife, too, talked
-serenely, sometimes with the faintly subtle mockery, as if she had
-never intimated that a dividing spear threatened her heart. That was
-their way to hide the truth and emotion when they willed. But Adam was
-silent.
-
-Alone, out under the shadow of the towering gate to the valley, he
-strode to and fro, absorbed in a maze of thoughts that gradually
-cleared, as if by the light of the solemn stars and virtue of the
-speaking silence. He had chanced upon the strangest and most fatal
-situation in all his desert years. Yes, but was it by chance? Straight
-as an arrow he had come across the barrens to meet a wonderful woman
-who was going to love him, and a despicable man whom he was going to
-kill. That seemed the fatality which rang in his ears, shone in the
-accusing stars, hid in the heavy shadows. It was a matter of feeling.
-His intelligence could not grasp it. Had he been in Death Valley
-four days or four months? Was he walking in his sleep, victim of a
-nightmare? The desert, faithful always, answered him. This was nothing
-but the flux and reflux of human passion, contending tides between man
-and woman, the littleness, the curse, the terror, and yet the joy of
-life. Death Valley yawned at his feet, changeless and shadowy, awful
-in its locked solemnity of solitude, its voicelessness, its desolation
-that had been desolation in past ages. He could doubt nothing there.
-His thoughts seemed almost above human error. A spirit spoke for him.
-
-Virey had dragged his wife to this lonely and dismal hell hole on earth
-to share his misery, to isolate her from men, to hide her glory of
-charm, to gloat over her loneliness, to revenge himself for a wrong, to
-feed his need of possession, his terrible love that had become hate, to
-watch the slow torture of her fading, wilting, drooping in this ghastly
-valley, to curse her living, to burn endlessly in torment because her
-soul would elude him forever, to drive her to death and die with her.
-
-Death Valley seemed a harmonious setting for this tragedy and a fitting
-grave for its actors. The worst in nature calling to the darkest in
-mankind! What a pity Virey could not divine his littleness--that he had
-been a crawling maggot in the peopled ulcer of the world--that in the
-great spaces where the sun beat down was a fiery cleansing!
-
-But Magdalene Virey was a riddle beyond solving. Nevertheless, Adam
-pondered every thought that would stay before his consciousness. Any
-woman was a riddle. Did not the image of Margarita Arrallanes flash up
-before him--that dusky-eyed, mindless, soulless little animal, victim
-of nature born in her? Adam’s thought halted with the seeming sacrilege
-of associating Magdalene Virey with memory of the Mexican girl. This
-Virey woman had complexity--she had mind, passion, nobility, soul. What
-had she done to earn her husband’s hate? She had never loved him--that
-was as fixed in Adam’s sight as the North Star. Nor had she loved
-another man, at least not with the passion and spirit of her wonderful
-womanhood. Adam divined that with the intensity of feeling which the
-desert loneliness and solitude had taught him. He could have felt the
-current of any woman’s great passion, whether it was in torrent, full
-charged and devastating, or at its lowering ebb. But, as inevitable
-as was life itself, there was the mysterious certainty that Magdalene
-Virey had terribly wronged her husband. How? Adam had repudiated any
-interest in what had driven them here; not until this moment had he
-permitted his doubt to insult the woman. Yet how helpless he was! His
-heart was full of unutterable pity. He could never have loved Magdalene
-Virey as a man, but as a brother he was yearning to change her, save
-her. What else in life was worth living for, except only the dreams on
-the heights, the walks along the lonely trails? By his own agony he had
-a strange affinity for anyone in trouble, especially a woman, and how
-terribly he saw the tragedy of Magdalene Virey! And it was not only her
-death that he saw. Death in a land where death reigned was nothing.
-For her he hated the certainty of physical pain, the turgid pulse, the
-red-hot iron band at the temples, the bearing down of weighted air, the
-drying up of flesh and blood. More than all he hated the thought of
-death of her spirit while her body lived. There would be a bloodless
-murder long before her blood stained Virey’s hands.
-
-But this thought gave Adam pause. Was he not dealing with a personality
-beyond his power to divine? What did he know of this strange woman? He
-knew naught, but felt all. She was beautiful, compelling, secretive,
-aloof, and proud, magnificent as a living flame. She was mocking
-because knowledge of the world, of the frailty of women and falsity of
-men, had been as an open page. She had lived in sight of the crowded
-mart, the show places where men and women passed, knowing no more of
-earth than that it was a place for graves. She was bitter because she
-had drunk bitterness to the dregs. But the sudden up-flashing warmth
-of her, forced out of her reserve, came from a heart of golden fire.
-Adam constituted himself an omniscient judge, answerable only to his
-conscience. By all the gods he would be true to the truth of this woman!
-
-Never had she been forced into this desert of desolation. That thought
-of Adam’s seemed far back in the past. She had dared to come. Had Death
-Valley and the death it was famed for any terrors for her? By the side
-of her husband she had willingly come, unutterably despising him,
-infinitely brave where he was cowardly, scornfully and magnificently
-prepared to meet any punishment that might satisfy him. Adam saw how,
-in this, Magdalene Virey was answering to some strange need in itself.
-Let the blind, weak, egoist Virey demand the tortures of the damned!
-She would pay. But she was paying also a debt to herself. Adam’s final
-conception of Magdalene Virey was that she had been hideously wronged
-by life, by men; that in younger days of passionate revolt she had
-transgressed the selfish law of husbands; that in maturer years, with
-the storm and defeat and disillusion of womanhood, she had risen to
-the heights, she had been true to herself; and with mockery of the man
-who could so underestimate her, who dared believe he could make her a
-craven, whimpering, guilty wretch, she had faced the desert with him.
-She had seen the great love that was not love change to terrible hate.
-She had divined the hidden motive. She let him revel in his hellish
-secret joy. She welcomed Death Valley.
-
-Adam marveled at this unquenchable spirit, this sublime effrontery of
-a woman. And he hesitated to dare to turn that spirit from its superb
-indifference. But this vacillation in him was weak. What a wonderful
-experience it would be to embody in Magdalene Virey the instinct, the
-strife, the nature of the desert! With her mind, if he had the power to
-teach, she would grasp the lesson in a single day.
-
-And lastly, her unforgettable implication, “the crowning agony,” of
-what he might bring upon her. There could be only one interpretation of
-that--love. The idea thrilled him, but only with wonder and pity. It
-took possession of Adam’s imagination. Well, such love might come to
-pass! The desert storms bridged canyons with sand in one day. It was a
-place of violence. The elements waited not upon time or circumstance.
-The few women Adam had come in contact with on the desert had loved
-him. Even the one-eyed Mohave Jo, that hideous, unsexed, monstrous
-deformity of a woman, whom he had met and left groveling in the sand
-at his feet, shamed at last before a crowd of idle, gaping, vile
-men--even she had awakened to this strange madness of love. But Adam
-had not wanted that of any woman, since the poignant moment of his
-youth on the desert, when the dusky-eyed Margarita had murmured of love
-so fresh and sweet to him, “Ah, so long ago and far away!”
-
-Least of all did Adam want the love of Magdalene Virey. “If she
-were young and I were young! Or if she had never...!” Ah! even
-possibilities, like might-have-beens, were useless dreams. But the die
-was cast. Serve Magdalene Virey he would, and teach her the secret of
-the strength of the sand wastes and the lonely hills, and that the
-victory of life was not to yield. Fight for her, too, he would. In all
-the multiplicity of ways he had learned, he would fight the solitude
-and loneliness of Death Valley, the ghastliness so inimical to the
-creative life of a woman, the heat, the thirst, the starvation, the
-poison air, the furnace wind, storm and flood and avalanche. Just as
-naturally, if need be, if it fatefully fell out so, he would lay his
-slaying hands in all their ruthless might upon the man who had made her
-dare her doom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When, next morning at sunrise hour, Adam presented himself at the Virey
-camp, he was greeted by Mrs. Virey, seemingly a transformed woman.
-She wore a riding suit, the worn condition of which attested to the
-rough ride across the mountain. What remarkable difference it made in
-her appearance! It detracted from her height. And the slenderness of
-her, revealed rather than suggested by her gowns, showed much of grace
-and symmetry. She had braided her hair and let it hang. When the sun
-had tanned her white face and hands Magdalene Virey would really be
-transformed.
-
-Adam tried not to stare, but his effort was futile.
-
-“Good morning,” she said, with a bright smile.
-
-“Why, Mrs. Virey, I--I hardly knew you!” he stammered.
-
-“Thanks. I feel complimented. It is the first time you’ve looked at
-_me_. Shorn of my dignity--no, my worldliness, do I begin well, desert
-man?... No more stuffy dresses clogging my feet! No more veils to
-protect my face! Let the sun burn! I want to work. I want to help. I
-want to learn. If madness must be mine, let it be a madness to learn
-what in this God-forsaken land ever made you the man you are. There,
-Sir Wansfell, I have flung down the gage.”
-
-“Very well,” replied Adam, soberly.
-
-“And now,” she continued, “I am eager to work. If I blunder, be
-patient. If I am stupid, make me see. And if I faint in the sun or fall
-beside the trail, remember it is my poor body that fails, and not my
-will.”
-
-So, in the light of her keen interest, Adam found the humdrum mixing of
-dough and the baking of bread a pleasure and a lesson to him, rather
-than a task.
-
-“Ah! how important are the homely things of life!” she said. “A poet
-said ‘we live too much in the world.’... I wonder did he mean just
-this. We grow away from or never learn the simple things. I remember
-my grandfather’s farm--the plowed fields, the green corn, the yellow
-wheat, the chickens in the garden, the mice in the barn, the smell of
-hay, the smell of burning leaves, the smell of the rich brown earth....
-Wansfell, not for years have I remembered them. Something about you,
-the way you worked over that bread, like a nice old country lady, made
-me remember.... Oh, I wonder what I have missed!”
-
-“We all miss something. It can’t be helped. But there are
-compensations, and it’s never too late.”
-
-“You are a child, with all your bigness. You have the mind of a child.”
-
-“That’s one of my few blessings.... Now you try your hand at mixing the
-second batch of dough.”
-
-She made a picture on her knees, with her sleeves rolled up, her
-beautiful hands white with flour, her face beginning to flush. Adam
-wanted to laugh at her absolute failure to mix dough, and at the same
-moment he had it in him to weep over the earnestness, the sadness, the
-pathetic meaning of her.
-
-Eventually they prepared the meal, and she carried Virey’s breakfast in
-to him. Then she returned to eat with Adam.
-
-“I shall wash the dishes,” she announced.
-
-“No,” he protested.
-
-Then came a clash. It ended with a compromise. And from that clash
-Adam realized he might dominate her in little things, but in a great
-conflict of wills she would be the stronger. It was a step in his own
-slow education. There was a constitutional difference between men and
-women.
-
-Upon Adam’s resumption of the work around the shack Mrs. Virey helped
-him as much as he would permit, which by midday was somewhat beyond her
-strength. Her face sunburned rosily and her hands showed the contact
-with dirt and her boots were dusty.
-
-“You mustn’t overdo it,” he advised. “Rest and sleep during the noon
-hours.”
-
-She retired within the shack and did not reappear till the middle of
-the afternoon. Meanwhile, Adam had worked at his tasks, trying at the
-same time to keep an eye on Virey, who wandered around aimlessly over
-the rock-strewn field, idling here and plodding there. Adam saw how
-Virey watched the shack; and when Magdalene came out again he saw her
-and grew as motionless as the stone where he leaned. Every thought of
-Virey’s must have been dominated by this woman’s presence, the meaning
-of her, the possibilities of her, the tragedy of her.
-
-“Oh, how I slept!” she exclaimed. “Is it work that makes you sleep?”
-
-“Indeed yes.”
-
-“Ah! I see my noble husband standing like Mephistopheles, smiling at
-grief.... What’s he doing over there?”
-
-“I don’t know, unless it’s watching for you. He’s been around like that
-for hours.”
-
-“Poor man!” she said, with both compassion and mockery. “Watching me?
-What loss of precious time--and so futile! It is a habit he contracted
-some years ago.... Wansfell, take me down to the opening in the
-mountain there, so that I can look into Death Valley.”
-
-“Shall I ask Virey?” queried Adam, in slight uncertainty.
-
-“No. Let him watch or follow or do as he likes. I am here in Death
-Valley. It was his cherished plan to bury me here. I shall not leave
-until he takes me--which will be never. For the rest, he is nothing to
-me. We are as far apart as the poles.”
-
-On the way down the gentle slope Adam halted amid sun-blasted shrubs,
-scarcely recognizable as greasewood. Here he knelt in the gravel to
-pluck some flowers so tiny that only a trained eye could ever have
-espied them. One was a little pink flower with sage color and sage
-odor; another a white daisy, very frail, and without any visible
-leaves; and a third was a purple-red flower, half the size of the
-tiniest buttercup, and this had small dark-green leaves.
-
-“Flowers in Death Valley!” exclaimed Mrs. Virey, in utter amaze.
-
-“Yes. Flowers of a day! They sprang up yesterday; to-day they bloom,
-to-morrow they will die. I don’t know their names. To me their
-blossoming is one of the wonders of the desert. I think sometimes that
-it is a promise. A whole year the tiny seeds lie in the hot sands. Then
-comes a mysterious call and the green plant shoots its inch-long stalk
-to the sun. Another day beauty unfolds and there is fragrance on the
-desert air. Another day sees them whither and die.”
-
-“Beauty and fragrance indeed they have,” mused the woman. “Such tiny
-flowers to look and smell so sweet! I never saw their like. Flowers of
-a day!... They indeed give rise to thoughts too deep for tears!”
-
-Adam led his companion to the base of the mountain wall, and around the
-corner of the opening, so that they came suddenly and unexpectedly
-into full view of Death Valley. He did not look at her. He wanted to
-wait a little before doing that. The soft gasp which escaped her lips
-and the quick grasping of his hand were significant of the shock she
-sustained.
-
-Their position faced mostly down the valley. It seemed a vast level,
-gently sloping up to the borders where specks of mesquites dotted the
-sand. Dull gray and flat, these league-wide wastes of speckled sand
-bordered a dazzling-white sunlit belt, the winding bottom of the long
-bowl, the salty dead stream of Death Valley. Miles and miles below, two
-mountain ranges blended in a purple blaze, and endless slanting lines
-of slopes ran down to merge in the valley floor. The ranges sent down
-offshoots of mountains that slanted and lengthened into the valley. One
-bright-green oasis, that, lost in the vastness, was comparable to one
-of the tiny flowers Adam had plucked out of the sand, shone wonderfully
-and illusively out of the glare of gray and white. A dim, mystic scene!
-
-“O God!... It is my grave!” cried Magdalene Virey.
-
-“We all are destined for graves,” replied Adam, solemnly. “Could any
-grave elsewhere be so grand--so lonely--so peaceful?... Now let us walk
-out a little way, to the edge of that ridge, and sit there while the
-sun sets.”
-
-On this vantage point they were out some distance in the valley,
-so that they could see even the western end of the Panamint range,
-where a glaring sun had begun to change its color over the bold black
-peaks. A broad shadow lengthened across the valley and crept up the
-yellow foothills to the red Funeral Mountains. This shadow marvelously
-changed to purple, and as the radiance of light continued to shade,
-the purple deepened. Over all the valley at the western end appeared
-a haze the color of which was nameless. Adam felt the lessening heat
-of the sinking sun. Half that blaze was gone. It had been gold and
-was now silver. He swept his gaze around jealously, not to miss the
-transformations; and his companion, silent and absorbed, instinctively
-turned with him. Across the valley the Funerals towered, ragged and
-sharp, with rosy crowns; and one, the only dome-shaped peak, showed its
-strata of gray and drab through the rose. Another peak, farther back,
-lifted a pink shaft into the blue sky. What a contrast to the lower
-hills and slopes, so beautifully pearl gray in tint! And now, almost
-the instant Adam had marked the exquisite colors, they began to fade.
-On that illimitable horizon line there were soon no bright tones left.
-Far to the south, peaks that had been dim now stood out clear and sharp
-against the sky. One, gold capped and radiant, shadowed as if a cloud
-had come between it and the sun. Adam turned again to the west, in time
-to see the last vestige of silver fire vanish. Sunset!
-
-A somber smoky sunset it was now, as if this Death Valley was the
-gateway of hell and its sinister shades were upflung from fire. Adam
-saw a vulture sail across the clear space of sky, breasting the wind.
-It lent life to the desolation.
-
-The desert day was done and the desert shades began to descend. The
-moment was tranquil and sad. It had little to do with the destiny
-of man--nothing except that by some inscrutable design of God or an
-accident of evolution man happened to be imprisoned where nature never
-intended man to be. Death Valley was only a ragged rent of the old
-earth, where men wandered wild, brooding, lost, or where others sought
-with folly and passion to dig forth golden treasure. The mysterious
-lights changed. A long pale radiance appeared over the western range
-and lengthened along its bold horizon. The only red color left was way
-to the south, and that shone dim. The air held a solemn stillness.
-
-“Magdalene Virey,” said Adam, “what you see there resembles death--it
-may be death--but it is peace. Does it not rest your troubled soul? A
-woman must be herself here.”
-
-She, whose words could pour out in such torrent of eloquence, was
-silent now. Adam looked at her then, into the shadowed eyes. What he
-saw there awed him. The abyss seen through those beautiful, unguarded
-windows of her soul was like the gray scored valley beneath, but
-lighting, quickening with thought, with hope, with life. Death Valley
-was a part of the earth dying, and it would become like a canyon on the
-burned-out moon; but this woman’s spirit seemed everlasting. If her
-soul had been a whited sepulcher, it was in the way of transfiguration.
-Adam experienced a singular exaltation in the moment, a gladness beyond
-his comprehension, a sense that the present strange communion there
-between this woman’s awakening and the terrible lessons of his life was
-creating for him a far-distant interest, baffling, but great in its
-inspiration.
-
-In the gathering twilight he led her back to camp, content that it
-seemed still impossible for her to speak. But the touch of her hand at
-parting was more eloquent than any words.
-
-Then alone, in his blankets, with gaze up at the inscrutable, promising
-stars, Adam gave himself over to insistent and crowding thoughts, back
-of which throbbed a dominating, divine hope in his power to save this
-woman’s life and soul, and perhaps even her happiness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next day Adam’s natural aggressiveness asserted itself, controlled now
-by an imperturbable spirit that nothing could daunt. He approached
-Virey relentlessly, though with kindness, even good nature, and he
-began to talk about Death Valley, the perilous nature of the camping
-spot, the blasting heat of midsummer and the horror of the midnight
-furnace winds, the possibility of the water drying up. Virey was cold,
-then impatient, then intolerant, and finally furious. First he was deaf
-to Adam’s persuasion, then he tried to get out of listening, then he
-repudiated all Adam had said, and finally he raved and cursed. Adam
-persisted in his arguments until Virey strode off.
-
-Mrs. Virey heard some of this clash. Apparently Adam’s idea of
-changing her husband amused her. But when Virey returned for supper he
-was glad enough to eat, and when Adam again launched his argument it
-appeared that Mrs. Virey lost the last little trace of mockery. She
-listened intently while Adam told her husband why he would have to
-take his wife away from Death Valley, before midsummer. Virey might as
-well have been stone deaf. It was not Virey, however, who interested
-the woman, but something about Adam that made her look and listen
-thoughtfully.
-
-Thus began a singular time for Adam, unmatched in all his desert
-experience. He gave his whole heart to the task of teaching Magdalene
-Virey and to the wearing down of Virey’s will. All the lighter tasks
-that his hands had learned he taught her. Then to climb to the heights,
-to pick the ledges for signs of gold or pan the sandy washes, to know
-the rocks and the few species of vegetation, to recognize the illusion
-of distance and color, to watch the sunsets and the stars became daily
-experiences. Hard as work was for her delicate hands and muscles, he
-urged her to their limit. During the first days she suffered sunburn,
-scalds, skinned fingers, bruised knees, and extreme fatigue. When
-she grew tanned and stronger he led her out on walks and climbs so
-hard that he had to help her back to camp. She learned the meaning of
-physical pain, and to endure it. She learned the blessing it was to eat
-when she was famished, to rest when she was utterly weary, to sleep
-when sleep was peace.
-
-Through these brief, full days Adam attacked Virey at every
-opportunity, which time came to be, at length, only during meals.
-Virey would leave camp, often to go up the slope of weathered rocks,
-a dangerous climb that manifestly fascinated him. Reaching a large
-rock that became his favorite place, he would perch there for long
-hours, watching, gazing down like a vulture waiting for time to strike
-its prey. All about him seemed to suggest a brooding wait. He slept
-during the midday hours and through the long nights. At dusk, which was
-usually bedtime for all, Adam often heard him talking to Mrs. Virey in
-a low, hard, passionate voice. Sometimes her melodious tones, with the
-mockery always present when she spoke to her husband, thrilled Adam,
-while at the same moment it filled him with despair. But Adam never
-despaired of driving Virey to leave the valley. The man was weak in all
-ways except that side which pertained to revenge. Notwithstanding the
-real and growing obstacle of this passion, Adam clung to his conviction
-that in the end Virey would collapse. When, however, one day the
-Indians came, and Virey sent them away with a large order for supplies,
-Adam gave vent to a grim thought, “Well, I can always kill him.”
-
-All the disgust and loathing Adam felt for this waster of life
-vanished in the presence of Magdalene Virey. If that long-passed
-sunset hour over Death Valley had awakened the woman, what had been
-the transformation of the weeks? Adam had no thoughts that adequately
-expressed his feeling for the change in her. It gave him further
-reverence for desert sun and heat and thirst and violence and solitude.
-It gave him strange new insight into the mystery of life. Was any
-healing of disease or agony impossible--any change of spirit--any
-renewal of life? Nothing in relation to human life was impossible.
-Magnificently the desert magnified and multiplied time, thought,
-effort, pain, health, hope--all that could be felt.
-
-It seemed to Adam that through the physical relation to the desert
-he was changing Magdalene Virey’s body and heart and soul. Brown her
-face and hands had grown; and slowly the graceful, thin lines of her
-slender body had begun to round out. She was gaining. If it had not
-been for her shadowed eyes, and the permanent sadness and mockery in
-the beautiful lips, she would have been like a girl of eighteen. Her
-voice, too, with its contralto richness, its mellow depth, its subtle
-shades of tone, proclaimed the woman. Adam at first had imagined her to
-be about thirty years old, but as time passed by, and she grew younger
-with renewed strength, he changed his mind. Looking at her to guess
-her age was like looking at the desert illusions. Absolute certainty
-he had, however, of the reward and result of her inflexible will, of
-splendid spirit, of sincere gladness. She had endured physical toil and
-pain to the limit of her frail strength, until she was no longer frail.
-This spirit revived what had probably been early childish love of
-natural things; and action and knowledge developed it until her heart
-was wholly absorbed in all that it was possible to do there in that
-lonesome fastness. With the genius and intuition of a woman she had
-grasped at the one solace left her--the possibility of learning Adam’s
-lesson of the desert. What had taken him years to acquire she learned
-from him or divined in days. She had a wonderful mind.
-
-Once, while they were resting upon a promontory that overhung the
-valley, Adam spoke to her. She did not hear him. Her eyes reflected
-the wonder and immensity of the waste beneath her. Indeed, she did not
-appear to be brooding or thinking. And when he spoke again, breaking in
-upon her abstraction, she was startled. He forgot what he had intended
-to say, substituting a query as to her thoughts.
-
-“How strange!” she murmured. “I didn’t have a thought. I forgot where I
-was. Your voice seemed to come from far off.”
-
-“I spoke to you before, but you didn’t hear,” said Adam. “You looked
-sort of, well--watchful, I’d call it.”
-
-“Watchful? Yes, I was. I feel I was, but I don’t remember. This
-is indeed a strange state for Magdalene Virey. It behooves her to
-cultivate it. But what kind of a state was it?... Wansfell, could it
-have been happiness?”
-
-She asked that in a whisper, serious, and with pathos, yet with a smile.
-
-“It’s always happiness for me to watch from the heights. Surely you are
-finding happy moments?”
-
-“Yes, many, thanks to you, my friend. But they are conscious happy
-moments, just sheer joy of movement, or sight of beauty, or a thrill
-of hope, or perhaps a vague dream of old, far-off, unhappy things. And
-it _is_ happiness to remember them.... But this was different. It was
-unconscious. I tell you, Wansfell, I did not have a thought in my mind!
-I saw--I watched. Oh, how illusive it is!”
-
-“Try to recall it,” he suggested, much interested.
-
-“I try--I try,” she said, presently, “but the spell is broken.”
-
-“Well, then, let me put a thought into your mind,” went on Adam.
-“Dismukes and I once had a long talk about the desert. Why does it
-fascinate all men? What is the secret? Dismukes didn’t rate himself
-high as a thinker. But he is a thinker. He knows the desert. To me
-he’s great. And he and I agreed that the commonly accepted idea of
-the desert’s lure is wrong. Men seek gold, solitude, forgetfulness.
-Some wander for the love of wandering. Others seek to hide from the
-world. Criminals are driven to the desert. Besides these, all travelers
-crossing the desert talk of its enchantments. They all have different
-reasons. Loneliness, peace, silence, beauty, wonder, sublimity--a
-thousand reasons! Indeed, they are all proofs of the strange call of
-the desert. But these men do not go deep enough.”
-
-“Have you solved the secret?” she asked, wonderingly.
-
-“No, not yet,” he replied, a little sadly. “It eludes me. It’s like
-finding the water of the mirage.”
-
-“It’s like the secret of a woman’s heart, Wansfell.”
-
-“Then if that is so--tell me.”
-
-“Ah! no woman ever tells that secret.”
-
-“Have you come to love the desert?”
-
-“You ask me that often,” she replied, in perplexity. “I don’t know.
-I--I reverence--I fear--I thrill. But love--I can’t say that I love
-the desert. Not yet. Love comes slowly and seldom to me. I loved my
-mother.... Once I loved a horse.”
-
-“Have you loved men?” he queried.
-
-“No!” she flashed, in sudden passion, and her eyes burned dark on
-his. “Do _you_ imagine that of me?... I was eighteen when I--when
-they married me to Virey. I despised him. I learned to loathe him....
-Wansfell, I never really loved any man. Once I was mad--driven!”
-
-How easily could Adam strike the chords of her emotion and rouse her to
-impassioned speech! His power to do this haunted him, and sometimes he
-could not resist it until wistfulness or trouble in her eyes made him
-ashamed.
-
-“Some day I’ll tell you how _I_ was driven once--ruined,” he said.
-
-“Ruined! You? Why, Wansfell, you are a man! Sometimes I think you’re a
-god of the desert!... But tell me--what ruined you, as you mean it?”
-
-“No, not now. I’m interested in your--what is it?--your lack of power
-to love.”
-
-“Lack! How little you know me! I am _all_ power to love. I am a
-quivering mass of exquisitely delicate, sensitive nerves. I am a
-seething torrent, of hot blood. I am an empty heart, deep and terrible
-as this valley, hungry for love as it is hungry for precious rain or
-dew. I am an illimitable emotion, heaving like the tides of the sea. I
-am all love.”
-
-“And I--only a stupid blunderer,” said Adam.
-
-“You use a knife relentlessly, sometimes.... Wansfell, listen....
-I have a child--a lovely girl. She is fourteen years old--the
-sweetest.... Ah! Before she was born I did not love her--I did not
-_want_ her. But afterward!... Wansfell, a mother’s love is divine. But
-I had more than that. All--all my heart went out to Ruth.... _Love!_
-Oh, my God! does any man know the torture of love?... Oh, _I_ know!
-I had to leave her--I had to give her up ... and I’ll never--never
-see--her--again!”
-
-The woman bowed with hands to her face and all her slender body shook.
-
-“Forgive me!” whispered Adam, huskily, in distress. It was all he could
-say for a moment. She had stunned him. Never had he imagined her as a
-mother. “Yet--yet I’m glad I know now. You should have told me. I am
-your friend. I’ve tried to be a--a brother. Tell me, Magdalene. You’ll
-be the--the less troubled. I will help you. I think I understand--just
-a little. You seemed to me only a very young woman--and you’re a
-mother! Always I say I’ll never be surprised again. Why, the future is
-all surprise!... And your little girl’s name is Ruth? Ruth Virey. What
-a pretty name!”
-
-Adam had rambled on, full of contrition, hating himself, trying somehow
-to convey sympathy. Perhaps his words, his touch on her bowed shoulder,
-helped her somewhat, for presently she sat up, flung back her hair,
-and turned a tear-stained face to him. How changed, how softened, how
-beautiful! Slowly her eyes were veiling an emotion, a glimpse of which
-uplifted him.
-
-“Wansfell, I’m thirty-eight years old,” she said.
-
-“No! I can’t believe that!” he ejaculated.
-
-“It’s true.”
-
-“Well, well! I guess I’ll go back to figuring the desert. But speaking
-of age--you guess mine. I’ll bet you can’t come any nearer to mine.”
-
-Gravely she studied him, and in the look and action once more grew
-composed.
-
-“You’re a masculine Sphinx. Those terrible lines from cheek to
-jaw--they speak of agony, but not of age. But you’re gray at the
-temples. Wansfell, you are thirty-seven--perhaps forty.”
-
-“Magdalene Virey!” cried Adam, aghast. “Do I look so old? Alas for
-vanished youth!... I am only twenty-six.”
-
-It was her turn to be amazed. “We had better confine ourselves to other
-riddles than love and age. They are treacherous.... Come, let us be
-going.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-The hour came when Magdalene Virey stirred Adam to his depths.
-
-“Wansfell,” she said, with a rare and wonderful tremor in her voice,
-“I love the silence, the loneliness, the serenity--even the tragedy of
-this valley of shadows. Ah! It is one place that will never be popular
-with men--where few women will ever come. Nature has set it apart for
-wanderers of the wastelands, men like you, unquenchable souls who
-endure, as you said, to fight, to strive, to seek, to find.... And
-surely for lost souls like me! Most men and all women must find death
-here, if they stay. But there is death in life. I’ve faced my soul
-here, in the black, lonely watches of the desert nights. And I would
-endure any agony to change that soul, to make it as high and clear and
-noble as the white cone of the mountain yonder.”
-
-Mysterious and inscrutable, the desert influence had worked upon
-Magdalene Virey. On the other hand, forces destructive to her physical
-being had attacked her. It was as if an invisible withering wind had
-blown upon a flower in the night. Adam saw this with distress. But
-she laughed at the truth of it--laughed without mockery. Something
-triumphant rang like a bell in her laugh. Always, in the subtlety of
-character she had brought with her and the mystery she had absorbed
-from the desert, she stayed beyond Adam’s understanding. It seemed that
-she liked to listen to his ceaseless importunities; but merciless to
-herself and aloof from Virey, she refused to leave Death Valley.
-
-“Suppose I pack the burros and tuck you under my arm and take you,
-anyway?” he queried, stubbornly.
-
-“I fancy I’d like you to tuck me under your arm,” she replied, with the
-low laugh that came readily now, “but if you did--it would be as far as
-you’d get.”
-
-“How so?” he demanded, curiously.
-
-“Why, I’d exercise the prerogative of the eternal feminine and command
-that time should stand still right there.”
-
-A sweetness and charm, perhaps of other days, a memory of power,
-haunted face and voice then.
-
-“Time--stand still?” echoed Adam, ponderingly. “Magdalene, you are
-beyond me.”
-
-“So it seems. I’m a little beyond myself sometimes. You will never see
-in me the woman who has been courted, loved, spoiled by men.”
-
-“Well, I grasp that, I guess. But I don’t care to see you as such a
-woman. I might not----”
-
-“Ah! you might not respect me,” she interrupted. “Alas!... But,
-Wansfell, if I had met _you_ when I was eighteen I would never have
-been courted and loved and ruined by men.... You don’t grasp that,
-either.”
-
-Adam had long ceased to curse his density. The simplicity of him
-antagonized her complexity. His had been the blessed victory over her
-bitterness, her mockery, her consciousness of despair. His had been
-the gladness of seeing her grow brown and strong and well, until these
-early June days had begun to weaken her. That fact had augmented his
-earnestness to get her to leave the valley. But she was adamant. And
-all his importunities and arguments and threats she parried with some
-subtle femininity of action or look or speech that left him bewildered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The time came when only early in the mornings or late in the afternoons
-could they walk to their accustomed seat near the gateway of the valley
-and climb to the promontories. Nature moved on remorselessly with her
-seasons, and the sun had begun to assume its fiery authority during
-most of the daylight hours.
-
-One morning before sunrise they climbed, much against Adam’s advice,
-to a high point where Mrs. Virey loved to face the east at that hour.
-It was a hard climb, too hard for her to attempt in the heat and
-oppression that had come of late. Nevertheless, she prevailed upon Adam
-to take her, and she had just about strength enough to get there.
-
-They saw the east luminous and rosy, ethereal and beautiful,
-momentarily brightening with a rayed effulgence that spread from a
-golden center behind the dark bold domes of the Funeral Mountains. They
-saw the sun rise and change the luminous dawn to lurid day. One moment,
-and the beauty, the glory, the promise were as if they had never been.
-The light over Death Valley at that height was too fierce for the gaze
-of man.
-
-On the way down, at a narrow ledge, where loose stones made precarious
-footing, Adam cautioned his companion and offered to help her. Waving
-him on, she followed him with her lithe free step. Then she slipped off
-the more solid trail to a little declivity of loose rocks that began
-to slide with her toward a slope where, if she went over it, she must
-meet serious injury. She did not scream. Adam plunged after her and,
-reaching her with a long arm just as she was about to fall, he swung
-her up as if she had only the weight of a child. Then, holding her in
-his arms, he essayed to wade out of the little stream of sliding rocks.
-It was difficult only because he feared he might slip and fall with
-her. Presently he reached the solid ledge and was about to set her upon
-her feet.
-
-“Time--stand still here!” she exclaimed, her voice full of the old
-mockery of herself, with an added regret for what might have been, but
-could never be, with pathos, with the eternal charm of woman who could
-never separate her personality, her consciousness of her sex, from
-their old relation to man.
-
-Adam halted his action as if suddenly chained, and he gazed down upon
-her, where she rested with her head on the bend of his left elbow.
-There was a smile on the brown face that had once been so pale.
-Her large eyes, wide open, exposed to the sky, seemed to reflect
-its dark blue color and something of its mystery of light. Adam saw
-wonder there, and reverence that must have been for him, but seemed
-incredible, and the shading of unutterable thoughts.
-
-“Put me down,” she said.
-
-“Why did you say, ‘Time--stand still here’?” he asked, as he placed her
-upon her feet.
-
-“Do you remember the time when I told you how words and lines and
-verses of the poets I used to love come to mind so vividly out here?
-Sometimes I speak them, that is all.”
-
-“I understand. All I ever read has come back to me here on the desert,
-as clear as the print on the page--seen so many years ago. I used to
-hate Sunday school when I was a boy. But now, often, words of the Bible
-come before my mind.... But are you telling me the whole truth? Why did
-you say, ‘Time--stand still here,’ when I held you in my arms?”
-
-“What a boy you are!” she murmured, and her eyes held a gladness for
-the sight of him. “Confess, now, wouldn’t that moment have been a
-beautiful one for time to stop--for life to stand still--for the world
-to be naught--for thought and memory to cease?”
-
-“Yes, it would,” he replied, “but no more beautiful than this moment
-while you stand there so. When you look like that you make me hope.”
-
-“For what?” she queried, softly.
-
-“For you.”
-
-“Wansfell, you are the only man I’ve ever known who could have held me
-in his arms and have been blind and dead to the nature of a woman....
-Listen. You’ve done me the honor to say I have splendid thoughts and
-noble emotions. I hope I have. I know you have inspired many. I know
-this valley of death has changed my soul.... But, Wansfell, I am a
-woman, and a woman is more than her high and lofty thoughts--her
-wandering inspirations. A woman is a creature of feeling, somehow
-doomed.... When I said, ‘Time--stand still here,’ I was false to the
-woman in me that you idealize. A thousand thoughts, emotions, memories,
-desires, sorrows, vanities prompted the words of which you have made me
-ashamed. But to spare myself a little, let me say that it would indeed
-be beautiful for me to have you take me up into your arms--and then for
-time to stand still forever.”
-
-“Do you mean that--so--you’d feel safe, protected, at rest?” he asked,
-with emotion.
-
-“Yes, and infinitely more. Wansfell it is a woman’s fate that the
-only safe and happy and desired place for her this side of the grave
-is in the arms of the man she loves. A real man--with strength and
-gentleness--for her and her alone!... It is a terrible thing in women,
-the need to be loved. As a baby I had that need--as a girl--and as a
-woman it became a passion. Looking back now, through the revelation
-that has come to me here in this valley of silence--when thought is
-clairvoyant and all-pervading--I can see how the need of love, the
-passion to be loved, is the strongest instinct in any woman. It _is_
-an instinct. She can no more change it than she can change the shape
-of her hand. Poor fated women! Education, freedom, career may blind
-them to their real nature. But it is a man, the right man, that means
-life to a woman. Otherwise the best in her dies.... That instinct in
-me--for which I confess shame--has been unsatisfied despite all the men
-who have loved me. When you saved me--perhaps from injury--and took
-me into your arms, the instinct over which I have no control flashed
-up. While it lasted, until you looked at me, I wanted that moment to
-last forever. I wanted to be held that way--in your great, strong
-arms--until the last trumpet sounded. I wanted you to see only me, feel
-only me, hold only me, live for only me, love _me_ beyond all else on
-earth and in heaven!”
-
-As she paused, her slender brown hands at her heaving breast, her eyes
-strained as if peering through obscurity at a distant light, Adam could
-only stare at her in helpless fascination. In such moods as this she
-taught him as much of the mystery of life as he had taught her of the
-nature of the desert.
-
-“Now the instinct is gone,” she continued. “Chilled by your aloofness!
-I am looking at it with intelligence. And, Wansfell, I’m filled with
-pity for women. I pity myself, despite the fact that my mind is free.
-I can control my acts, if not my instincts and emotions. I am bound.
-I am a woman. I am a she-creature. I am little different from the
-fierce she-cats, the she-lions--any of the she-animals that you’ve
-told me fight to survive down on your wild Colorado Desert.... That
-seems to me the sex, the fate, the doom of women. Ah! no wonder they
-fight for men--spit and hiss and squall and scratch and rend! It’s
-a sad thing, seen from a woman’s mind. That great mass of women who
-cannot reason about their instincts, or understand the springs of their
-emotions--they are the happier. Too much knowledge is bad for my sex.
-Perhaps we are wrongly educated. _I_ am the happier for what you have
-taught me. I can see myself now with pity instead of loathing. I am not
-to blame for what life has made me. There are no wicked women. They
-must be loved or they are lost.... My friend, the divinity in human
-life is seen best in some lost woman like me.”
-
-“Magdalene Virey,” protested Adam, “I can’t follow you.... But to say
-_you_ are a lost woman--that I won’t listen to.”
-
-“I _was_ a lost woman,” interrupted Mrs. Virey, her voice rising out
-of the strong, sweet melody. “I had my pride, and I defied the husband
-whose heart I broke and whose life I ruined. I scorned the punishment,
-the exile he meted out to me. That was because I was thoroughbred.
-But all the same I was lost. Lost to happiness, to hope, to effort,
-to repentance, to spiritual uplift. Death Valley will be my tomb, but
-there will be resurrection for me.... It is you, Wansfell, you have
-been my salvation.... _You_ have the power. It has come from your
-strife and agony on the desert. It is beyond riches, beyond honor. It
-is the divine in you that seeks and finds the divine in unfortunates
-who cross your wandering trail.”
-
-Adam, rendered mute, could only offer his hand; and in silence he led
-her down the slope.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That afternoon, near the close of the hot hours, Adam lay in the
-shade of the brush shelter he had erected near the Virey shack. He
-was absorbed in watching a tribe of red ants, and his posture was so
-unusual that it gave pause to Virey, who had come down from the slope.
-The man approached and curiously gazed at Adam, to see what he was
-doing.
-
-“Looking for grains of gold?” inquired Virey, with sarcasm. “I’ll lend
-you my magnifying glass.”
-
-“I’m watching these red ants,” replied Adam, without looking up.
-
-Virey bent over and, having seen, he slowly straightened up.
-
-“Go to the ant, thou sluggard!” he ejaculated, and this time without
-sarcasm.
-
-“Virey, I’m no sluggard,” returned Adam. “It’s you who are that. I’m a
-worker.”
-
-“Wansfell, I was not meaning you,” said Virey. “There are things I hate
-you for, but laziness is certainly not included in them.... I never
-worked in my life. I had money left me. It was a curse. I thought I
-could buy everything. I bought a wife--the big-eyed woman to whom you
-devote your services--and your attentions.... And I bought for myself
-the sweetness of the deadly nightshade flower--a statue of marble,
-chiseled in the beautiful curves of mocking love--a woman of chain
-lightning and hate.... If I had lived by industry, as live those red
-ants you’re watching, I might not now have one foot in my grave in
-Death Valley.”
-
-Thus there were rare instances when Virey appeared a man with the
-human virtues of regret, of comprehension, of intolerance, but never a
-word issued from his lips that was not tinged with bitterness. Had the
-divinity in him been blasted forever? Or was it a submerged spark that
-could quicken only to a touch of the woman lost to him? Adam wondered.
-Sometimes a feeling of pity for Virey stole over him, but it never
-lasted long. Adam had more respect for these red ants than for some
-men, despite the alleged divinity. He abhorred the drones of life. The
-desert taught how useless were the idlers--how nature ruthlessly cut
-them off.
-
-The red ants had a hill some few paces from the shelter where Adam lay.
-One train of ants, empty handed, as it were, traveled rapidly from the
-ant hill toward the camp litter; and another train staggered under
-tremendous burdens in the other direction. At first Adam thought these
-last were carrying bits of bread, then he thought they were carrying
-grains of gravel, and then he discovered, by moving closer to watch,
-that they were carrying round black-and-white globules, several times
-as large as their own bodies. Presently he concluded that these round
-objects were ant eggs which the tribe was moving from one hill to
-another. It was exceedingly interesting to watch them. He recognized
-them as the species of desert ant that could bite almost as fiercely
-as a scorpion. Their labor was prodigious. The great difficulty
-appeared to be in keeping the eggs in their jaws. These burdens were
-continually falling out and rolling away. Some ants tried many times
-and in many ways to grasp the hard little globules. Then, when this was
-accomplished, came the work compared with which the labor of man seemed
-insignificant. After getting a start the loaded ants made fair progress
-over smooth, hard ground, but when they ran into a crust of earth or a
-pebble or a chip they began the toil of a giant. The ant never essayed
-to go round the obstacle. He surmounted it. He pushed and lifted and
-heaved, and sometimes backed over, dragging his precious burden behind
-him. Others would meet a little pitfall and, instead of circling it to
-get to the ant hill, they would roll down, over and over, with their
-eggs, until they reached the bottom. Then it was uphill work on the
-other side, indefatigible, ceaseless, patient, wonderful.
-
-Adam presently had to forego his little sentiment about the toil of
-the ants over their eggs. The black-and-white globules were seeds of
-maize. On the night before, Adam’s burro Jennie had persisted around
-camp until he gave her the last of some maize left in one of his packs.
-Jennie had spilled generous quantities of the maize in the sand, and
-the ants were carrying home the seeds.
-
-How powerful they were! How endowed with tireless endurance and a
-persistence beyond human understanding! The thing that struck Adam so
-singularly was that these ants did not recognize defeat. They could
-not give up. Failure was a state unknown to their instincts. And so
-they performed marvelous feats. What was the spirit that actuated them?
-The mighty life of nature was infinitely strong in them. It was the
-same as the tenacity of the lichen that lived on the desert rocks, or
-the eyesight of the condor that could see its prey from the invisible
-heights of the sky, or the age-long destructive movements of the
-mountain tops wearing down to the valleys.
-
-When Adam got up from his pleasant task and meditation he was surprised
-to find Mrs. Virey standing near with eyes intent on him. Then it
-became incumbent upon him to show her the toils of the red ants. She
-watched them attentively for a while.
-
-“Wonderful little creatures!” she exclaimed. “So this watching is one
-of the secrets of your desert knowledge. Wansfell, I can’t compare
-these ants to men. They are far superior. They have order, purpose.
-They are passionless, perfect organizations to carry on their lives.
-They will work and live--the descendants of this very tribe of
-ants--long after the race of men has disappeared off the face of the
-earth.... But wonderful as they are, and interesting as are their
-labors, I’d prefer to watch you chop wood, or, better, to climb the
-slope with your giant stride.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night, some time late, Adam was awakened by a gale that swooped up
-through the gateway from the valley. It blew away the cool mountain air
-which had settled down from the heights. It was a warmer wind than any
-Adam had ever before experienced at night. It worried him. Forerunner,
-it must be, of the midnight furnace winds that had added to the fame
-of Death Valley! It brought a strange, low, hollow roar, unlike any
-other sound in nature. It was a voice. Adam harkened to the warning.
-On the morrow he would again talk to Virey. Soon it might be too late
-to save Magdalene Virey. She had obstructed his will. She would not
-leave without her husband. She had bidden Adam stay there in Death
-Valley to serve her, but she seemed to have placed her husband beyond
-Adam’s reach. The ferocity in Adam had never found itself in relation
-to Virey. Adam had persuaded and argued with the persistence of the
-toiling ant, but to work his way with Virey seemed to demand the swoop
-of the desert hawk.
-
-This strange warm wind, on its first occurrence during Adam’s stay in
-the valley, rose to a gale and then gradually subsided until it moaned
-away mournfully. Its advent had robbed Adam of sleep; its going seemed
-to leave a deader silence, fraught with the meaning of its visit.
-
-Adam could sleep no more. This silence belied the blinking of the
-stars. It disproved the solidarity of the universe. Nothing lived,
-except his soul, that seemingly had departed from his body in a dream,
-and now with his vague thoughts and vaguer feelings wandered over the
-wastelands, a phantom in the night. Silence of utter solitude--most
-intense, dead, dreaming, waiting, sepulcher-like, awful! Where was the
-rustle of the wings of the bats? The air moved soundlessly, and it
-seemed to have the substance of shadows. A dead solitude--a terrible
-silence! A man and the earth! The wide spaces, the wild places of the
-earth as it was in the beginning! Here could be the last lesson to a
-thinking man--the last development of a man into savage or god.
-
-There! Was that a throb of his heart or a ring in his ear? Crack of a
-stone, faint, far away, high on the heights, a lonely sound making real
-the lonely night. It relieved Adam. The tension of him relaxed. And he
-listened, hopefully, longing to hear another break in the silence that
-would be so insupportable.
-
-As he listened, the desert moon, oval in shape, orange hued and weird,
-sailed over the black brow of the mountain and illumined the valley in
-a radiance that did not seem of land or sea. The darkness of midnight
-gave way to orange shadows, mustering and shading, stranger than the
-fantastic shapes of dreams.
-
-Another ring of rock on rock, and sharp rattle, and roll on roll,
-assured Adam that the weathering gods of the mountain were not daunted
-by the silence and the loneliness of Death Valley. They were working
-as ever. Their task was to level the mountain down to the level of the
-sea. The stern, immutable purpose seemed to vibrate in the ringing
-cracks and in the hollow reports. These sounds in their evenness
-and perfect rhythm and lonely tone established once more in Adam’s
-disturbed consciousness the nature of the place. Death Valley! The
-rolling of rocks dispelled phantasms.
-
-Then came a low, grating roar. The avalanche of endless broken
-rocks had slipped an inch. It left an ominous silence. Adam stirred
-restlessly in his blankets. There was a woman in the lee of that
-tremendous sliding slope--a woman of delicate frame, of magnificent
-spirit, of a heart of living flame. Every hour she slept or lay wide
-eyed in the path of that impending cataclysm was one of exceeding
-peril. Adam chafed under the invisible bonds of her will. Because she
-chose to lie there, fearless, beyond the mind of man to comprehend, was
-that any reason why he should let her perish? Adam vowed that he would
-end this dread situation before another nightfall. Yet when he thought
-of Magdalene Virey his heart contracted. Only through the fierce spirit
-of the desert could he defy her and beat down the jailer who chained
-her there. But that fierce spirit of his seemed obstructed by hers, an
-aloof thing, greater than ferocity, beyond physical life.
-
-And so Adam lay sleepless, listening to the lonely fall of sliding
-rocks, the rattle and clash, and then the hollow settling. Then he
-listened to the silence.
-
-It was broken by a different note, louder, harsher--the rattle and bang
-of a stone displaced and falling from a momentum other than its own. It
-did not settle. Heavy and large, it cracked down to thud into the sand
-and bump out through the brush. Scarcely had it quieted when another
-was set in motion, and it brought a low, sliding crash of many small
-rocks. Adam sat up, turning his ear toward the slope. Another large
-stone banged down to the sands. Adam heard the whiz of it, evidently
-hurtling through the air between his camp and the Vireys’. If that
-stone had struck their shack!
-
-Adam got up and, pulling on his boots, walked out a little way from
-his camp. What an opaque orange gloom! Nevertheless, it had radiance.
-He could see almost as well as when the full moon soared in silver
-effulgence. More cracking and rolling of little rocks, and then the
-dislodgment of a heavy one, convinced Adam that a burro was climbing
-the slope or a panther had come down to prowl around camp. At any rate
-the displacement of stones jarred unnaturally on Adam’s sensitive ear.
-
-Hurrying across to the Virey shack, he approached the side farther from
-the slope and called through the brush wall, “Mrs. Virey!”
-
-“Yes. What do you want, Wansfell?” she replied, instantly. She had been
-wide awake.
-
-“Have you heard the sliding rocks?”
-
-“Indeed I have! All through that strange roar of wind--and later.”
-
-“You and Virey better get up and take your blankets out a ways, where
-you will not be in danger. I think there’s a burro or a panther up on
-the slope. You know how loose the stones are--how at the slightest
-touch they come sliding and rolling. I’ll go up and scare the beast
-away.”
-
-“Wansfell, you’re wrong,” came the reply, with that old mockery which
-always hurt Adam. “You should not insult a burro--not to speak of a
-panther.”
-
-“What?” queried Adam, blankly.
-
-“It is another kind of an animal.”
-
-But for that subtle mockery of voice Adam would have been persuaded the
-woman was out of her head, or at least answering him in her sleep.
-
-“Mrs. Virey, please----”
-
-“Wansfell, it’s a sneaking coyote,” she called, piercingly, and then
-she actually uttered a low laugh.
-
-Adam was absolutely dumfounded. “Coyote!” he ejaculated.
-
-“Yes. It’s my husband. It’s Virey. He found out the rolling rocks
-frightened me at night. So he climbs up there and rolls them.... Sees
-how close he can come to hitting the shack!... Oh, he’s done that
-often!”
-
-An instant Adam leaned there with his head bent to the brush wall, as
-if turned to stone. Then like a man stung he leaped up and bounded
-round the shack toward the slope.
-
-In the orange radiance on that strange, moon-blanched slope he dimly
-saw a moving object. It stood upright. Indeed, no burro or panther!
-Adam drew a deep and mighty breath for the yell that must jar the very
-stones from their sockets.
-
-“HYAR!” he yelled in stentorian roar. Like thunder the great sound
-pealed up the slope. “COME DOWN OR I’LL WRING YOUR NECK!”
-
-Only the clapping, rolling, immeasurable echoes answered him. The last
-hollow clap and roll died away, leaving the silence deader than before.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam spent the remainder of that night pacing to and fro in the
-orange-hued shadows, fighting the fierce, grim violence that at last
-had burst its barrier. Adam could have wrung the life out of this Virey
-with less compunction than he would have in stamping on the head of a
-venomous reptile. Yet it was as if a spirit kept in the shadow of his
-form, as he strode the bare shingle, gazing up at the solemn black
-mountains and at the wan stars.
-
-Adam went down to the gateway between the huge walls. A light was
-kindling over the far-away Funeral range, and soon a glorious star
-swept up, as if by magic, above the dark rim of the world. The morning
-star shining down into Death Valley! No dream--no illusion--no desert
-mirage! Like the Star of Bethlehem beckoning the Wise Men to the East,
-it seemed to blaze a radiant path for Adam down across the valley of
-dim, mystic shadows. What could be the meaning of such a wonderful
-light? Was that blue-white lilac-haloed star only another earth upon
-which the sun was shining? Adam lifted his drawn face to its light and
-wrestled with the baser side of his nature. He seemed to be dominated
-by the spirit that kept close to his side. Magdalene Virey kept vigil
-with him on that lonely beat. It was her agony which swayed and wore
-down his elemental passion. Would not he fail her if he killed this
-man? Virey’s brutality seemed not the great question at issue for him.
-
-“I’ll not kill him--yet!”
-
-Thus Adam eased the terrible contention within him.
-
-When he returned to camp the sun had risen red and hot, with a thin,
-leaden haze dulling its brightness. No wind stirred. Not a sound broke
-the stillness. Magdalene Virey sat on the stone bench under the brush
-shelter, waiting for him. She rose as he drew near. Never had he seen
-her like this, smiling a welcome that was as true as her presence, yet
-facing him with darkened eyes and tremulous lips and fear. Adam read
-her. Not fear of him, but of what he might do!
-
-“Is Virey back yet?” he asked.
-
-“Yes. He just returned. He’s inside--going to sleep.”
-
-“I want to see him--to get something off my mind,” said Adam.
-
-“Wait--Adam!” she cried, and reached for him as he wheeled to go toward
-the shack.
-
-One glance at her brought Adam to a standstill, and then to a slow
-settling down upon the stone seat, where he bowed his head. Life had
-held few more poignant moments than this, in his pity for others. Yet
-he thrilled with admiration for this woman. She came close to him,
-leaned against him, and the quiver of her body showed she needed the
-support. She put a shaking hand on his shoulder.
-
-“My friend--brother,” she whispered, “if you kill him--it will
-undo--all the good you’ve done--for me.”
-
-“You told me once that the grandest act of a man was to fight for the
-happiness--the life of a woman,” he replied.
-
-“True! And haven’t you fought for my happiness, and my life, too? I
-would have died long ago. As for happiness--it has come out of my
-fight, my work, my effort to meet you on your heights--more happiness
-than I deserve--than I ever hoped to attain.... But if you kill
-Virey--all will have been in vain.”
-
-“Why?” he asked.
-
-“Because it is I who ruined him,” she replied, in low, deep voice,
-significant of the force behind it. “As men go in the world he was a
-gentleman, a man of affairs, happy and carefree. When he met me his
-life changed. He worshiped me. It was not his fault that I could not
-love him. I hated him because they forced me to marry him. For years he
-idolized me.... Then--then came the shock--his despair, his agony. It
-made him mad. There is a very thin line between great love and great
-hate.”
-
-“What--what ruined him?” demanded Adam.
-
-“Adam, it will be harder to confess than any other ordeal of my
-whole life. Because--because _you_ are the one man I should have
-met years ago.... Do you understand? And I--who yearn for your
-respect--for your--Oh, spare me!... I who need your faith--your
-strange, incomprehensible faith in me--I, who hug to my hungry bosom
-the beautiful hopes you have in me--I must confess my shame to save my
-husband’s worthless life.”
-
-“No. I’ll not have you--you humiliating yourself to save him anything.
-I give my word. I’ll never kill Virey unless he harms you.”
-
-“Ah! But he has harmed me. He has struck me.... Wansfell! don’t leap
-like that. Listen. Virey will harm me, sooner or later. He is obsessed
-with his one idea--to see me suffer. That is why he has let you and
-me wander around together so much. He hoped in his narrow soul to see
-you come to love me, and me to love you--so through that I should fall
-_again_--to suffer more anguish--to offer more meat for his hellish
-revenge.... But, lo! I am uplifted--forever beyond his reach--never to
-be rent by his fiendish glee ... unless you kill him--which would stain
-my hands with his blood--bring back the doom of soul from which you
-rescued me!”
-
-“Magdalene, I swear I’ll never kill Virey unless he kills you,”
-declared Adam, as if forced beyond endurance.
-
-“Ah, I ask no more!” she whispered, in passionate gratitude. “My God!
-how I feared you--yet somehow gloried in your look!... And now listen,
-friend, brother--man who should have been my lover--I hurry to my
-abasement. I kill the she-thing in me and go on to my atonement. I
-fight the instincts of a woman. I sacrifice a possible paradise, for I
-am young and life is sweet.”
-
-She circled his head with her arm and drew it against her heaving
-breast. The throbs of that tortured heart beat, beat, beat all through
-Adam’s blood, to the core of his body.
-
-“My daughter Ruth was not Virey’s child,” she went on, her voice
-low, yet clear as a bell. “I was only nineteen--a fool--mad--driven.
-I thought I was in love, but it was only one of those insane spells
-that so often ruin women.... For years I kept the secret. Then I could
-not keep it any longer. At the height of Virey’s goodness to me, and
-his adoration, and his wonderful love for Ruth, I told him the truth.
-I _had_ to tell it.... That killed his soul. He lived only to make
-me suffer. The sword he held over my head was the threat to tell my
-secret to Ruth. I could not bear that. A thousand deaths would have
-been preferable to that.... So in the frenzy of our trouble we started
-west for the desert. My father and Ruth followed us--caught up with us
-at Sacramento. Virey hated Ruth as passionately as he had loved her.
-I dared not risk him near her in one of his terrible moods. So I sent
-Ruth away with my father, somewhere to southern California. She did not
-know it was parting forever. But, O God in heaven--how I knew it!...
-Then, in my desperation, I dared Virey to do his worst. I had ruined
-him and I would pay to the last drop of blood in my bitter heart. We
-came to Death Valley, as I told you, because the terror and desolation
-seemed to Virey to be as close to a hell on earth as he could find
-to hide me. Here he began indeed to make me suffer--dirt and vermin
-and thirst and hunger and pain! Oh! the horror of it all comes back
-to me!... But even Death Valley cheated him. You came, Wansfell, and
-now--at last--I believe in God!”
-
-Adam wrapped a long arm around her trembling body and held her close.
-At last she had confessed her secret. It called to the unplumbed depths
-of him. And the cry in his heart was for the endless agony of woman.
-And it was a bitter cry of doubt. If Magdalene Virey had at last found
-faith in God, it was more than Adam had found, though she called him
-the instrument of her salvation. A fierce and terrible rage flamed in
-him for the ruin of her. Like a lion he longed to rise up to slay.
-Blood and death were the elements that equalized wrong. Yet through
-his helpless fury whispered a still voice into his consciousness--she
-had been miserable and now she was at peace; she had been lost and now
-she was saved. He could not get around that. His desert passion halted
-there. He must go on alone into the waste places and ponder over the
-wonder of this woman and what had transformed her. He must remember
-her soul-moving words and, away somewhere in the solitude and silence,
-learn if the love she intimated was a terrible truth. It could not be
-true now, yet the shaking of her slender form communicated itself to
-his, and there was inward tumult, strange, new, a convulsive birth of a
-sensation dead these many years--dead since that dusky-eyed Margarita
-Arallanes had tilted her black head to say, “Ah, so long ago and far
-away!”
-
-Memory surged up in Adam, moving him to speak aloud his own deeply
-hidden secret, by the revelation of which he might share the shame and
-remorse and agony of Magdalene Virey.
-
-“I will tell you my story,” he said, and the words were as cruel blades
-at the closed portals of his heart. Huskily he began, halting often,
-breathing hard, while the clammy sweat beaded upon his brow. What was
-this life--these years that deceived with forgetfulness? His trouble
-was there as keen as on the day it culminated. He told Magdalene of
-his boyhood, of his love for his brother Guerd, and of their life in
-the old home, where all, even friendships of the girls, was for Guerd
-and nothing for him. As he progressed, Magdalene Virey’s own agony was
-forgotten. The quiver of her body changed to strung intensity, the
-heaving of her bosom was no longer the long-drawn breath to relieve
-oppression. Remorselessly as she had bared her great secret, Adam
-confessed his little, tawdry, miserable romance--his wild response to
-the lure of a vain Mexican girl, and his fall, and the words that had
-disillusioned him.
-
-“Ah, so long ago and far away!” echoed Magdalene Virey, all the
-richness of her wonderful voice gathering in a might of woman’s
-fury. “Oh, such a thing for a girl to say!... And Adam--_she_, this
-Margarita, was the only woman you ever loved--ever knew that way?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And she was the cause of your ruin?”
-
-“Indeed she was, poor child!”
-
-“The damned hussy!” cried Magdalene, passionately. “And you--only
-eighteen years old? How I hate her!... And what of the man who won her
-fickle heart?”
-
-Adam bowed as a tree in a storm. “He--he was my brother.”
-
-“Oh _no_!” she burst out. “The boy you loved--the _brother_! Oh, it
-can’t be true!”
-
-“It was true.... And, Magdalene--I killed him.”
-
-Then with a gasp she enveloped him, in a fierce, protective frenzy of
-tenderness, arms around him, pressing his face to her breast, hanging
-over him as a mother over her child.
-
-“Oh, my God! Oh, my God! How terrible!... Your _brother_!... And I
-thought my secret, my sin, my burden so terrible! Oh, my heart bleeds
-for you.... Wansfell, poor unhappy wanderer!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-July! At last the endlessly long, increasingly hot June days brought
-the leaden-hazed month of July, when no sane man ever attempted to
-cross Death Valley while the sun was high.
-
-In all hours, even in the darkness, the bold, rugged slopes of the
-Panamints reflected sinister shades of red. And the valley was one of
-gray swirling shadows and waving veils of heat like transparent smoke.
-Beyond that vast, strange, dim valley rose the drab and ocher slopes
-of the Funeral Mountains, sweeping up to the bronze battlements and
-on to the lilac and purple peaks blurred in the leaden-hued haze that
-obscured the sky. The sun was sky-broad, an illimitable flare, with a
-lurid white heart into which no man could look.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam was compelled to curtail his activities. He did not suffer greatly
-from the heat, but he felt its weakening power. Ever his blood seemed
-at fever heat. Early in the mornings and late in the evenings he
-prepared simple meals, which, as the days dragged on, were less and
-ever less partaken of by his companions and himself. During the midday
-hours, through the terrible heat, he lay in the shade, sweltering and
-oppressed, in a stupor of sleep. The nights were the only relief from
-the immense and merciless glare, the bearing down of invisible bars
-of red-hot iron. Most of these long hours of darkness Adam lay awake
-or walked in the gloom or sat in the awful stillness, waiting for he
-knew not what. But that he waited for something he knew with augmenting
-dread.
-
-When the full blast of this summer heat came, Virey changed physically
-and mentally. He grew thin. He walked with bowed shoulders. His
-tongue protruded slightly and he always panted. Every day he ate less
-and slept less than on the day before. He obeyed no demands from Adam
-and took no precautions. His sufferings would have been less and his
-strength would have been greater had he refrained from exposing himself
-to the sun. But he reveled in proofs of the nature of Death Valley.
-
-And if Virey had ever worn a mask in front of Adam he now dropped it.
-Indeed he ignored Adam, no longer with scorn or indifference, but as
-if unaware of his presence. Whenever Adam wanted to be heard by Virey,
-which desire diminished daily, he had to block his path, confront him
-forcefully. Virey was given over wholly to his obsession. His hate
-possessed him body and soul. And if it had ever been a primitive hate
-to destroy, it had been restrained, and therefore rendered infinitely
-cruel, by the slow, measured process of thought, of premeditation.
-
-Often when Adam absented himself from camp, Virey had a trick of
-climbing the weathered slope to roll down rocks. He seemed mad to
-do this. Yet when Adam returned he would come clambering down, wet
-and spent, a haggard, sweating wretch not yet quite beyond fear. In
-vain had Adam argued, pleaded, talked with him; in vain had been the
-strident scorn of a man and the curses of rage. Virey, however, had
-a dread of Adam’s huge hands. Something about them fascinated him.
-When one of these, clenched in an enormous fist, was shoved under
-his nose with a last threat, then Virey would retire sullenly to the
-shack. In every way that was possible he kept before Magdalene Virey
-the spectacle of his ruin and the consciousness that it was her doing.
-These midsummer days soon made him a gaunt, unshaven, hollow-eyed
-wretch. Miserable and unkempt he presented himself at meals, and sat
-there, a haggard ghost, to mouth a little food and to stare at his
-wife with accusing eyes. He reminded her of cool, shaded rooms, of
-exquisite linen and china, of dainty morsels, of carved-glass pitchers
-full of refreshing drink and clinking ice. Always he kept before her
-the heat, the squalor, the dirt, the horror of Death Valley. When he
-could present himself before her with his thin, torn garments clinging
-wet to his emaciated body, his nerves gone from useless exertions, his
-hands bloody and shaking as if with palsy, his tongue hanging out--when
-he could surprise her thus and see her shrink, then he experienced
-rapture. He seemed to cry out: Woman! behold the wreck of Virey!
-
-But if that was rapture for him, to gloat over the doom of her seemed
-his glory. Day by day Death Valley wrought by invisible lines and
-shades a havoc in Magdalene Virey’s beauty. To look at her was to
-have striking proof that Death Valley had never been intended for a
-woman, no matter how magnificent her spirit. The only spirit that could
-prevail here was the one which had lost its earthly habiliments. Like a
-cat playing with a mouse, Virey watched his wife. Like Mephistopheles
-gloating over the soul of a lost woman, Virey attended to the slow
-manifestations of his wife’s failing strength. He meant to squeeze
-every drop of blood out of her heart and still keep, if possible,
-life lingering in her. His most terrible bitterness seemed to consist
-of his failure to hide her utterly and forever from the gaze of any
-man save himself. Here he had hidden her in the most desolate place
-in the world, yet another man had come, and, like all the others,
-had been ready to lay down his life for her. Virey writhed under
-this circumstance over which he had no control. It was really the
-only truth about the whole situation that he was able to grasp. The
-terrible tragedy of his hate was that it was not hate, but love. Like a
-cannibal, he would have eaten his wife raw, not from hunger, but from
-his passion to consume her, incorporate her heart and blood and flesh
-into his, make her body his forever. Thought of her soul, her mind, her
-spirit, never occurred to Virey. So he never realized how she escaped
-him, never understood her mocking scorn.
-
-But through his thick and heat-hazed brain there must have pierced
-some divination of his failing powers to torture her. The time came
-when he ceased to confront her like a scarecrow, he ceased accusing
-her, he ceased to hold before her the past and its contrast with the
-present, he gave up his refinement of cruelty. This marked in Virey
-a further change, a greater abasement. He reverted to instinct. He
-retrograded to a savage in his hate, and that hate found its outlet
-altogether in primitive ways.
-
-Adam’s keen eye saw all this, and the slow boil in his blood was
-not all owing to the torrid heat of Death Valley. His great hands,
-so efficient and ruthless, seemed fettered. A thousand times he had
-muttered to the silence of the night, to the solemn, hazed daylight,
-to the rocks that had souls, and to the invisible presence ever beside
-him: “How long must I stand this? How long--how long?”
-
-One afternoon as he awoke late from the sweltering siesta he heard Mrs.
-Virey scream. The cry startled him, because she had never done that
-before. He ran.
-
-Adam found her lying at the foot of the stone bench in a dead faint.
-The brown had left her skin. How white the wasted face! What dark
-shadows under the hollow eyes! His heart smote him remorselessly.
-
-As he knelt and was about to lift her head he espied a huge, black,
-hairy spider crawling out of the folds of her gray gown. It was a
-tarantula, one of the ugliest of the species. Adam flipped it off with
-his hand and killed it under his boot.
-
-Then with basin of water and wetted scarf he essayed to bring Mrs.
-Virey back to consciousness. She did not come to quickly, but at last
-she stirred, and opened her eyes with a flutter. She seemed to be
-awakening from a nightmare of fear, loathing, and horror. For that
-instant her sight did not take in Adam, but was a dark, humid, dilated
-vision of memory.
-
-“Magdalene, I killed the tarantula,” said he. “It can’t harm you
-now.... Wake up! Why, you’re stiff and you look like--like I don’t know
-what!... You fainted and I’ve had a time bringing you to.”
-
-“Oh!” she cried. “It’s you.” And then she clung to him while he lifted
-her, steadying her upon her feet, and placed her on the stone bench.
-“So I fainted?... Ugh! That loathsome spider! Where is it?”
-
-“I covered it with sand,” he replied.
-
-“Would it have--bitten me?”
-
-“No. Not unless you grasped it.”
-
-Slowly she recovered and, letting go of him, leaned back in the seat.
-Crystal beads of sweat stood out upon her white brow. Her hair was wet.
-Her sensitive lips quivered.
-
-“I’ve a perfect horror of mice, bugs, snakes, spiders--anything that
-crawls,” she said. “I can’t restrain it. I inherited it from my
-mother.... And what has mind got to do with most of a woman’s feelings?
-Virey has finally found that out.”
-
-“Virey!... What do you mean?” rejoined Adam.
-
-“I was leaning back here on the bench when suddenly I heard Virey
-slipping up behind me. I knew he was up to something. But I wouldn’t
-turn to see what. Then with two sticks he held the tarantula out over
-me--almost in my face. I screamed. I seemed to freeze inside. He
-dropped the tarantula in my lap.... Then all went black.”
-
-“Where--is he now?” asked Adam, finding it difficult to speak.
-
-“He’s in the shack.”
-
-Adam made a giant stride in that direction, only to be caught and
-detained by her clinging hands. Earnestly she gazed up at him, with
-melancholy, searching eyes.
-
-He uttered a loud laugh, mirthless, a mere explosion of surcharged
-breath. “No!... I can’t get angry. I can’t be a man any more. This
-Death Valley and the sun--and you--have worked on my mind.... But I’ll
-tell you what--nothing can stop me from beating Virey--so he’ll never
-do that again.”
-
-“Ah!... So I’ve worked on your mind? Then it’s the only great deed I
-ever did.... Wansfell, I told you Virey has threatened to shoot you.
-He’s meant to more than once, but when you have come he has been
-afraid. But he might.”
-
-“I wish to heaven he’d try it,” responded Adam, and, loosing the
-woman’s hold upon his hands, he strode toward the shack.
-
-“Virey, come out!” he called, loudly, though without any particular
-feeling. There was no reply, and he repeated the call, this time
-louder. Still Virey remained silent. Waiting a moment longer, Adam
-finally spoke again, with deliberate, cold voice. “Virey, I don’t want
-to mess up that room, with all your wife’s belongings in there. So come
-outside.”
-
-At that Adam heard a quick, panting breath. Then Virey appeared--came
-to the door of the shack. Adam could not have told what the man’s
-distorted face resembled. He carried a gun, and his heart was ferocious
-if his will was weak.
-
-“Don’t you--lay one of your--bloody hands on me,” he panted.
-
-Adam took two long strides and halted before Virey, not six feet
-distant.
-
-“So you’ve got your little gun, eh?” he queried, without any particular
-force. Adam had been compelled to smother all that mighty passion
-within him, or he could not have answered for his actions. “What are
-you going to do with it?”
-
-“If you make a--move at me--I’ll kill you,” came the husky, panting
-response.
-
-“Virey, I’m going to beat you within an inch of your worthless life,”
-declared Adam, monotonously, as if he had learned this speech by rote.
-“But I’ve got to talk first. I’m full of a million things to call you.”
-
-“Damn you, I’ll not listen,” replied Virey, beginning to shake with
-excitement. The idea of using the gun had become an intent and was
-acting powerfully upon him. “You leave my--camp--you get out--of this
-valley!”
-
-“Virey, are you crazy?” queried Adam. The use of his voice had changed
-that deadlock of his feelings. He must not trust himself to bandy
-speech with Virey. The beating must be administered quickly or there
-would be something worse. Yet how desperately hard not to try to awaken
-conscience or sense in this man!
-
-“No, I’m not crazy,” yelled Virey.
-
-“If you’re not crazy, then that trick of throwing a tarantula on your
-wife was damnable--mean--hellish--monstrous.... My God! man, can’t you
-see what a coward you are? To torture her--as if you were a heathen!
-That delicate woman--all quivering nerves! To pick on a weakness, like
-that of a child! Virey, if you’re not crazy you’re the worst brute I’ve
-ever met on the desert. You’ve sunk lower than men whom the desert has
-made beasts. You----”
-
-“Beast I am--thanks to my delicate wife,” cried Virey, with exceeding
-bitter passion. “Delicate? Ha-ha! The last lover of Magdalene Virey
-can’t see she’s strong as steel--alive as red fire! How she clings to
-memory! How she has nine lives of a cat--and hangs on to them--just
-to remember!... And you--meddler! You desert rat of a preacher! Get
-out--or I’ll kill you!”
-
-“Shoot and be damned!” flashed Adam, as with leap as swift as his voice
-he reached a sweeping arm.
-
-Virey’s face turned ashen. He raised the gun. Adam knocked it up
-just as it exploded. The powder burned his forehead, but the bullet
-sped high. Another blow sent the gun flying to the sand. Then Adam,
-fastening a powerful grip on Virey, clutching shirt and collar and
-throat at once, dragged him before the stone bench where Mrs. Virey
-sat, wide eyed and pale. Here Adam tripped the man and threw him
-heavily upon the sand. Before he could rise Adam straddled him, bearing
-him down. Then Adam’s big right hand swept and dug in the sand to
-uncover the dead tarantula.
-
-“Ah! here’s your spider!” he shouted. And he rubbed the hairy,
-half-crushed tarantula in Virey’s face. The man screamed and wrestled.
-“Good! you open your mouth. Now we’ll see.... Eat it--eat it, damn your
-cowardly soul!” Then Adam essayed to thrust the spider between Virey’s
-open lips. He succeeded only partly. Virey let out a strangling,
-spitting yell, then closed his teeth as a vise. Adam smeared what was
-left of the crushed tarantula all over Virey’s face.
-
-“Now get up,” he ordered, and, rising himself, he kicked Virey. Adam,
-in the liberation of his emotions by action, was now safe from himself.
-He would not kill Virey. He could even hold in his enormous strength.
-He could even think of the joy of violence that was rioting inside him,
-of the ruthless fierceness with which he could have rent this man limb
-from limb.
-
-Virey, hissing and panting in a frenzy, scrambled to his feet. Fight
-was in him now. He leaped at Adam, only to meet a blow that laid him
-on the sand. It had not stunned him. Up he sprang, bloody, livid, and
-was at Adam again. His frenzy lent him strength and in that moment he
-had no fear of man or devil. The desert rage was on him. He swung his
-fists, beat wildly at Adam, tore and clawed. Adam slapped him with
-great broad hands that clapped like boards, and then, when Virey lunged
-close, he closed his fist and smashed it into Virey’s face. The man
-of the cities went plowing in the sand. Then on his hands and knees
-he crawled like a dog, and, finding a stone, he jumped up to fling
-it. Adam dodged the missile. Wildly Virey clutched for more, throwing
-one after another. Adam caught one and threw it back, to crack hard
-on his opponent’s shin. Virey yelled no more. His rage took complete
-possession of him. Grasping up a large rock, he held it as a mace and
-rushed upon Adam to brain him. That action and intent to kill was the
-only big response he had made to this wild environment. He beat at
-Adam. He lunged up to meet his foe’s lofty head. He had no fear. But he
-was mad. No dawning came to him that he was being toyed with. Strong
-and furious at the moment, he might have succeeded in killing a lesser
-man. But before Adam he was powerless to do murder. Then the time came
-when Adam knocked the rock out of his hand and began to beat him, blow
-on blow to face and body, with violence, but with checked strength,
-so that Virey staggered here and there, upheld by fists. At last,
-whipped out of rage and power to retaliate, Virey fell to the sands.
-Adam dragged him into the shack and left him prostrate and moaning, an
-abject beaten wretch who realized his condition.
-
-Most difficult of all for Adam then was to face Mrs. Virey. Yet the
-instant he did he realized that his ignorance of women was infinite.
-
-“Did the bullet--when he fired--did it hit you?” she queried, her large
-eyes, intense and glowing, wonderfully dark with emotion, flashing over
-him.
-
-“No--it missed--me,” panted Adam, as with heavy breaths he sank upon
-the stone bench.
-
-“I picked up the gun. I was afraid he’d find it. You’d better keep it
-now,” she said, and slipped it into his pocket.
-
-“What a--dis--gusting--sight for you--to have--to watch!” exclaimed
-Adam, trying to speak and breathe at once.
-
-“It was frightful--terrible at first,” she returned. “But after the
-gun went flying--and you had stopped trying to make him eat the--the
-spider--uggh! how sickening!... After that it got to be-- Well,
-Wansfell, it was the first time in the years I’ve known my husband that
-I respected him. He meant to kill you. It amazed me. I admired him....
-And as for you--to see you tower over him--and parry his blows--and
-hit him when you liked--and knock him and drag him--oh, that roused a
-terrible something in me! I never felt so before in my whole life. I
-was some other woman. I watched the blood flow, I heard the thuds and
-heavy breaths, I actually smelled the heat of you, I was so close--and
-it all inflamed me, made me strung with savage excitement--I had almost
-said joy.... God knows, Wansfell, we have hidden natures within our
-breasts.”
-
-“If only it’s a lesson to him!” sighed Adam.
-
-“Then it were well done,” she replied, “but I doubt--I doubt. Virey
-is hopeless. Let us forget.... And now will you please help me search
-in the sand here for something I dropped. It fell from my lap when I
-fainted, I suppose. It’s a small ivory case with a miniature I think
-all the world of. Last and best of my treasures!”
-
-Adam raked in the sand along the base of the bench, and presently found
-the lost treasure. How passionately, with what eloquent cry of rapture,
-did she clutch it!
-
-“Look!” she exclaimed, with wonderful thrill in her voice, and held the
-little case open before Adam’s eyes.
-
-He saw a miniature painting of a girl’s face, oval, pure as a flower,
-with beautiful curls of dark bronze, and magnificent eyes. In these
-last Adam recognized the mother of this girl. The look of them, the
-pride and fire, if not the color, were the same as Magdalene Virey’s.
-
-“A sweet and lovely face,” said Adam.
-
-“Ruth!” she whispered. “My daughter--my only child--my baby that I
-abandoned to save her happiness!... Oh, mockery of life that I was
-given such a heart to love--that I was given such a perfect child!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The midsummer midnight furnace winds began to blow.
-
-They did not blow every night or many nights consecutively; otherwise
-all life in the valley would soon have become extinct. Adam found the
-hot winds heretofore, that he had imagined were those for which the
-valley was famed, were really comfortable compared with these terrible
-furnace blasts. In trying to understand their nature, Adam concluded
-they were caused by a displacement of higher currents of cool air.
-Sometime during the middle of the night there began a downward current
-of cool air from the mountain heights; and this caused a disturbance
-of the vast area of hot air in the burning valley below sea level. The
-tremendous pressure drove the hot air to find an outlet so it could
-rise to let the cool air down, and thus there came gusts and gales of
-furnace winds, rushing down the valley, roaring up the canyons.
-
-The camp of the Vireys, almost in the center of one of these outlets
-and scarcely a quarter of a mile from the main valley, lay open to the
-full fury of these winds.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The 1st of August was a hazy, blistering day in which the valley
-smoked. Veils of transparent black heat--shrouds of moving white
-transparent heat! The mountains’ tops were invisible, as if obscured in
-thin, leaden-hued fog; their bases showed dull, sinister red through
-the haze. Nothing moved except the strange veils and the terrible
-heaven-wide sun that seemed to have burst. It was a day when, if a man
-touched an unshaded stone with his naked hand, he would be burned as by
-a hot iron. A solemn, silent, sulphurous, smoky, deadly day, inimical
-to life!
-
-But at last the sunset of red hell ended that day and merciful darkness
-intervened. The fore part of the night was hot, yet endurable, and
-a relief compared to the sunlit hours. Adam marked, however, or
-imagined, a singular, ominous, reddish hue of the dim stars, a vast
-still veil between him and the sky, a waiting hush. He walked out
-into the open, peering through the dimness, trying to comprehend. The
-color of the stars and heavens, and of the dull black slopes, and of
-the night itself, seemed that of a world burned out. Immense, dim,
-mysterious, empty, desolate! Had this Death Valley finally unhinged
-his mind? But he convinced himself that it was normal. The unreality,
-the terror, the forbidding hush of all the elements, the imminence of
-catastrophe--these were all actually present. Anything could happen
-here. Exaggeration of sense was impossible. This Death Valley was only
-a niche of the universe and the universe only a part of the infinite.
-He felt his intelligence and emotion, and at the same time the
-conviction that only a step away was death. The old wonder arose--was
-death the end? Not possible! Yet the cruelty, the impassivity of
-nature, letting the iron consequences fall--this seemed to crush him.
-For the sake of a woman who suffered agony of body and mind, Adam was
-at war with nature and the spirit of creation. Why? The eternal query
-had no answer. It never would be answered.
-
-As the hours wore away the air grew hotter, denser. Like a blanket
-it seemed to lie heavily on Adam. It was the hottest, stillest, most
-oppressive, strangest night of all his desert experience. Sleep was
-impossible. Rest was impossible. Inaction was impossible. Every breath
-seemed impossible of fulfillment. A pressure constricted Adam’s lungs.
-The slow, gentle walk that he drove himself to take, which it was
-impossible to keep from taking, brought out a hot flood of sweat on his
-body, and the drops burned as they trickled down his flesh.
-
-“If the winds blow to-night!” he muttered, in irresistible dread.
-
-Something told him they would blow. To-night they would blow harder
-and hotter than ever before. The day of leaden fire had promised that.
-Nature had her midnight change to make in the elements. Time would not
-stand still. The universe prevailed on its inscrutable course; the
-planets burned; the suns blazed upon their earths; and this ball of
-rock on which Adam clung, groaning with the other pygmies of his kind,
-whirled and hurtled through space, now dark and then light, now hot and
-then cold, slave to a blazing master ninety million miles away. It was
-all so inconceivable, inscrutable, unbelievable.
-
-There came a movement of air fanning his check, emphasizing the warmth.
-He smelled anew the dry alkali dust, the smoky odor, almost like
-brimstone. The hour was near midnight and the deathlike silence brooded
-no more. A low moan, as of a lost soul, moved somewhere on the still
-air. Weird, dismal, uncanny, it fitted the spectral shadows and shapes
-around him, and the night with its mystery. No human sound, though it
-resembled the mourn of humanity! A puff of hot wind struck Adam in the
-face, rushed by, rustling the dead and withered brush, passed on to
-lull and die away. It seemed to leave a slow movement in the still air,
-a soft, restless, uneasy shifting, as of an immense volume becoming
-unsettled. Adam knew. Behind that sudden birth of life of dead air
-pressed the furious blasts of hell--the midnight furnace wind of Death
-Valley.
-
-Adam listened. How strange, low, sad the moan! His keen ears, attuned
-to all varieties of desert sound, seemed to fill and expand. The moan
-swelled to a low roar, lulling now, then rising. Like no sound he had
-ever heard before, it had strange affinity with the abyss of shadows.
-Suddenly the air around Adam began a steady movement northward. Its
-density increased, or else the movement, or pressure behind, made it
-appear so. And it grew swift, until it rustled the brush. Down in the
-valley the roar swelled like the movement of a mighty storm through a
-forest. When the gale reached the gateway below Adam it gave a hollow
-bellow.
-
-The last of the warm, still air was pressed beyond Adam, apparently
-leaving a vacuum, for there did not appear to be air enough to breathe.
-The roar of wind sounded still quite distant, though now loud. Then
-the hot blast struck Adam--a burning, withering wind. It was as if
-he had suddenly faced an open furnace from which flames and sparks
-leaped out upon him. That he could breathe, that he lived a moment,
-seemed a marvel. Wind and roar filled the wide space between the
-slopes and rushed on, carrying sand and dust and even shadows with it.
-That blast softened in volume and had almost died away when another
-whooped up through the gateway, louder and stronger and hotter than its
-predecessor. It blew down Adam’s sun shelter of brush and carried the
-branches rustling away. Then stormed contending tides of winds until,
-what with burning blasts and whirling dust devils and air thick with
-powdered salt and alkali, life became indeed a torment for Adam, man of
-the desert as he was.
-
-In the face of these furnace winds, tenacity of life had new meaning
-for Adam. The struggle to breathe was the struggle of a dying man to
-live. But Adam found that he could survive. It took labor, greater even
-than toiling through a sandstorm, or across a sun-scorched waste to a
-distant water hole. And it was involuntary labor. His great lungs were
-not a bellows for him to open when he chose. They were compelled to
-work. But the process, in addition to the burn and sting, the incessant
-thirst, the dust-laden air, the hot skullbone like an iron lid that
-must fly off, and the strange, dim, red starlight, the somber red
-varying shadow, the weird rush and roar and lull--all these created
-heroic fortitude if a man was to endure. Adam understood why no human
-being could long exist in Death Valley.
-
-“She will not live through the night,” muttered Adam. “But if she does,
-I think I’ll take her away.”
-
-While in the unearthly starlit gloom, so dimly red, Adam slowly plodded
-across to the Virey camp, that idea grew in his mind. It had augmented
-before this hour, only to faint at the strength of her spirit, but
-to-night was different. It marked a climax. If Magdalene Virey showed
-any weakening, any change of spirit, Adam knew he would have reached
-the end of his endurance.
-
-She would be lying or sitting on the stone bench. It was not possible
-to breathe inside the shack. Terrible as were the furnace winds, they
-had to be breasted--they had to be fought for the very air of life. She
-had not the strength to walk up and down, to and fro, through those
-endless hours.
-
-Adam’s keen eyes, peering through the red-tinged obscurity, made out
-the dark shape of Virey staggering along back and forth like an old
-man driven and bewildered, hounded by the death he feared. The sight
-gave Adam a moment of fierce satisfaction. Strong as was the influence
-of Magdalene Virey, it could not keep down hate for this selfish and
-fallen man. Selfish beyond all other frailty of human nature! The
-narrow mind obsessed with self--the I and me and mine--the miserable
-littleness that could not forgive, that could not understand! Adam had
-pity even in his hate.
-
-He found the woman on the bench, lying prone, a white, limp, fragile
-shape, motionless as stone. Sitting down, he bent over to look into
-her face. Her unfathomable eyes, wide and dark and strained, stirred
-his heart as never before. They were eyes to which sleep was a
-stranger--haunted eyes, like the strange midnight at which they gazed
-out, supernaturally bright, mirroring the dim stars, beautiful as the
-waking dreams never to come true--eyes of melancholy, of unutterable
-passion, of deathless spirit. They were the eyes of woman and of love.
-
-Adam took her wasted hand and held it while waiting for the wind to
-lull so that she could hear him speak. At length the hot blast moved
-on, like the receding of a fire.
-
-“Magdalene, I can’t stand this any longer,” he said.
-
-“You mean--these winds--of hell?” she panted, in a whisper.
-
-“No. I mean your suffering. I might have stood your spiritual ordeal.
-Your remorse--your agony of loss of the daughter Ruth--your brave
-spirit defying Virey’s hate.... But I can’t stand your physical
-torment. You’re wasting away. You’re withering--burning up. This hand
-is hot as fire--and dry as a leaf. You must drink more water....
-Magdalene, lift your head.”
-
-“I--cannot,” she whispered, with wan smile. “No--strength left.”
-
-Adam lifted her head and gave her water to drink. Then as he laid her
-back another blast of wind came roaring through the strange opaque
-night. How it moaned and wailed around the huge bowlders and through
-the brush! It was a dance of wind fiends, hounding the lost spirits of
-this valley of horrors. Adam felt the slow, tight tide of his blood
-called stingingly to his skin and his extremities, and there it burned.
-It was not only his heart and his lungs that were oppressed, but the
-very life of his body seemed to be pressing to escape through the pores
-of his skin--pressed from inward by the terrible struggle to survive
-and pressed back from outside by the tremendous blast of wind! The
-wind roared by and lulled to a moan. The wave of invisible fire passed
-on. Out there in the dim starlight Virey staggered back and forth
-under the too great burden of his fate. He made no sound. He was a
-specter. Beyond the gray level of gloom with its strange shadows rose
-the immense slope of loose stones, all shining with dim, pale-red glow,
-all seemingly alive, waiting for the slide of the avalanche. And on
-the instant a rock cracked with faint ring, rolled with little hollow
-reports, mockingly, full of terrible and latent power. It had ominous
-answer in a slight jar of the earth under Adam’s feet, perhaps an
-earthquake settling of the crust, and then the whole vast slope moved
-with a low, grating sound, neither roar nor crash, nor rattle. The
-avalanche had slipped a foot. Adam could have pealed out a cry of dread
-for this woman. What a ghastly fantasy the struggle for life in Death
-Valley! What mockery of wind and desert and avalanche!
-
-“Wansfell--listen,” whispered the woman. “Do you hear--it passing on?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Adam, bending lower to see her eyes. Did she mean that
-the roar of wind was dying away?
-
-“The stormy blast of hell--with restless fury--drives the spirits
-onward!” she said, her voice rising.
-
-“I know--I understand. But you mustn’t speak such thoughts. You must
-not give up to the wandering of your mind. You must fight,” implored
-Adam.
-
-“My friend--the fight is over--the victory is mine.... I shall escape
-Virey. He possessed my body--poor weak thing of flesh!... but he wanted
-my love--my soul.... My soul to kill! He’ll never have either....
-Wansfell, I’ll not live--through the night.... I am dying now.”
-
-“No--no!” cried Adam, huskily. “You only imagine that. It’s only the
-oppression of these winds--and the terror of the night--this awful,
-unearthly valley of death. You’ll live. The winds will wear out soon.
-If only you fight you’ll live.... And to-morrow--Magdalene, so help me
-God--I’ll take you away!”
-
-He expected the inflexible and magnetic opposition of her will, the
-resistless power of her spirit to uplift and transform. And this time
-he was adamant. At last the desert force within him had arisen above
-all spiritual obstacles. The thing that called was life--life as it had
-been in the beginning of time. But no mockery or eloquence of refusal
-was forthcoming from Magdalene Virey. Instead, she placed the little
-ivory case, containing the miniature painting of her daughter Ruth, in
-Adam’s hand and softly pressed it there.
-
-“But--if I should die--I want you to have this picture of Ruth,” she
-said. “I’ve had to hide it from Virey--to gaze upon it in his absence.
-Take it, my friend, and keep it, and look at it until it draws you
-to her.... Wansfell, I’ll not bewilder you by mystic prophecies. But
-I tell you solemnly--with the clairvoyant truth given to a woman who
-feels the presence of death--that my daughter Ruth will cross your
-wanderer’s trail--come into your life--and love you.... Remember what I
-tell you. I see!... You are a young man still. She is a budding girl.
-You two will meet, perhaps in your own wastelands. Ruth is all of
-me--magnified a thousand times. More--she is as lovely as an unfolding
-rose at dawn. She will be a white, living flame.... It will be as if
-I had met you long ago--when I was a girl--and gave you what by the
-nature of life was yours.... Wansfell, you wakened my heart--saved my
-soul--taught me peace.... I wonder how you did it. You were just a
-man.... There’s a falseness of life--the scales fell from my eyes one
-by one. It is the heart, the flesh, the bursting stream of red blood
-that count with nature. All this strife, this travail, makes toward
-a perfection never to be attained. But effort and pain, agony of
-flesh, and victory over mind make strength, virility.... Nature loves
-barbarian women who nurse their children. I--with all my love--could
-not nurse my baby Ruth. It’s a mystery no longer. Death Valley and a
-primitive man have opened my eyes. Nature did not intend people to live
-in cities, but in forests, as lived the Aryans of India, or like the
-savages of Brazilian jungles. Like the desert beasts, self-sufficient,
-bringing forth few of their kind, but better, stronger species. The
-weak perish. So should the weak among men.... Ah! hear the roar!
-Another wind of death!... But I’ve said all.... Wansfell, go find
-Ruth--find me in her--and--remember!”
-
-The rich voice, growing faint at the last, failed as another furnace
-blast came swooping up with its dust and heat. Adam bowed his head
-and endured. It passed and another came. The woman lay with closed
-eyes and limp body and nerveless hands. Hours passed and the terrible
-winds subsided. The shadow of a man that was Virey swaying to and fro,
-like a drunken specter, vanished in the shack. The woman slept. Adam
-watched by her side till dawn, and when the gray light came he could
-no more have been changed than could the night have been recalled. He
-would find the burros and pack them and saddle one for Magdalene Virey
-to ride; he would start to climb out of Death Valley and when another
-night fell he would have her safe on the cool mountain heights. If
-Virey tried to prevent this, it would mean the terrible end he merited.
-Adam gazed down upon the sleeping woman. How transparent, how frail a
-creature! She mystified Adam. She represented the creative force in
-life. She possessed that unintelligible and fatal thing in nature--the
-greatest, the most irresistible, the purest expression of truth, of
-what nature strove so desperately for--and it was beauty. Her youth,
-her error, her mocking acceptance of life, her magnificent spirit, her
-mother longing, her agony and her physical pangs, her awakening and
-repentance and victory--all were written on the pale face and with the
-indestructible charm of line and curve and classic feature constituted
-its infinite loveliness. She was a sleeping woman, yet she was close to
-the angels.
-
-Adam looked from her to the ivory case in his hand.
-
-“Her daughter Ruth--for me!” he said, wonderingly. “How strange if we
-met! If--if-- But that’s impossible. She was wandering in mind.”
-
-He carried the little case to his camp, searched in his pack for an
-old silk scarf, and, tearing this, he carefully wrapped the gift and
-deposited it inside the leather money belt he wore hidden round his
-waist.
-
-“Now to get ready to leave Death Valley!” he exclaimed, in grim
-exultance.
-
-Adam’s burros seldom strayed far from camp. This morning, however,
-he did not find them near the spring nor down in the notches of the
-mountain wall. So he bent his steps in the other direction. At last,
-round a corner of slope, out of sight of camp, he espied them, and soon
-had them trotting ahead of him.
-
-He had traversed probably half the distance he had come when the burro
-Jennie halted to shoot up her long ears. Something moving had attracted
-her attention, but Adam could not see it. He drove her on. Again she
-stopped. Adam could now see the shack, and as he peered sharply there
-seemed to cross his vision a bounding gray object. He rubbed his eyes
-and muttered. Perhaps the heat had affected his sight. Then between
-him and the shack flashed a rough object, gray-white in color, and
-it had the bounding motion of a jack rabbit. But it could not have
-been a rabbit, because it was too large, and, besides, there were
-none in the valley. A wild cat, perhaps? Adam urged Jennie on, and it
-struck him that she was acting queerly. This burro never grew contrary
-without cause. When she squealed and sheered off to one side Adam knew
-something was amiss. That vague shock returned to his consciousness,
-stronger, more certain and bewildering. Halting so as to hear better,
-he held his breath and listened. Crack and roll of rock--slow sliding
-rattle--crack! The mystery of the bounding gray objects was solved.
-Virey had again taken to rolling rocks down the slope.
-
-Adam broke into a run. He was quite a distance from the shack, though
-now he could see it plainly. No person was in sight. More than once,
-as he looked, he saw rocks bound high above the brush and fall to puff
-up dust. Virey was industrious this morning, making up for lost time,
-taking sure advantage of Adam’s absence. Adam ran faster. He reached
-a point opposite the fanlike edge of the great slant of loose stones,
-and here he seemed to get into a zone of concatenated sounds. The wind,
-created by his run, filled his ears. And his sight, too, seemed not
-to be trusted. Did it not magnify a bounding rock and puff of dust
-into many rocks and puffs? Streaks were running low down in the brush,
-raising little dusty streams. He saw clumps of brush shake and bend. If
-something queer, such as had affected Jennie, did not possess his sight
-and mind, then it surely possessed Death Valley. For something was
-wrong.
-
-Suddenly Adam’s ears were deafened by a splitting shock. He plunged in
-his giant stride, slowed and halted. He heard the last of a sliding
-roar. The avalanche had slipped. But it had stopped. Bounding rocks
-hurtled in front of Adam, behind him, and puffs and streaks of dust
-were everywhere. He heard the whiz and thud of a rolling rock passing
-close behind him. As he gazed a large stone bounded from the ground
-and seemed to pass right through the shack. The shack collapsed.
-Adam’s heart leaped to his throat. He was riveted to the spot. Then,
-mercifully it seemed, a white form glided out from the sun shelter. It
-was the woman, still unharmed. The sight unclamped Adam’s voice and
-muscle.
-
-“Go across! Hurry!” yelled Adam, with all the power of his lungs. He
-measured the distance between him and her. Two hundred yards! Rocks
-were hurtling and pounding across that space.
-
-The woman heard him. She waved her white hand and it seemed she was
-waving him back out of peril. Then she pointed up the slope. Adam
-wheeled. What a thrilling sight! Rocks were streaking down, hurtling
-into the air, falling to crack powder from other rocks, that likewise
-were set in motion. Far up the long gray slope, with its million facets
-of stones shining in the sunlight, appeared Virey, working frantically.
-No longer did he seek to frighten his wife. He meant to kill her. His
-insane genius had read the secret of the slope, and in an instant he
-would have the avalanche in motion. The cracking clamor increased. Adam
-opened his lips to yell a terrible threat up at Virey, but a whizzing
-bowlder, large as a bucket, flashing within a foot of his head,
-awakened him to his own peril. He saw other rocks bounding down in line
-with him, and, changing his position, stepping, leaping, dodging, he
-managed to evade them. He had no fear for himself, but terror for the
-woman, and for Virey deadly rage possessed his heart.
-
-Then a piercing split, as of rocks rent asunder, a rattling crash, and
-the lower half of the great gray slope was in motion. The avalanche!
-Adam leaped at the startling sound, and, bounding a few yards to a huge
-bowlder, high as his head and higher, he mounted it. There, unmindful
-of himself, he wheeled to look for Magdalene Virey. Too late to reach
-her! She faced that avalanche, arms spread aloft, every line of her
-body instinct with the magnificent spirit which had been her doom.
-
-“_Run! Run! Run!_” shrieked Adam, wildly.
-
-Lost was his piercing shriek in the swallowing, gathering might of the
-crashing roar of the avalanche. A pall of dust, a gray tumbling mass,
-moved down ponderously, majestically, to hide from Adam’s sight the
-white form of Magdalene Virey. It spread to where Adam stood, enveloped
-him, and then, in boom and thunder and crash as of falling worlds, the
-bowlder was lifted and carried along with the avalanche.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-Adam was thrown prostrate. In the thick, smothering dust he all but
-lost his senses. Adam felt what seemed a stream of stones rolling over
-his feet. The thundering, deafening roar rolled on, spread and thinned
-to a rattling crash, deadened and ceased. Then from the hollows of
-the hills boomed a mighty echo, a lifting and throwing of measureless
-sound, that thumped from battlement to battlement and rumbled away like
-muttering thunder.
-
-The silence then was terrible by contrast. As horror relaxed its grim
-clutch Adam began to realize that miraculously he had been spared. In
-the hot, dusty pall he fought for breath like a drowning man. The heavy
-dust settled and the lighter drifted away.
-
-Adam clambered to his feet. The huge bowlder that had been his ship of
-safety appeared to be surrounded by a sea of small rocks, level with
-where he stood. The avalanche had spread a deep layer of rocks all
-over and beyond the space adjacent to the camp. Not a vestige of the
-shack remained. Magdalene Virey had been buried forever beneath a mass
-of stone. Adam’s great frame shuddered with the convulsions of his
-emotion. He bent and bowed under the inevitable. “Oh, too late! too
-late!... Yet I knew all the time!” was the mournful cry he sent out
-into the silence. Dazed, sick, horror-stricken, he bowed there above
-Magdalene Virey’s sepulcher and salt tears burned his eyes and splashed
-down upon the dusty stones. He suffered, dully at first, and then
-acutely, as his stunned consciousness began to recover. Tragic this
-situation had been from the beginning, and it could have had but one
-end.
-
-Suddenly he remembered Virey. The thought transformed him.
-
-“He must have slid with the avalanche,” muttered Adam. “Buried under
-here somewhere. One sepulcher for him and wife!... So he wanted
-it--alive or dead!”
-
-The lower part of the great slope was now solid rock, dusty and earthy
-in places, in others the gray color of live granite. It led his eye
-upward, half a mile, to the wide, riblike ridge that marked the lower
-margin of another slope of weathered rocks. It shone in the hot
-sunlight. Dark veils of heat rose, resembling smoke against the sky.
-The very air seemed trembling, and over that mountain-side hovered the
-shadow of catastrophe.
-
-A moving white object caught Adam’s roving sight. His desert eyes
-magnified that white object. A man! He was toiling over the loose
-stones.
-
-“_Virey!_” burst out Adam, and with the explosion of the word all of
-the desert stormed in him and his nature was no different from the
-cataclysm that had shorn and scarred the slope.
-
-Like a wide-lunged primordial giant, Adam lifted his roar of rage
-toward the heights--a yell that clapped fierce echoes from the cliffs.
-Virey heard. He began to clamber faster over the rocks and sheered off
-toward the right, where, under the beetling, steep slopes, every rod
-was more fraught with peril.
-
-Adam bounded like a huge soft-footed cat over and up the hummocky
-spread of the avalanche. Virey’s only avenue of escape lay upward and
-to the left. Once Adam cut him off there, he was in a trap.
-
-To the right over the ridge small stones began to show, rolling and
-bouncing, then shooting like bullets off the bare slant below. Virey
-was out of Adam’s sight now, but evidently still headed in the fatal
-direction. Like a mountain sheep, surest-footed of beasts, Adam bounded
-from loose rock to sharp corner, across the wide holes, on and upward.
-
-Another low, vast slope spread out and sheered gradually up before
-him, breaking its uniformity far to the right, and waving gracefully
-to steep slants of loose rock perilous to behold. Adam heard the faint
-cracking of stones. He hurried on, working away from the left, until he
-was climbing straight toward the splintered, toppling mass of mountain
-peak, a mile above him. All now, in every direction, was broken rock,
-round, sharp, flat, octagonal, every shape, but mostly round, showing
-how in the process of ages the rolling and grinding had worn off the
-edges. Here the heat smoked up. When Adam laid a hurried hand on a
-stone he did not leave it there long.
-
-At length he again espied Virey, far to the right and half a mile
-farther up, climbing like a weary beast on hands and feet. By choice
-or by mistake he had gone upward to the most hazardous zone of all
-that treacherous, unstable mountain-side. Even now the little dusty
-slides rolled from under him. Adam strode on. He made short cuts. He
-avoided the looser slides. He zigzagged the steeper places. He would
-attend to safe stepping stones for a few rods, then halt to lift his
-gaze toward that white-shirted man toiling up like a crippled ape. The
-mountain slope, though huge and wide under the glaring sun, seemed to
-lose something of its openness. The red battlements and ramparts of
-the heights were frowning down upon it, casting a shadow of menace,
-if not of shade. The terrible forces of nature became manifest. Here
-the thunderbolts boomed and the storms battled, and in past ages the
-earthquake and volcanic fire had fretted the once noble peak. It was
-ruined. It had disintegrated. Ready to spread its million cracks and
-crumble, it lowered gloomily.
-
-Red, sinister, bare, ghastly, this smoky slope under the pitiless sun
-was a fitting place for Wansfell to get his hands on Virey--murderer of
-a woman. Adam thought of it that way because he remembered how Virey
-had been fascinated at the story of Baldy McKue. But mostly Adam’s mind
-worked like the cunning instinct of a wolf to circumvent its prey.
-Thoughts were but flashes. The red tinge in Adam’s sight did not all
-come from the color or the rock. And it was when he halted to look or
-rest that he thought at all.
-
-But the time came when he halted for more than that. Placing his hands
-around his mouth, he expanded his deep lungs and burst into trumpetlike
-yell:
-
-“VIREY!” The fugitive heard, turned from his toiling, slid to a seat on
-the precarious slope, and waited. “I’LL BREAK YOUR BONES!”
-
-A wild cry pealed down to ring in Adam’s ears. He had struck terror to
-the heart of the murderer. And Adam beat down his savage eagerness, so
-as to lengthen the time till Virey’s doom. Not thus did the desert in
-Adam speak, but what the desert had made him. Agony, blood, death! They
-were almost as old as the rocks. Other animate shapes, in another age,
-had met in strife there, under the silent, beetling peak. Life was the
-only uttermost precious thing. All else, all suffering, all possession,
-was nothing. To kill a man was elemental, as to save him was divine.
-
-Virey’s progress became a haunting and all-satisfying spectacle to
-behold, and Adam’s pursuit became studied, calculated, retarded--a
-thing as cruel as the poised beak of a vulture.
-
-Virey got halfway up a gray, desolate, weathered slant, immense in
-its spread, another fan-shaped, waiting avalanche. The red ragged
-heights loomed above; below hung a mountain-side as unstable as water,
-restrained, perhaps, by a mere pebble. Here Virey halted. Farther he
-could not climb. Like a spent and cornered rat he meant to show fight.
-
-Adam soon reached a point directly below Virey, some hundreds of
-yards--a long, hard climb. He paused to catch his breath.
-
-“Bad slope for me if he begins to roll stones!” muttered Adam, grimly.
-
-But neither rolling stones nor avalanches could stop Adam. The end of
-this tragedy was fixed. It had been set for all the years of Virey’s
-life and back into the past. The very stones cried out. Glaring sun,
-smoking heat, shining slope, and the nameless shadow--all were tinged
-with a hue inimical to Virey’s life. The lonely, solemn, silent desert
-day, at full noontide heat, bespoke the culmination of something
-Virey had long ago ordained. Far below, over the lower hills of the
-Panamints, yawned Death Valley, ghastly gray through the leaden haze,
-an abyss of ashes, iron walled and sun blasted, hateful and horrible as
-the portal of hell. High up and beyond, faintly red against an obscure
-space of sky, towered the Funerals, grand and desolate.
-
-Adam began to climb the weathered slope, taking a zigzag course.
-Sliding stones only slightly retarded his ascent. He stepped too
-quickly. Usually when a stone slipped his weight had left it.
-
-Virey set loose a bowlder. It slid, rolled, leaped, fell with a crack,
-and then took to hurtling bounds, starting a multitude of smaller
-stones. Adam kept keen eye on the bowlder and paid no attention to the
-others. Then he stepped aside out of its course. As it whizzed past
-him Virey slid another loose upon the slope. Adam climbed even as the
-rock bounded down, and a few strides took him to one side. Virey ran
-over, directly in line with Adam, and started another huge rock. Thus
-by keeping on a zigzag ascent Adam kept climbing most of the time,
-and managed to avoid the larger missiles. The smaller ones, however,
-could not all be avoided. And their contact was no slight matter. Virey
-tugged upon a large rock, deeply embedded, and rolled it down. Huge,
-bounding, crashing, it started a rattling slide that would have swept
-Adam to destruction had it caught him. But he leaped out of line just
-in the nick of time. Virey began to work harder, to set loose smaller
-stones and more of them, so that soon he had the slope a perilous
-ascent for Adam. They cracked and banged down, and the debris rattled
-after them. Adam swerved and leaped and ran. He smelled the brimstone
-powder and the granite dust. Fortunately, no cloud of dust collected
-to obscure his watchful sight. He climbed on, swiftly when advantage
-offered, cautiously when he must take time to leap and dodge. Then
-a big rock started a multitude of small ones, and all clattered and
-spread. Adam dashed forward and backward. The heavier stones bounced
-high, and as many came at one time, he could not watch all. As he
-dodged one, another waved the hair of his head, and then another,
-striking his shoulder, knocked him down. The instant he lay there,
-other stones rolled over him. Adam scrambled up. Even pain could not
-change his fierce, cold implacability, but it accelerated his action.
-He played no longer with Virey. He yelled again what he meant to do
-with his hands, and he spread them aloft, great, clawlike members, the
-sight of which inflamed Virey to desperation. Frantically he plowed up
-the stones and rolled them, until he had a deluge plunging down the
-slope. But it was not written that Adam should be disabled. Narrow
-shaves he had, and exceeding risks he took, yet closer and closer he
-climbed. Only a hundred yards now separated the men. Adam could plainly
-see Virey’s ragged shirt, flying in shreds, his ashen face, his wet
-hair matted over his eyes.
-
-Suddenly above the cracks and rattling clash rose a heavy, penetrating
-sound. Mighty rasp of a loose body against one of solidity! Startled to
-a halt, Adam gazed down at his feet. The rocks seemed to be heaving.
-Then a dreadful yell broke sharply. Virey! Adam flashed his gaze upward
-in time to see the whole slope move. And that move was accompanied by a
-rattling crash, growing louder and more prolonged. Virey stood stricken
-by mortal terror in the midst of an avalanche.
-
-Wheeling swiftly, Adam bounded away and down, his giant strides
-reaching farther and faster, his quivering body light and supple,
-his eye guiding his flying feet to surfaces that were safe. Behind,
-beyond, above him the mountain slope roared until sound no longer meant
-anything. His ears were useless. The slope under him heaved and waved.
-Running for his life, he was at the same time riding an avalanche. The
-accelerating motion under him was strange and terrifying. It endowed
-him with wings. His feet scarcely touched the stones and in a few
-seconds he had bounded off the moving section of slope.
-
-Then he halted to turn and see, irresistibly called to watch Virey
-go to what must soon be a just punishment. The avalanche, waving
-like swells of the sea, seemed slowing its motion. Thin dust clouds
-of powdered rock hung over it. Adam again became aware of sound--a
-long-drawn, rattling roar, decreasing, deadening, dying. Suddenly as
-the avalanche had started it halted. But it gave forth grating, ominous
-warnings. Only an upper layer of the loose rock had slid down, and the
-under layer appeared precisely like what the surface had been--rocks
-and rocks of all sizes, just as loose, just as ready to roll.
-
-Adam dared to stride back upon that exposed under layer, the better to
-see straight down the steep slope. Grim and grisly it shone beneath the
-gloomy sun. Perhaps the powdered dust created an obscurity high in the
-air, but low down all was clear.
-
-Virey could be plainly seen, embedded to his hips in the loose stones.
-Writhing, squirming, wrestling, he sought to free himself from that
-grip of granite. In vain! He was caught in a vise of his own making.
-Prisoner of the mountain-side that he had used to betray his wife! He
-had turned toward Adam, face upward. There seemed a change in him, but
-in the racking excitement of that moment Adam could not tell what.
-
-Then that desert instinct, like the bursting of a flood, moved Adam to
-the violence of strife, the ruthlessness of nature, the blood-spilling
-of men. Madness of hate seized him. The torrid heat of that desert sun
-boiled in his blood, the granite of the slope hardened in his heart,
-the red veils of smoky shadows colored his sight. Loneliness and
-solitude were terrible forces of nature--primitive as the beginnings of
-life. For years the contending strife of the desert had been his. For
-months desolation, death, decay of Death Valley!
-
-“MY TURN!” he yelled, in voice of thunder, and, bristling haired,
-supple, and long armed, with strength and laugh and face of a savage,
-he heaved a huge rock.
-
-It rolled, it cracked, it banged, it hurtled high, to crash and smash,
-and then, leaping aloft, instinct as if with mockery, it went over
-Virey’s head to go on down over the precipice, whence it sent up a
-sliding roar. Adam heaved another stone and watched it. Virey grew
-motionless as a statue. He could not dance and dodge away from rolling
-rocks as Adam had done. How strangely that second rock rolled! Starting
-in line with Virey, it swerved to the right, then hit the slope and
-swerved back in line, then, hitting again, swerved once more, missing
-the miserable victim by a small margin.
-
-“AHA THERE, VIREY!” yelled Adam, waving his hands. “ALL DAY AND ALL
-NIGHT I’LL ROLL STONES!”
-
-Virey was mute. He was chained. He was helpless. He could not move
-or faint or die. Retribution had overtaken him. The nature of it
-was to be the nature of the slow torture and merciless death he had
-inflicted upon his wife. As he had chosen the most deadly and lonely
-and awful spot on earth to hide her and kill her, so the nature that
-he had embraced now chose to turn upon him. There was law here--law of
-the unknown forces in life and in the elements. At that very moment
-a vulture streaked down from the hazed heights and sailed, a black
-shadow of wide-spread wings, across the slope. What had given this
-grisly-omened bird sight and scent illimitable?
-
-Adam braced his brawny shoulder under the bulge of a rock weighing
-tons. Purple grew his face. His muscles split his shirt. His bones
-cracked. But there was a nameless joy in this exercise of his enormous
-strength. They were two men--one was weak, the other was strong. And
-nature could not abide both. The huge rock grated, groaned, stirred,
-moved--and turned over, slowly to roll, to crunch, to pound, and
-then to gather speed, growing a thing of power, ponderous, active,
-changing, at last to hurtle into the air, to plunge down with
-thunderous crash, then to roll straight as a bee line at Virey. But
-a few yards in front of him it rose aloft, with something of grace,
-airily, and, sailing over Virey’s head, it banged and boomed out of
-sight below. Long the echoes clapped, and at last the silence, the
-speaking silence of that place, closed on the slope. It awoke again
-to Adam’s rolling of a stone and another and another and then two
-together. All these rocks rolled differently. They were playthings of
-the god of the mountain. The mover of thunderbolts might have been
-aiming his colossal missiles at an invisible target. All these rolling
-stones seemed to head straight for Virey, but they were at the last
-instant deflected by chance. They hit the slope and passed wide or
-high. They were in league with the evil spirit that had dominated
-Virey. They were instruments of torture. They were of the nature of the
-desert. They belonged to Death Valley.
-
-Adam did not soon tire at his gigantic task. The rolling stones
-fascinated him. From dead things they leaped to life. How they hurtled
-through space! Some shot aloft a hundred feet. Others split, and
-rolled, like wheels, down and down, the halves passing on either side
-of the doomed Virey. A multitude of rocks Adam turned loose, and then
-another multitude. Into the heaving of every one went his intent to
-kill. But Virey bore a charmed life.
-
-A time came when Adam rolled his last stone. Like the very first one,
-it sped straight for Virey, and just as it appeared about to crush him
-it veered to one side. Adam stared grim and aghast. Could he never kill
-Virey as Virey had murdered his wife and tried to kill him?
-
-“She--said I’d--never kill--you!” panted Adam, and the doubt in him was
-a strange, struggling thing, soon beaten down by his insatiable rage.
-Then he took a stride downward, meaning to descend and finish Virey
-with his hands.
-
-As he stepped down the avalanche below grated with strange, harsh
-sound. It seemed to warn him. Halting, he gazed with clearer eyes. What
-was this change in Virey? Adam bent and peered. Had the man’s hair
-turned snow white?
-
-Adam made another and a longer stride downward. And that instant the
-slope trembled. Virey flung up his arms as if to ward off another
-rolling stone. A rending, as of the rock-bound fastness of the slope
-yielding its hold--then the avalanche, with Virey in the center, moved
-downward, slowly heaving like a swell of weighted waves, and started
-to roll with angry roar. It gathered a ponderous momentum. It would
-never stop again on that slope. A shining, red-tinged dust cloud
-shrouded Virey. And then the avalanche, spilling over the declivity
-below, shocked the whole mountain slope and lifted to the heavens a
-thick-crashing, rolling roar of thunder. Death Valley engulfed the
-hollow echo and boomed thunder across to the battlements of the Funeral
-Mountains. And when the last rumble wore away, silence and solitude
-reigned there, pervasive and peaceful, as they had in the ages before
-man, with his passions, had evolved to vex nature.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-
-Adam’s return to camp was as vague as one of his desert nightmares.
-But as thought gained something of ascendency over agitation he became
-aware of blood and dust and sweat caked with his clothes upon his
-person, proving the effect of his supreme exertions. He had heaved an
-endless number of rocks; he had heaved the mountain-side down upon
-Virey, all to no avail. A higher power had claimed him. And the spirit
-of Magdalene Virey, like her living presence, had inscrutably come
-between Adam and revenge.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Adam had packed his burros, twilight in the clefts of the hills
-had deepened to purple. He filled his canteens, and started the burros
-down toward the gateway. The place behind him was as silent as a grave.
-Adam did not look back. He felt the gray obscurity close over the scene.
-
-Down at the gateway he saw that the valley was still light with the
-afterglow of sunset. Diagonally and far across the ashen waste he
-descried the little dark patch which he knew to be an oasis, where the
-waters of Furnace Creek sank into the sands.
-
-The intense heat, the vast stillness, the strange radiation from
-the sand, the peculiar gray light of the valley, told Adam that
-the midnight furnace winds would blow long before he reached his
-destination. But he welcomed any physical ordeal. He saw how a great
-strife with the elements, a strain to the uttermost of his strength and
-his passion to fight, would save his faith, his hope, perhaps his mind.
-
-So gradual was the change from twilight to darkness that he would
-scarcely have noted it but for the dimming of the notched peak. Out
-there in the open valley it was not dark. It was really the color of
-moonlight on marble. Wan, opaque, mystic, it made distance false. The
-mountains seemed far away and the stars close. Like the bottom of the
-Dead Sea, drained of its bitter waters, was this Death Valley. Action,
-strong and steady use of muscle, always had served to drive subjective
-broodings and wonderings and imaginings from Adam’s mind. But not here,
-in this sink, at night! He seemed continually and immensely confronted
-with the unreality of a fact--a live man alone on the salt dead waste
-of Death Valley. Measureless and unbreakable solitude! The waste hole
-into which drained the bitter dregs of the desert!
-
-He plodded on, driving the burros ahead of him. Jennie was contrary.
-Every few steps she edged off a straight line, and the angle of her
-ears and head showed that she was watching her master. She did not want
-to cross the valley. Instinct taught her the wisdom of opposition. Many
-a burro had saved its master’s life by stubborn refusal to travel the
-wrong way. Adam was patient, even kind, but he relentlessly drove her
-on in the direction he had chosen.
-
-At length the ashen level plain changed its hue and its surface.
-The salt crust became hummocky and a dirty gray. The color caused
-false steps on his part, and the burros groped at fault, weary and
-discouraged. Adam would mount a slow heave, only to find it a hollow
-crust that broke with his weight. Some months before--or was it
-years?--when he had crossed the valley, far below this line, the layer
-of salt crust had been softer and under it ran murky waters, heavy as
-vitriol. Dry now as sun-baked clay! It made travel more difficult,
-although less dangerous. Adam broke through once. It reminded him that
-Dismukes had said the floor of Death Valley was “Forty feet from hell!”
-Not for a long while had he thought of Dismukes, yet this hazardous
-direction he was taking now appeared to be the outcome of long-made
-plans to meet the old prospector.
-
-Long hours and slow miles passed behind him. When the burros broke
-through Adam had a task for all his strength. Once he could not pull
-Jennie out of a pitfall without unpacking her. And the time came when
-he had the added task of leading the way and dragging the burros with
-ropes. Burros did not lead well on good ground, let alone over this
-scored and burst salt crust.
-
-The heat and oppressiveness and dense silence increased toward
-midnight; and then began a soft and steady movement of air down the
-valley. Adam felt a prickling of his skin and a drying of the sweat
-upon him. An immense and mournful moan breathed over the wasteland,
-like that of a mighty soul in travail. Adam got out of the hummocky
-zone upon the dry, crisp, white level of salt, soda, borax, alkali,
-where thin, pale sheets of powder moved with the silken rustle of
-seeping and shifting sands. Most fortunate was the fact that the
-rising wind was at his back. He strode on, again driving the burros
-ahead, holding straight for the dim notched peak. The rising wind
-changed the silence, the night, the stars, the valley--changed all
-in some unearthly manner. It seemed to muster all together, to move
-all, to insulate even the loneliness, and clothe them in transforming,
-drifting, shrouds of white, formless bodies impelled by nameless
-domination. Phantasmagoria of white winds, weird and wild! Midnight
-furnace blasts of Death Valley! Nature’s equilibrium--nature’s eternal
-and perfect balance of the elements!
-
-Out here in the open, the hollow roar that had swelled and lulled
-through the canyons was absent. An incessant moaning, now rising, now
-falling, attended the winds on their march down the valley. Other
-difference there was here, and it was in the more intense heat. And the
-blowing of white shrouds into the opaque gloom, the sweeping of sheets
-of powdery dust along the level floor, the thick air that bore taste of
-bitter salt and odor of poison gas--these indeed seemed not phenomena
-of normal earth. The wind increased to a gale. Then suddenly it lulled
-and died, leaving the valley to a pale, silent deadness; and again,
-preceded by a mournful wail, it rose harder and fiercer till it was
-blowing seventy miles an hour. These winds were the blasts of fury.
-They held heated substance. The power behind them was the illimitable
-upper air, high as the sky and wide as the desert, relentlessly bearing
-down to drive way the day’s torrid heat.
-
-The gales accelerated Adam’s progress, so that sometimes he was almost
-running. Often he was thrown to his knees. And when the midnight
-storm reached its height the light of the stars failed, the outline
-of mountains faded in a white, whirling chaos, dim and moaning and
-terrible. Adam felt as if blood and flesh were burning up, drying
-out, shriveling and cracking. He lost his direction and clung to the
-burros, knowing their instinct to be surer guide than his. There came
-a time when pain left him, when sense of physical contacts and motions
-began to fade, when his brain seemed to reel. The burros dragged him
-on, and lower he swayed; oftener he plunged to his knees, plowing his
-big hands in the salt and lowering his face into the flying sheets of
-powder. He gasped and coughed and choked, and fought to breathe through
-his smothering scarf. And at last, as he fell exhausted, blind and
-almost asphyxiated, the hot gales died away. The change of air saved
-Adam from unconsciousness. He lay there, gradually recovering, until
-he gained feeling enough to know the burros were pulling on the rope
-which tied them and him together. They were squealing. They were trying
-to drag him, to warn him, to frighten him into the action that would
-save his life. Thus goaded, Adam essayed to get upon his feet, and the
-effort seemed a vague, interminable lifting of colossal weights, and a
-climbing up dragging stairs of sand. But for the burros he would have
-plunged in a circle.
-
-Then followed a black and horrible interval in which he seemed hauled
-across a pale shingle of naked earth, peopled with specters, a
-wandering, lost man, still alive but half dead, leashed to the spirits
-of burros he had driven to their death. Uphill, always uphill they
-pulled him, with his feet clogged by the clutching sands. A gray dawn
-broke, and his entrance into the light resembled climbing out of somber
-depths to the open world. Another drab wall of iron rock seemed to loom
-over him. The valley of the white shadows of death had been crossed.
-A green patch of mesquites and cottonwoods gleamed cool and dark out
-of the gray sands. The burros ran, with bobbing packs, straight to
-the water they had scented. Staggering on after them, Adam managed
-to remove their burdens; and that took the remnant of his strength.
-Yielding to a dead darkness of sense, he fell under the trees.
-
-When he came to the day had far advanced and the sun, sloping to the
-west, was sinking behind the Panamints. Adam stumbled up, his muscles
-numb, as if contracted and robbed of their elasticity. His thirst told
-the story of that day’s heat, which had parched him, even while he lay
-asleep in the shade. Hunger did not trouble him. Either he was weak
-from exertion or had suffered from breathing poisoned air or had lost
-something of his equilibrium. Whatever was wrong, it surely behooved
-him to get out of the lower part of the valley, up above sea level to a
-place where he could regain his strength. To that end he hunted for his
-burros. They were close by, and he soon packed them, though with much
-less than his usual dexterity. Then he started, following the course of
-the running water.
-
-This Furnace Creek ran down out of a deep-mouthed canyon, with yellow
-walls of gravel. The water looked like vinegar, and it was hot and
-had a bad taste. Yet it would sustain life of man and beast. Adam
-followed the lines of mesquites that marked its course up the gradually
-ascending floor of the canyon. He soon felt a loosening of the weight
-upon his lungs, and lessening of air pressure. Twilight caught him a
-couple of miles up the canyon, where a wide, long thicket of weeds and
-grass and mesquites marked the turning of Furnace Creek into the drab
-hills, and where springs and little streams trickled down from the
-_arroyos_.
-
-Up one of these _arroyos_, in the midst of some gnarled mesquites, Adam
-made camp. Darkness soon set in, and he ate by the light of a camp
-fire. After he had partaken of food he discovered that he was hungry.
-Also, his eyelids drooped heavily. Despite these healthy reactions and
-a deeper interest in his surroundings, Adam knew he was not entirely
-well. He endeavored to sit up awhile, and tried to think. There were
-intervals when a deadlock occurred between thoughts. The old pleasure,
-the old watchful listening, the old intimate sense of loneliness, had
-gone from him. His mind did not seem to be on physical things at hand,
-or on the present moment. And when he actually discovered that all the
-time he looked down toward Death Valley he exclaimed, aghast: “I’m not
-here; I’m down there!”
-
-Gloomy and depressed, he rolled in his blankets. And he slept twelve
-hours. Next day he felt better in body, but no different in mind.
-He set to work making a comfortable camp in spite of the fact that
-he did not seem to want to stay there. Hard work and plenty of food
-improved his condition. His strength of limb soon rallied to rest and
-nourishment. But the strange state of mind persisted, and began to
-encroach upon every moment. It took effort of will to attend to any
-action. Dismukes must be in this locality somewhere, according to the
-little map, but, though Adam remembered this, and reflected how it
-accounted for his own presence there, he could not dwell seriously upon
-the fact. Dismukes seemed relegated to the vague future. There was an
-impondering present imperative something that haunted Adam, yet eluded
-his grasp. At night he walked under the stars and could not shake off
-the spell; and next day, when in an idle hour he found himself walking
-again and again down the gravel-bedded canyon toward Death Valley, then
-he divined that what he had attributed to absent-mindedness was a far
-more serious aberration.
-
-The discovery brought about a shock that quickened his mental
-processes. What ailed him? He was well and strong again. What was
-wrong with his mind? Where had gone the old dreaming content, the
-self-sufficient communion with all visible forms of nature, and
-the half-conscious affinity with all the invisible spirit of the
-wilderness? How strangely he had been warped out of his orbit!
-Something nameless and dreadful and calling had come between him and
-his consciousness. Why did he face the west, at dawn, in the solemn
-white-hot noon, at the red sunset hour, and in the silent lonely
-watches of the night? Why did not the stars of the east lure his dreamy
-gaze as those in the west? He made the astounding discovery that
-there were moments, and moments increasing in number, when he did not
-feel alone. Some one walked in his shadow at noontide. At twilight a
-spirit seemed in keeping with his wandering westward steps. The world
-and natural objects and old habits seemed far off. He found himself
-whispering vagrant fancies, the substance of which, once realized, was
-baffling and disheartening. And at last he divined that a longing to
-return to Death Valley consumed him.
-
-“Ah! So that’s it!” he muttered, in consternation. “But why?”
-
-It came to Adam then--the secret of the mystery. Death Valley called
-him. All that it was, all that it contained, all he had lived there,
-sent out insidious and enchanting voices of terrible silent power.
-The long shadow of that valley of purple shadows still enveloped him.
-Death, desolation, and decay; the appalling nudity of the racked bowels
-of the earth; the abode of solitude and silence, where shrieked the
-furies of the midnight winds; the grave of Magdalene Virey--these
-haunted Adam and lured him back with resistless and insupportable claim.
-
-“Death Valley again--for me. I shall go mad,” soliloquized Adam.
-
-At last his mind was slowly being unhinged by the forces of the desert.
-Some places of the earth were too strong, too inhuman, too old, and too
-wasted for any man. Adam realized his peril, and that the worst of
-his case consisted in an indifference which he did not want to combat.
-Unless something happened--a great, intervening, destructive agent to
-counteract the all-enfolding, trancelike spell of Death Valley--Adam
-would return to the valley of avalanches and there he would go mad.
-
-And the very instant he resigned himself, a cry pierced his dull ear.
-Sharply he sat up. The hour was near the middle of the forenoon. The
-day was hot and still. Adam’s pulses slowly quieted down. He had been
-mistaken. The water babbled by his camp, bees flew over with droning
-hum. Then as he relaxed he was again startled by a cry, faint and far
-off. It appeared to come from up the canyon, round the low yellow
-corner of wall. He listened intently, but the sound was not repeated.
-Was not the desert full of silent voices? About this cry there was a
-tangible reality that stirred Adam out of his dreams, his glooms.
-
-Adam went on, and climbed up the gravel bank on the left side, to a
-bare slope, and from that to the top of a ridge. His sluggish blood
-quickened. The old exploring instinct awoke. He had heard a distant
-cry. What next? There was something in the air.
-
-Then Adam gazed around him to a distance. Adam shuddered and thrilled
-at the beetling, rugged, broken walls that marked the gateway where so
-often he had stood with Magdalene Virey to watch the transformations of
-shadowed dawn and sunset in Death Valley.
-
-He descended to a level, and strode on, looking everywhere, halting now
-and then to listen, every moment gaining some hold on his old self. He
-went on and on, slow and sure, missing not a rod of ground, as if the
-very stones might speak to him. He welcomed his growing intensity of
-sensation, because it meant that he had either received a premonition
-or had reverted to his old self, or perhaps both.
-
-Adam plodded along this wide gravel wash, with the high bronze
-saw-toothed peaks of the Funerals on the left, and some yellow-clay
-dunes showing their tips over the bank on the right. At length he came
-to a place that suggested a possible sloping of these colored clay
-dunes down into a basin or canyon. Climbing up the bank, he took a
-few steps across the narrow top, there to be halted as if he had been
-struck.
-
-He had been confronted by a tremendous amphitheater, a yellow gulf, a
-labyrinthine maze so astounding that he discredited his sight.
-
-Before him and on each side the earth was as bare as the bareness of
-rock--a mystic region of steps and slopes and slants, of channels and
-dunes and mounds, of cone-shaped and fan-shaped ridges, all of denuded
-crinkly clay with tiny tracery of erosion as graceful as the veins of
-a leaf, all merging their marvelous hues in a mosaic of golden amber,
-of cream yellow, of mauve, of bronze cinnamon. How bleak and ghastly,
-yet how beautiful in their stark purity of denudation! Endless was the
-number of smooth, scalloped, and ribbed surfaces, all curving with
-exquisite line and grace down into the dry channels under the dunes. At
-the base of the lower circle of the amphitheater the golds and yellows
-and russets were strongest, but along the wide wings moving away toward
-the abyss below were more vividly wonderful hues--a dark, beautiful
-mouse color on the left contrasting with a strange pearly cream on
-the other. These were striking bands of color sweeping the eye away
-as far as they extended, and jealously drawing it back again. Between
-these great corners of the curve climbed ridges of gray and heliotrope
-to meet streaks of green--the mineral green of copper, like the color
-of the sea in sunlight--and snowy traceries of white that were narrow
-veins of outcropping borax. High up above the rim of the amphitheater,
-along the battlements of the mountain, stood out a zigzag belt of rusty
-red, from which the iron stain had run downward to tinge the lower
-hues. Above all this wondrous coloration upheaved the bare breast of
-the mountain, growing darker with earthy browns until the bold ramparts
-of the peak, gray like rock, gleamed pale against the leaden-blue
-sky. Low down through the opening of the amphitheater gleamed a void,
-a distant bottom of the bowl, dim and purple and ghastly, with shining
-white streaks like silver streams--and this was Death Valley.
-
-And then Adam, with breast oppressed by feelings too deep for
-utterance, retracted his far-seeing gaze, once more to look over the
-whole amazing spectacle, from the crinkly buff clay under his feet to
-the dim white bottom of the valley. And at this keen instant he again
-heard a cry. Human it was, or else he had lost his mind, and all which
-he saw here was disordered imagination.
-
-Turning back, he ran in the direction whence he believed the sound had
-come, passing by some rods the point where he had climbed out of the
-wash. And at the apex of the great curve, toward which tended all the
-multitude of wrinkles of the denuded slopes, he found a trail coming up
-out of the amphitheater and leading down into the wash. The dust bore
-unmistakable signs of fresh moccasin tracks, of hobnailed boots, and of
-traces where water had been spilled. The boot impressions led down and
-the moccasin tracks up; and, as these latter were the fresher, Adam,
-after a pause of astonishment and a keen glance all around, began to
-follow them.
-
-The trail led across the wash and turned west toward where the walls
-commenced to take on the dignity of a canyon. Bunches of sage and
-greasewood began to dot the sand, and beyond showed the thickets of
-mesquite. Some prospector was packing water from the creek up the
-canyon and down into that amphitheater. Suddenly Adam thought of
-Dismukes. He examined the next hobnailed boot track he descried in the
-dust with minute care. The foot that had made it did not belong to
-Dismukes. Adam hurried on.
-
-He came upon a spot where the man he was trailing--surely an
-Indian--had fallen in the sand. A dark splotch, sticky and wet, had
-never been made by spilled water. Adam recognized blood when he touched
-it, but if he had not known it by the feel, he surely would have by
-the smell. Probably at that instant Adam became fully himself again. He
-was on the track of events, he sensed some human being in trouble; and
-the encroaching spell of Death Valley lost its power.
-
-The trail led into the mesquites, to a wet glade rank with sedge and
-dank with the damp odor of soapy water.
-
-A few more hurried strides brought Adam upon the body of an Indian,
-lying face down at the edge of the trickling little stream. His black
-matted hair was bloody. A ragged, torn, and stained shirt bore further
-evidence of violence. Adam turned him over, seeing at a glance that he
-had been terribly beaten about the head with a blunt instrument. He was
-gasping. Swiftly Adam scooped up water in his hat. He had heard that
-kind of a gasp before. Lifting the Indian’s head, Adam poured water
-into the open mouth. Then he bathed the blood-stained face.
-
-The Indian was of the tribe that had packed supplies for the Vireys. He
-was apparently fatally hurt. It was evident that he wanted to speak.
-And from the incoherent mixture of language which these Indians used in
-conversation with white men Adam gathered significant details of gold,
-of robbers, of something being driven round and round, grinding stone
-like maize.
-
-“_Arrastra!_” queried Adam.
-
-The Indian nodded and made a weak motion of his hand toward the trail
-that led to the yellow wilderness of clay, and then further gestures,
-which, with a few more gutturally whispered words, gave Adam the
-impression that a man of huge bulk, wide of shoulder, was working the
-old Spanish treadmill--_arrastra_--grinding for gold. Then the Indian
-uttered, with a last flash of spirit, the warning he could not speak,
-and, falling back, he gasped and faded into unconsciousness.
-
-Adam stood up, thinking hard, muttering aloud some of his thoughts.
-
-“_Arrastra!_... That was the way of Dismukes--to grind for gold....
-He’s here--somewhere--down in that yellow hole.... Robbers have jumped
-his claim--probably are holding him--torturing him to tell of hidden
-gold ... and they beat this poor Indian to death.”
-
-There was necessity for quick thought and quick action. The Indian was
-not dead, but he soon would be. Adam could do nothing for him. It was
-imperative to decide whether to wait here for the return of the water
-carrier or at once follow the trail to the yellow clay slopes. Adam
-wore a gun, but it held only two unused shells, and there was no more
-ammunition in his pack. The Indian had no weapon. Perhaps the water
-carrier would be armed. If Dismukes were dead, there need be no rash
-hurry to avenge him; if he lived as prisoner a little time more or less
-would not greatly matter. Adam speedily decided to wait a reasonable
-time for the man who packed water, and, if he came, to kill him and
-then hurry up the trail. There was, in this way, less danger of being
-discovered, and, besides, one of the robbers dispatched would render
-the band just so much weaker. Adam especially favored this course
-because of the possibility of getting a weapon.
-
-“And more,” muttered Adam, “if he happens to be a tall man I can
-pretend to be him--packing water back.”
-
-Therefore Adam screened himself behind a thick clump of mesquite near
-the trail and waited in ambush like a panther ready to spring.
-
-As he crouched there, keen eyes up the canyon, ears like those of a
-listening deer, there flashed into Adam’s mind one of Magdalene Virey’s
-unforgetable remarks. “The power of the desert over me lies somewhere
-in my strange faculty of forgetting self. I watch, I hear, I feel, I
-smell, but I don’t think. Just a gleam--a fleeting moment--then the
-state of consciousness or lack of consciousness is gone! But in that
-moment lies the secret lure of the desert. Its power over men!”
-
-Swiftly as it had come the memory passed, and Adam became for fleeting
-moments at a time the embodiment of Magdalene Virey’s philosophy,
-all unconscious when thought was absent from feeling. The hour was
-approaching midday and the wind began to rustle the mesquites and
-seep the sand. Adam smelled a dry dust somewhat tangy, and tasted the
-bitterness of it as he licked his lips. Flies had began to buzz around
-the dead Indian. Instinctively Adam gazed aloft, and, yes, there far
-above him circled a vulture, and above that another, sweeping down from
-the invisible depths of blue, magically ringing a flight around the
-heavens, with never a movement of wings. They sailed round and round,
-always down. Where did they come from? What power poised them so surely
-in the air?
-
-Adam waited. All at once his whole body vibrated with the leap of
-his heart. A tall, hulking man hove in sight, balancing a bar across
-his shoulders, from each end of which hung a large bucket. These
-buckets swung to and fro with the fellow’s steps. Like a lazy man, he
-advanced leisurely. Adam saw a little puff of smoke lift from the red,
-indistinct patch that was this water carrier’s face. He had cigarette
-or pipe. As he approached nearer and nearer, Adam received steadily
-growing and changing impressions of the man he was about to kill, until
-they fixed in the image of a long, loosely jointed body, a soiled shirt
-open at the neck, bare brown arms, and cruel red face. Just outside the
-mesquites, the robber halted to peer at the spot where the Indian had
-fallen, and then ahead as if he expected to see a body lying in the
-trail.
-
-“Ho! Ho! if thet durned Injin I beat didn’t crawl way down hyar! An’
-his brains oozin’ out!” he ejaculated hoarsely, as he strode between
-the scratching mesquites, swinging the crossbar and buckets sidewise.
-“Takes a hell of a lot to kill some critters!”
-
-Like a released spring Adam shot up. His big hands flashed to cut off a
-startled yell.
-
-“Not so much!” he called, grimly, and next instant his giant frame
-strung to the expenditure of mighty effort.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At noon the wind was blowing a gusty gale and the sun shone a deep,
-weird, magenta color through the pall of yellow dust. The sky was not
-visible. Down on the ridges and in the washes dust sheets were whipped
-up at intervals. Clouds of flying sand rustled through the air, and
-sometimes the wind had force enough to carry grains of gravel. These
-intermittent blasts resembled the midnight furnace winds, except for
-the strange fact that they were not so hot, so withering. Every few
-minutes the canyon would be obscured in sweeping, curling streaks and
-sheets of dust. Then, as the gale roared away, the dust settled and the
-air again cleared. But high up, the dull, yellow pall hung, apparently
-motionless, with that weird sun, like a red-orange moon seen through
-haze, growing darker.
-
-The fury of the elements seemed to favor Adam. Heat and gale and
-obscurity could tend only to relax the vigilance of men. Adam counted
-upon surprising the gang. To his regret, he had found no weapon on
-the robber he had overcome. Wearing the man’s slouch sombrero pulled
-down, and carrying the water buckets suspended from the bar across his
-shoulders, Adam believed that in the thick of the duststorm he might
-approach near the gang, perhaps get right among them.
-
-When he got to the top of the amphitheater and found it a weird and
-terrible abyss of flying yellow shadows and full of shriek of wind
-and moan and roar, he decided he would go down as far as might seem
-advisable, then try to slip up on the robbers, wherever they were, and
-get a look at them and their surroundings before rushing to the attack.
-
-Down, and yet farther, Adam plodded, amazed at the depth of the pit,
-the bottom of which he had not seen. The plainly defined trail led him
-on, and in one place huge boot tracks, familiar to him, acted as a
-spur. The tracks were not many days old and had been made by Dismukes.
-Adam now expected to find his old friend dead or in some terrible
-situation. The place, the day, the heat, the wind--all presaged terror,
-violence, gold, and blood. No human beings would endure this nude and
-ghastly and burning hell hole of flying dust for anything except gold.
-
-At last Adam got so far down, so deep into the yellow depths, that pall
-and roar of duststorm appeared above him. He walked in a strange yellow
-twilight. And here the sun showed a darker magenta. Fine siftings of
-dust floated and fell all around him, dry, choking, and, when they
-touched his face, like invisible sparks of fire.
-
-Interminably the yellow-walled wash wound this way and that, widening
-out to the dimensions of a canyon. At length Adam smelled smoke. He was
-close to a camp of some kind. Depositing the buckets in the trail, he
-sheered off and went up an intersecting wash.
-
-When out of sight of the trail, he climbed up a soft clay slope and,
-lying flat at the top, he peeped over. More yellow ridges like the ribs
-of a washboard! They seemed to run out on all sides, in a circling
-maze, soft and curved and colorful, and shaded by what seemed unnatural
-shadows. But they were almost level. Here indeed was the pit of the
-amphitheater. With slow, desert-trained gaze Adam swept the graceful
-dunes. All bare! The twilight of changing yellow shadow hindered sure
-sight at considerable distance, and the sweeping rush of wind above,
-and then a low hollow roar, made listening useless.
-
-At length Adam noticed how all the clay ridges or ends of slopes to
-his right ran about a hundred yards and then sheered down abruptly.
-Here, then, was the main canyon through which the trail ran. The line
-of it, a vague break in the yellow color, turned toward Adam’s left.
-Adam deliberated a moment. Would he go on or return to the trail? Then
-he rose, crossed the top of the clay ridge, plunged down its soft bank,
-leaped the sandy and gravelly wash at the bottom, and started up the
-next ridge. This was exactly like the one he had surmounted. Adam kept
-on, down and up, down and up, until the yellow twilight in front of
-him appeared separated by a lazy column of blue. Adam’s nostrils made
-sure of that. It was smoke. Cautiously crawling now, down and up, Adam
-gained the ridge from behind which rose the smoke. Here he crouched
-against the soft clay, breathing hard from his exertions, listening and
-peering.
-
-The ridges about him began to show streaks of brown earth and ledges
-of rock. As he looked about he was startled by a rumbling, grating
-sound. It was continuous, but it had louder rumbles, almost bumps. The
-sound was rock grating on rock. Adam thought he knew what made it.
-With all his might he listened, pressing his ear down on the clay. The
-rumble kept on, but Adam could not hear any other sound until there
-came a lull in the wind above. Then he heard a squeaking creak--a
-sound of wood moved tight against wood; then sharp cracks, but of soft
-substances; then the ring of a shovel on stone; and at last harsh
-voices.
-
-So far, so good, thought Adam. Only a few yards of clay separated him
-from mining operations, and he must see how many men were there and
-what was the lay of the land, and how best he could proceed. The old
-animal instinct to rush animated him, requiring severe control. While
-waiting for the wind to begin again, Adam wondered if he was to see
-Dismukes. He did not expect to.
-
-The elements seemed to await Adam’s wishes. At that very moment the
-yellow light shaded a little dimmer and the sinister-hued sun cloaked
-its ruddy face. The gale above howled, and the circling winds, lower
-down, gathered up sheets of dust and swept them across the shrouded
-amphitheater. And a wave of intenser heat moved down into the pit.
-
-Adam sank his fingers into the soft clay and crawled up this last
-slope. The rattle of loosened clay and gravel rolling down was
-swallowed up in the roar of wind. Reaching the last foot of ascent,
-Adam cautiously peeped over. He saw a wider space, a sort of round
-pocket between two yellow ridges, that ran out and widened from a
-ledge of crumbling rock. He crawled a few inches farther, raised
-himself a little higher. Then he saw brush roofs of structures,
-evidently erected for shade. The rumble began again. Higher Adam raised
-himself. Then he espied a coat hanging on a corner post of one of the
-structures. Dismukes’ coat! Adam could have picked it out of a thousand
-coats. Excitement now began to encroach upon his cool patience and
-determination. The gale seemed howling with rage at the truth here,
-still hidden from Adam’s eyes. Higher he raised himself.
-
-The brush-covered structure farther from him was a sun shelter, and
-under it lay piles of camp duffle. A camp fire smoked. Adam’s swift
-eyes caught the gleam of guns. The day was too torrid for these campers
-to pack guns. The nearer structure was large, octagonal shape, built of
-mesquite posts and brush. From under it came the rumble of rocks and
-the metallic clink of shovels, and then the creak and crack and the
-heavy voice.
-
-Still higher Adam pulled himself so that he might see under the brush
-shelter. A wide rent in the roof--a huge brown flash across this
-space--then lower down a movement of men to and fro--rumble of rocks,
-clink of shovel, thud of earth, creak and crack--a red undershirt--blue
-jeans--boots, and then passing, bending men nude to the waist--circle
-and sweep of long dark streak--then again the huge brown flash; it all
-bewildered Adam, so that one of his usually distinguishing glances
-failed to convey clear meaning of this scene. Then he looked and
-looked, and when he had looked a long, breathless moment he fell flat
-on the soft clay, digging his big hands deep, trembling and straining
-with the might of his passion to rush like a mad bull down upon the
-ruffians. It took another moment, that battling restraint. Then he
-raised to look with clearer, more calculating gaze.
-
-The brush roof was a shelter for an _arrastra_. The octagonal shape
-of this sun shade filled the pocket that nestled between the slopes.
-Its back stood close to the ledge of crumbling rock from which the
-gold-bearing ore was being extracted. Its front faced the open gully.
-Under it an _arrastra_ was in operation. As many of these Spanish
-devices as Adam had seen, no one of them had ever resembled this.
-
-In the center of the octagon a round pit had been dug into the ground,
-and lined and floored with flat stones. An upright beam was set in the
-middle of this, and was fastened above to the roof. Crossbeams were
-attached to the upright, and from these crossbeams dragged huge rocks
-held by chains. A long pole, like the tongue of a wagon, extended from
-the upright and reached far out, at a height of about four feet from
-the ground. The principle of operation was to revolve the crossbeams
-and upright post, dragging the heavy rocks around and around the pit,
-thus crushing the ore. Adam knew that mercury was then used to absorb
-the gold from the crevices.
-
-The motive power sometimes was a horse, and usually it was a mule.
-But in this instance the motive power was furnished by a man. A huge,
-broad, squat man naked to the waist! He was bound to the end of the
-long bar or tongue, and as he pushed it round and round his body was
-bent almost double. What wonderful brawny arms on which the muscles
-rippled and strung like ropes! The breast of this giant was covered
-with grizzled hair. Like a tired ox he bowed his huge head, wagging it
-from side to side. As he heaved around he exposed his broad back--the
-huge brown flash that had mystified Adam--and this mighty muscled back
-showed streaks and spots of blood.
-
-A gaunt man, rawboned and dark, with a face like a ghoul, stood just
-outside the circle described by the long bar. He held a mesquite branch
-with forked and thorny end, which he used as a goad. Whenever the
-hairy, half-naked giant passed around this gaunt man would swing the
-whip. It cracked on the brown back--spattered the drops of blood.
-
-There were three other men shoveling, carrying, and dumping ore into
-the pit. One was slight of build and hard of face. A red-undershirted
-fellow looked tough and wiry, of middle age, a seasoned desert rat,
-villainous as a reptile. The third man had a small, closely cropped
-head like a bullet, and a jaw that stood out beyond his brow, a hard
-visage smeared with sweat and dust. His big, naked shoulders proclaimed
-him young.
-
-And the grizzled giant, whom the others were goading and working to
-death there in the terrible heat, was Adam’s old savior and friend,
-Dismukes.
-
-Cautiously Adam backed and slid down the clay slope, and hurried up and
-down another. When he had crossed several he turned to the left and ran
-down to the trail, and followed along that until he reached the spot
-where he had left the buckets of water.
-
-There he drank deeply, and tried to restrain his hurry. But he was not
-tired or out of breath. And his mind seemed at a deadlock. A weapon, a
-shovel, a sledge to crush their skulls! To keep between them and their
-guns! Thus Adam’s thoughts had riveted themselves on a few actions.
-There was, on the surface of his body, a cold, hard, tingling stretch
-of skin over rippling muscles; and deep internally, the mysterious and
-manifold life of blood and nerve and bone awoke and flamed under the
-instinct of the ages. Adam’s body then belonged to the past and to what
-the desert had made it.
-
-Swinging the crossbar over his shoulders and lifting the buckets,
-he took the trail down toward the camp! He bowed his head and his
-shoulders more than the weight of the buckets made necessary. The
-perverse gale blew more fiercely than ever, and the hollow roar
-resounded louder, and the yellow gloom of dust descended closer, and
-a weird, dim light streamed through the pall, down upon the moving
-shadows. All was somber, naked, earthy in this thickening, lowering
-pall. Odor of smoke and dust! A fiercely burning heat that had the
-weight of hotly pressing lead! Bellow and shriek and moan of gale
-that died away! It was the portal to an inferno, and Adam was a man
-descended in age-long successions from simian beasts, and he strode in
-the image of God, with love his motive, rage his passion, and the wild
-years of the desert at his back, driving him on.
-
-He rounded the last corner. There was the camp, fifty yards away. He
-now could almost straddle the only avenue of escape.
-
-The wind lulled. A yellow shadow drifted away from the sun, and again
-it shone with sinister magenta hue. All the air seemed to wait, as if
-the appalling forces of nature, aghast at the strange lives of men, had
-halted to watch.
-
-“Thar’s Bill with the water!” yelled the red-shirted man.
-
-Work and action ceased. The giant Dismukes looked, then heaved erect
-with head poised like that of a hawk.
-
-“Aw, Bill, you son-of-a-gun!” called another robber, in welcome. “We
-damn near died, waitin’ fer thet water!”
-
-“Ho! Ho!... Bill, ye musta run ag’in’ another Injun.”
-
-Adam walked on, shortening himself a little more, quickening his
-stride. When he reached and passed the shelter under which lay packs
-and coats and guns he suddenly quivered, as if released from dragging
-restraint.
-
-The robber of slight frame and hard face had walked out from under the
-shelter. He alone had been silent. He had peered keenly, bending a
-little.
-
-“Hey, is thet you, Bill?” he queried, with hard voice which suited his
-face.
-
-The gaunt robber cracked his whip. “Fellars, air we locoed by this hyar
-dust? Damn the deceivin’ light!... Too big fer Bill--er I’m blind with
-heat!”
-
-“_It ain’t Bill!_” screeched the little man, and he bounded toward
-where lay the guns.
-
-Adam dropped the buckets. Down they thudded with a splash. Two of his
-great leaps intercepted the little man, who veered aside, dodged, and
-then tried to run by. Adam, with a lunge and a swing, hit him squarely
-on the side of the head. The blow rang soddenly. Its tremendous power
-propelled the man off his feet, turning him sidewise as he went through
-the air, and carried him with terrific force against one of the shelter
-posts, round which his limp body seemed to wrap itself. Crash! the
-post gave way, letting the roof sag. Then the smitten man rolled to
-lodge against a pack, and lay inert.
-
-Whirling swiftly, Adam drew his gun, and paused a second, ready to rush.
-
-The robbers stood stock-still.
-
-“My Gawd!” hoarsely yelled the red-shirted one. “Who’s thet?... Did you
-see him soak Robbins?”
-
-Dismukes let out a stentorian roar of joy, of hate, of triumph. Like a
-chained elephant he plunged to escape. Failing that, he surged down to
-yell: “Aha, you bloody claim jumpers! Now you’re done! It’s Wansfell!”
-
-“_Wansfell!_” flashed the gaunt-faced villain, and that gaunt face
-turned ashen. “Grab a shovel! Run fer a gun!”
-
-Then the red-shirted robber swung aloft his shovel and rushed at Adam,
-bawling fierce curses. Adam shot him through. The man seemed blocked,
-as if by heavy impact, then, more fiercely, he rushed again. Adam’s
-second and last shot, fired at point-blank, staggered him. But the
-shovel descended on Adam’s head, a hard blow, fortunately from the
-flat side. Clubbing his gun, Adam beat down the man, who went falling
-with his shovel under the shelter. Both of the other men charged Adam
-and the three met at the opening. They leaped so swiftly upon him and
-were so heavy bodied that they bore him to the ground. Adam’s grim
-intention was to hang on to both of them so neither could run to get a
-weapon. To that end he locked a hold on each. Then began a whirling,
-wrestling, thudding battle. To make sure of them Adam had handicapped
-himself. He could not swing his malletlike fists and he had not been
-fortunate enough to grip their throats. So, rolling over and over with
-them, he took the rain of blows, swinging them back, heaving his weight
-upon them. Foot by foot he won his way farther and farther from where
-the guns lay. If one yelling robber surged half erect, Adam swung the
-other to trip him. And once inside the wide doorway of that octagon
-structure, Adam rose with the struggling men, an iron hand clutching
-each, and, swinging them wide apart, by giant effort he brought them
-back into solid and staggering impact. He had hoped to bring their
-heads together. But only their bodies collided and the force of the
-collision broke Adam’s hold on one. The young man of hulking frame
-went down, right on the shovel, and, quick to grasp it, he bounded up,
-fierce and strong. But as he swung aloft the weapon, Adam let go of
-the gaunt-faced man and hit him, knocking him against the other. They
-staggered back, almost falling.
-
-Swift on that advantage, Adam swung a fist to the bulging jaw of the
-man with the shovel. As if struck by a catapult, he went down over the
-wooden beam and the shovel flew far. Then Adam blocked the doorway.
-The other fellow charged him, only to be knocked back. As he reeled,
-his comrade, panting loud, straddled the long beam. Just then Dismukes
-with quick wits heaved forward on the beam, to which he was bound, and
-the claim jumper went sprawling in the dirt. Dismukes celebrated his
-entrance into the fray with another stentorian yell.
-
-Adam awoke now to a different and more intense sense of the fight. He
-had his antagonists cornered. They could never get by him to secure a
-gun. And the fierce zest of violent strife, the ruthless law of the
-desert, the survival of the strongest, the blood lust, would have made
-him refuse any weapon save his hands. He stood on his feet and his
-hands were enough. Like a wolf he snapped his teeth, then locked his
-jaw. As he swung and battled and threw these foes backward a strange,
-wild joy accelerated his actions. When he struck, the sodden blow felt
-good. He avoided no return blows. He breasted them. The smell of sweat
-and blood, the heat of panting breaths in his face, the feel of hot,
-rippling muscle, all tended to make him the fiercer. His sight stayed
-keen, though tinged with red. He saw the beady, evil eyes of the big
-robber, like hot green fire, and the bruised and bleeding face with its
-snarling mouth; and as he saw, he struck out hard with savage thrill.
-He saw the gaunt and sallow visage of the other, bloody mouthed, with
-malignant gaze of frenzied hate, of glinting intent to kill, and as he
-saw he beat him down.
-
-Then into his pulsing senses burst a terrible yell from Dismukes. The
-gaunt-faced man had fallen into the pit of the _arrastra_, and Dismukes
-had suddenly started ahead, shoving the beam over him. The big rocks
-dragging by chains from the crossbeam began to pound around on the ore.
-Jar and rumble! Then a piercing scream issued from the man who had been
-caught under the rocks, who was being dragged around the _arrastra_.
-
-Adam saw, even as he knocked back another rush of the other man.
-
-“GRINDIN’ GOLD, WANSFELL!” roared Dismukes. “MORE ORE, PARD!... WE’RE
-GRINDIN’ GOLD!”
-
-The huge prospector bent to his task. Supreme was his tremendous
-effort. Strength of ten men! Blood gushed from the cuts on his brawny
-back. Faster he shoved until he was running. And as he came around, the
-ferocity of his bristling face and the swelling of the great chest with
-its mats of hair seemed to prove him half man, half beast, a gorilla in
-a death grapple.
-
-Again the big robber lunged up, to lower his head and charge at Adam.
-He was past yelling. He did not seek to escape. He would have given his
-life to kill.
-
-“MORE ORE, PARD WANSFELL!” yelled Dismukes, as with whistling breath
-he shoved round the terrible mill of rumbling rocks. A horrible,
-long-drawn cry issued from under them.
-
-Then the sweep of the long beam caught the man who was charging Adam.
-Down to his knees it forced him, and, catching under his chin, was
-dragging him, when the upright post gave way with a crash. The released
-beam, under the tremendous momentum of Dismukes’ massive weight and
-strength, seemed to flash across the half circle, lifting and carrying
-the man. A low wall of rock caught his body, and the beam, swinging
-free from its fastening, cracked his head as if it had been a ripe
-melon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Sunset of that momentous and tragic day found Adam and Dismukes camped
-beyond the mouth of a wide pass that bisected the Funeral range.
-
-It was a dry camp, but water from a pure spring some miles down had
-been packed out. Greasewood grew abundantly on the wide flat, and there
-were bunches of dry gray sage.
-
-Adam felt well-nigh exhausted, and he would have been gloomy and silent
-but for his comrade. Dismukes might never have been harnessed to the
-beam of an _arrastra_ and driven like a mule, and his awful treadmill
-toil in the terrible heat under the lacerating lash was as if it had
-never been. Dismukes was elated, he was exultant, he was strangely
-young again.
-
-Always, to Adam, this giant prospector, Dismukes, had been beyond
-understanding. But now he was enigmatic. He transcended his old self.
-In the excitement following his rescue he had not mentioned the fact
-that Adam had saved his life. Adam thought greatly of this squaring
-of his old debt. But Dismukes seemed not to consider it. He never
-mentioned that but for Adam’s intervention he would have been goaded
-like a mule, kicked and flayed and driven in the stifling heat, until
-he fell down to die. All Dismukes thought of was the gold he had mined,
-the gold the claim jumpers had mined--the bags of heavy gold that were
-his, and the possession of which ended forever his life-long toil for
-a fortune. A hundred times that afternoon, as the men had packed and
-climbed out of the valley, Dismukes had tried to force upon Adam a half
-of the gold, a quarter of it, a share. But Adam refused.
-
-“Why, for Lord’s sake?” Dismukes at last exploded, his great ox eyes
-rolling. “It’s gold. Most of it I mined before those devils came. It’s
-clean an’ honest. You deserve a share. An’ the half of it will more
-than make up the sum I’ve slaved an’ saved to get. Why, man--why won’t
-you take it?”
-
-“Well, friend, I guess the only reason I’ve got is that it’s too heavy
-to pack,” replied Adam. He smiled as he spoke, but the fact was he had
-no other reason for refusal.
-
-Dismukes stared with wide eyes and open mouth. Adam, apparently, was
-beyond his comprehension just the same as Dismukes was beyond Adam’s.
-Finally he swore his astonishment, grunted his disapproval, and then,
-resigning himself to Adam’s strange apathy, he straightway glowed again.
-
-Adam, despite his amusement and something of sadness, could not
-help but respond in a measure to the intense rapture of his friend.
-Dismukes’ great work had ended. His long quest for the Golden Fleece
-had been rewarded. His thirty-five years of wandering and enduring
-and toiling were over, and life had suddenly loomed beautiful and
-enchanting. The dream of boyhood had come true. The fortune had been
-made. And now to look forward to ease, rest, travel, joy--all that he
-had slaved for. Marvelous past--magnificent prospect of future!
-
-Adam listened kindly, and went slowly, with tired limbs, about the
-camp tasks; and now he gazed at Dismukes, and again had an eye for his
-surroundings. Often he gazed up at the exceedingly high, blunt break
-in the Funeral range. What cataclysm of nature had made that rent? It
-was a zigzagged saw-toothed wall, with strata slanted at an angle of
-forty-five degrees. Zigzag veins of black and red bronze ran through
-the vast drab mass.
-
-The long purple shadows that Adam loved had begun to fall. Several
-huge bats with white heads darted in irregular flight over the camp.
-Adam’s hands, and his jaw, too, were swollen and painful as a result
-of the fight, and he served himself and ate with difficulty. And as
-for speech, he had little chance for that. Dismukes’ words flowed like
-a desert flood. The man was bewitched. He would consume moments in
-eloquent description of what he was going to do, then suddenly switch
-to an irrelevant subject.
-
-“Once, years ago, I was lost on the desert,” he said, reminiscently.
-“First an’ only time I ever got lost for sure. Got out of grub. Began
-to starve. Was goin’ to kill an’ eat my burro, when he up an’ run off.
-Finally got out of water. That’s the last straw, you know.... I walked
-all day an’ all night an’ all day, only to find myself more lost than
-ever. I thought I had been travelin’ toward the west to some place I’d
-heard of water an’ a ranch. Then I made sure I’d gone the wrong way.
-Staggerin’ an’ fallin’ an’ crawlin’ till near daylight, at last I gave
-up an’ stretched out to die. Me! I gave up--was glad to die.... I can
-remember the look of the pale stars--the gray mornin’ light--the awful
-silence an’ loneliness. Yes, I wanted to die quick.... An’ all at once
-I heard a rooster crow!”
-
-“Well! You’d lain down to die near a ranch. That was funny,” declared
-Adam. Life did play queer pranks on men.
-
-“Funny! Say, pard Wansfell, there’s nothin’ funny about death. An’
-as for life, I never dreamed how glorious it is, until I heard that
-rooster crow. I’ll buy a farm of green an’ grassy an’ shady land
-somewhere in the East--land with runnin’ water everywhere--an’ I’ll
-raise a thousand roosters just to hear them crow.”
-
-“Thought you meant to travel,” said Adam.
-
-“Sure. But I’ll settle down sometime, I suppose,” replied Dismukes,
-reflectively.
-
-“Friend, will you marry?” inquired Adam, gravely. How intensely
-interesting was this man about to go out into the world!
-
-“Marry!--What?” ejaculated the prospector.
-
-“A woman, of course.”
-
-“My God!” rolled out Dismukes. The thought had startled him. His great
-ox eyes reflected changes of amazing thought, shadows of old emotions
-long submerged. “That’s somethin’ I never _did_ think of. Me marry a
-woman!... No woman would ever have me.”
-
-“Dismukes, you’re not so old. And you’ll be rich. When you wear off the
-desert roughness you can find a wife. The world is full of good women
-who need husbands.”
-
-“Wansfell, you ain’t serious?” queried Dismukes, puzzled and stirred.
-He ran a broad hand through his shock of grizzled hair. His eyes were
-beautiful then. “I never had wife or sweetheart.... No girl ever looked
-at me--when I was a boy. An’ these years on the desert, women have been
-scarce, an’ not one was ever anythin’ to me.”
-
-“Well, when you get among a lot of pretty girls, just squeeze one for
-me,” said Adam, with the smile that was sad.
-
-Plain it was how Adam’s attempt at pleasantry, despite its
-undercurrent, had opened up a vista of bewildering and entrancing
-prospects for Dismukes. This prospector had grown grizzled on the
-desert; his long years had been years of loneliness; and now the
-forgotten dreams and desires of youth thronged thick and sweet in his
-imagination. Adam left him to that engrossing fancy, hoping it would
-keep him content and silent for a while.
-
-A golden flare brightened over the Panamint range, silhouetting the
-long, tapering lines of the peaks. Far to the west, when the sun had
-set, floated gray and silver-edged clouds, and under them a whorl of
-rosy, dusky, ruddy haze. All the slopes below were beginning to be
-enshrouded in purple, and even while Adam watched they grew cold and
-dark. The heat veils were still rising, but they were from the ridges
-of dark-brown and pale-gray earth far this side of the mountains. Death
-Valley was hidden, and for that Adam was glad. The winds had ceased,
-the clouds of dust had long settled. It was a bold and desolate scene,
-of wide scope and tremendous dimensions, a big country. The afterglow
-of sunset transformed the clouds. Then the golden flare faded fast, the
-clouds paled, the purple gloom deepened. Vast black ridges of mountains
-stood out like ragged islands in a desolate sea.
-
-“Wansfell,” spoke up Dismukes, “you need your hair cut.”
-
-“Maybe. But I’m glad it was long to-day when I got hit with the shovel.”
-
-“You sure did come near gettin’ it cut then,” replied Dismukes, with a
-hard laugh. “I’ll tell you what your long hair reminds me of. Years ago
-I met a big fellow on the desert. Six feet three he was, an’ ’most as
-big as you. An’ a darn good pard on the trail. Well, he wore his hair
-very long. It hid his ears. An’ in the hottest weather he never let me
-cut it. Well, the funny part all came out one day. Not so funny for
-him, to think of it!... We met men on the trail. They shot him an’ were
-nigh on to doin’ for me.... My big pardner was a horse thief. He’d had
-his ears cut off for stealin’ horses. An’ so he wore his hair long like
-yours to hide the fact he had no ears.”
-
-“Friend Dismukes, _I_ have ears, if my long hair is worrying you,”
-replied Adam. “And if I had not had mighty keen ears you’d still be
-grinding gold for your claim jumpers.”
-
-At dusk, while the big bats darted overhead with soft swishing of
-wings, and the camp fire burned down to red and glowing embers,
-Dismukes talked and talked. And always he returned to the subject of
-gold and of his future.
-
-“Pard, I wish you were goin’ with me,” he said, and the slow, sweeping
-gesture of the great horny hand had something of sublimity. He waved
-it away toward the east, and it signified the far places across the
-desert. “I’m rich. The years of lonely hell an’ never-endin’ toil are
-over. No more sour dough! No more thirst an’ heat an’ dust! No more
-hoardin’ of gold! The time has come for me to spend. I’ll bank my
-gold an’ draw my checks. At Frisco I’ll boil the alkali out of my
-carcass, an’, shaved an’ clipped an’ dressed, I’ll take again the name
-of my youth an’ fare forth for adventure. I’ll pay for the years of
-hard grub. I’ll eat the best an’ drink wine--wine--the sweetest an’
-oldest of wine! Wine in thin glasses.... I’ll wear silk next my skin
-an’ sleep on feathers. I’ll travel like a prince. I can see the big
-niggers roll their eyes. ‘Yas, sah, yas sah, the best for you, sah!’
-An’ I’ll tip them in gold.... I’ll go to my old home. Some of my people
-will be livin’. An’ when they see me they’ll see their ship come in.
-They’ll be rich. I’ll not forget the friends of my youth. That little
-village will have a church or a park as my gift. I’ll travel. I’ll see
-the sights an’ the cities. New York! Ha! if I like that place, I’ll
-buy it! I’ll see all there is to see, buy all there is to buy. I’ll
-be merry, I’ll be joyful. I’ll live. I’ll make up for all the lost
-years. But I’ll never forget the poor an’ the miserable. I can spend
-an’ give a hundred dollars a day for the rest of my life. I’ll cross
-the ocean. London! I’ve met Englishmen in the Southwest. Queer, cold
-sort of men! I’ll see how they live. I’ll go all over England. Then
-Paris! Never was I drunk, but I’ll get drunk in Paris. I want to see
-the wonderful hotels an’ shops an’ theaters. I’ll look at the beautiful
-French actresses. I’ll go to hear the prima donnas sing. I’ll throw
-gold double-eagles on the stage. An’ I’ll take a fly at Monte Carlo.
-An’ travel on an’ on. To Rome, that great city where the thrones of the
-emperors still stand. I’ll go spend a long hour high up in the ruins
-of the Coliseum. An’ dreamin’ of the days of the Cæsars--seein’ the
-gladiators in the arena--I’ll think of you, Wansfell. For there never
-lived on the old earth a greater fighter than you!... Egypt, the land
-of sun an’ sand! I’ll see the grand Sahara. An’ I’ll travel on an’
-on, all over the world. When I’ve seen it I’ll come back to my native
-land. An’ then, that green farm, with wooded hills an’ runnin’ streams!
-It must be near a city. Horses I’ll have an’ a man to drive, an’ a
-house of comfort.... Mebbe there’ll come a woman into my life. Mebbe
-children! The thought you planted in me, pard, somehow makes me yearn.
-After all, every man should have a son. I see that now. What blunders
-we make! But I’m rich, I’m not so old, I’ll drink life to the very
-lees.... I see the lights, I hear the voices of laughter an’ music, I
-feel the comfortin’ walls of a home. A roof over my head! An’ a bed as
-soft as downy feathers!... Mebbe, O my pard, mebbe the sweet smile of a
-woman--the touch of a lovin’ hand--the good-night kiss of a child!...
-My God! how the thoughts of life can burn an’ thrill!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Twenty miles a day, resting several hours through the fierce noon heat,
-the travelers made down across the Mohave Desert. To them, who had
-conquered the terrible elements and desolation of Death Valley, this
-waste of the Mohave presented comparatively little to contend with.
-Still, hardened and daring as they were, they did not incur unnecessary
-risks.
-
-The time was September, at the end of a fierce, dry summer. Cloudless
-sky, fervid and quivering air, burning downward rays of sun and rising
-veils of reflected heat from sand and rock--these were not to be
-trifled with. Dismukes’ little thermometer registered one hundred and
-thirty degrees in the shade; that is, whenever there was any shade to
-rest in. They did not burden themselves with the worry of knowing the
-degrees of heat while they were on the march.
-
-Water holes well known to Dismukes, though out of the beaten track,
-were found to be dry; and so the travelers had to go out of a direct
-line to replenish their supply. Under that burning sun even Dismukes
-and Adam suffered terribly after several hours without water. A
-very fine penetrating alkali dust irritated throat and nostrils and
-augmented the pain of thirst. Once they went a whole day without
-water, and at sundown reached a well kept by a man who made a living
-by selling water to prospectors and freighters and drivers of borax
-wagons. His prices were exorbitant. On this occasion, surlily surveying
-the parched travelers and the thirsty burros, he said his well was
-almost dry and he would not sell any water. Dismukes had told Adam that
-the well-owner bore him a grudge. They expostulated and pleaded with
-him to no avail. Adam went to the well and, lifting a trap-door, he
-peered down, to see quite a goodly supply of water. Then he returned to
-the little shack where the bushy-whiskered hoarder of precious water
-sat on a box with a rifle across his knees. Adam always appeared mild
-and serene, except when he was angry, at which time a man would have
-had to be blind not to see his mood. The well-owner probably expected
-Adam to plead again. But he reckoned falsely. Adam jerked the rifle
-from him and with a single movement of his hands he broke off the
-stock. Then he laid those big, hard hands on the man, who seemed to
-shrink under them.
-
-“Friend, you’ve plenty of water. It’s a live well. You can spare enough
-to save us. We’ll double your pay. Come.”
-
-Adam loosened his right hand and doubled up the enormous malletlike
-fist and swung it back. The well-owner suddenly changed his front and
-became animated, and the travelers got all the water they needed. But
-they did not annoy him further by pitching camp near his place.
-
-This country was crisscrossed by trails, and, arid desert though it
-was, every few miles showed an abandoned mine, or a prospector working
-a claim, or a shack containing a desert dweller. Adam and Dismukes were
-approaching the highway that bisected the Mohave Desert. It grew to be
-more of a sandy country, and anywhere in sand, water was always scarce.
-Another of Dismukes’ water holes was dry. It had not been visited for
-months. The one wanderer who had stopped there lay there half buried
-in the sand, a shrunken mummy of a man, with a dark and horrible
-mockery in the eyeless sockets of his skull. His skin was drawn like
-light-brown parchment over his face. Adam looked, and then again, and
-gave a sudden start. He turned the sun-dried visage more to the light.
-He recognized that face, set in its iron mask of death, with its grin
-that would grin forever until the brown skull went to dust.
-
-“Regan!” he exclaimed.
-
-“You know him?” queried Dismukes.
-
-“Yes. He was an Irishman I knew years ago. A talky, cheerful fellow.
-Hard drinker. He loved the desert, but drink kept him in the mining
-camps. The last time I saw him was at Tecopah, after you left.”
-
-“Poor devil! He died of thirst. I know that cast of face.... Let’s give
-him decent burial.”
-
-“Yes. Poor Regan! He was the man who named me Wansfell. Why he called
-me that I never knew--never will know.”
-
-Deep in the sand they buried the remains of Regan and erected a rude
-cross to mark his lonely grave.
-
-Dismukes led Adam off the well-beaten trail one day, up a narrow sandy
-wash to a closed pocket that smelled old and musty. Here a green spring
-bubbled from under a bank of sand. Water clear as crystal, slightly
-green in tinge, sparkled and murmured. A whitish sediment bordered the
-tiny stream of running water.
-
-“Arsenic!” exclaimed Adam.
-
-“Yes. An’ here’s where I found a whole caravan of people dead. It was
-six years ago. Place hasn’t changed much. Guess it’s filled up a little
-with blowin’ sand.... Aha! Look here!”
-
-Dismukes put the toe of his boot against a round white object
-protruding from the sand. It was a bleached skull.
-
-“Men mad with desert thirst never stop to read,” replied Adam, sadly.
-
-In silence Adam and Dismukes gazed down at the glistening white skull.
-Ghastly as it was, it yet had beauty. Once it had been full of thought,
-of emotion; and now it was tenanted by desert sand.
-
-Adam and Dismukes spent half a day at that arsenic spring, under the
-burning sun, suffering the thirst they dared not slake there, and they
-erected a rude cross that would stand for many and many a day. Deep in
-the crosspiece Adam cut the words: “DEATH! ARSENIC SPRING! DON’T DRINK!
-GOOD WATER FIVE MILES. FOLLOW DRY STREAM BED.”
-
-Dismukes appeared to get deep satisfaction and even happiness out of
-this accomplished task. It was a monument to the end of his desert
-experience. Good will toward his fellow men!
-
- * * * * *
-
-At last the day came when Adam watched Dismukes drive his burros out on
-the lonely trail, striding along with his rolling gait, a huge, short,
-broad-backed man, like a misshapen giant. What a stride he had! The
-thousands of desert miles it had mastered had not yet taken its force
-and spring. It was the stride of one who imagined he left nothing of
-life behind and saw its most calling adventures to the fore. He had
-tired of the desert. He had used it. He had glutted it of the riches
-he craved. And now he was heading down the trail toward the glittering
-haunts of men and the green pastures. Adam watched him with grief and
-yet with gladness, and still with something of awe. Dismukes’ going
-forever was incomprehensible. Adam felt what he could not analyze. The
-rolling voice of Dismukes, sonorous and splendid, still rang in Adam’s
-ears: “Pard, we’re square!... Good-by!” Adam understood now why a
-noble Indian, unspoiled by white men, reverenced a debt which involved
-life. The paying of that debt was all of unity and brotherhood there
-existed in the world. If it was great to feel gratitude for the saving
-of his life, it was far greater to remember he had saved the life of
-his savior. Adam, deeply agitated, watched Dismukes stride down the
-barren trail, behind his bobbing burros, watched him stride on into the
-lonely, glaring desert, so solemn and limitless and mysterious, until
-he vanished in the gray monotony.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-When the following March came, Adam had been a week plodding southward
-over the yucca plateaus of the Mohave.
-
-The desert had changed its face. Left behind were the rare
-calico-veined ranges of mountains, the royal-purple porphyries, the
-wonderful white granites, the green-blue coppers, the yellow sulphurs,
-and the ruddy red irons. This desert had color, but not so vivid, not
-so striking. And it had become more hospitable to the survival of plant
-life. The sandy floor was no longer monotonously gray.
-
-Adam loved the grotesque yucca trees. They were really trees that
-afforded shade and firewood, and they brought back no bittersweet
-memories like the _palo verdes_. The yuccas were fresh and green,
-renewed in the spring from the dusty gray sunburnt trees they had been
-in the autumn. Many of them bore great cone-shaped buds about to open,
-and on others had blossomed large white flowers with streaks of pink.
-A yucca forest presented a strange sight. These desert trees were
-deformed, weird, bristling, shaggy trunked, with grotesque shapes like
-specters in torture.
-
-Adam traveled leisurely, although a nameless and invisible hand seemed
-to beckon him from the beyond. His wandering steps were again guided,
-and something awaited him far down toward the Rio Colorado. He was
-completing a vast circle of the desert, and he could not resist that
-call, that wandering quest down toward the place which had given the
-color and direction to his life. But the way must be long, and as there
-were the thorns and rocks for his feet, so must there be bruises to his
-spirit.
-
-At night on the moon-blanched desert, under the weird, spectral-armed
-yuccas, Adam had revelation of the clearness of teaching that was to
-become his. The years had been preparing him. When would come his
-supreme trial? What would it be? And there came a whisper out of the
-lonely darkness, on the cool night wind, that some day he would go back
-to find the grave of his brother and to meet the punishment that was
-his due. Then all that was physical, all that was fierce, enduring,
-natural, thrust the thought from him. But though the savage desert life
-in him burned strong and resistless, yet he began to hear a new, a
-different, a higher voice of conscience. He imagined he stifled it with
-fiercely repudiating gestures, but all the wonderful strength of his
-brawny hands, magnified a thousand times, could not thrust a thought
-from him.
-
-Toward sunset one day Adam was down on the level desert floor, plodding
-along a sandy trail around the western wall of San Jacinto. The first
-_bisnagi_ cacti he saw seemed to greet him as old friends. They were
-small, only a foot or so high, and sparsely scattered over the long
-rocky slope that led to the base of the mountain wall. The tops of
-these cacti were as pink as wild roses. Adam was sweeping his gaze
-along to see how far they grew out on the desert when he discovered
-that his burro Jennie had espied moving objects.
-
-Coming toward Adam, still a goodly distance off, were two men and two
-burros, one of which appeared to have a rider. Presently they appeared
-to see Adam, for they halted, burros and all, for a moment. It struck
-Adam that when they started on again they sheered a little off a
-straight following of the trail. Whereupon Adam, too, sheered a little
-off, so as to pass near them. When they got fairly close he saw two
-rough-looking men, one driving a packed burro, and the other leading
-a burro upon which was a ragged slip of a girl. The sunlight caught a
-brown flash of her face. When nearly abreast, Adam hailed them.
-
-“Howdy, stranger!” they replied, halting. “Come from inside?”
-
-“No. I’m down from the Mohave,” replied Adam. “How’s the water? Reckon
-you came by the cottonwoods?”
-
-“Nope. There ain’t none there,” replied one of the men, shortly.
-“Plenty an’ fine water down the trail.”
-
-“Thanks. Where you headed for?”
-
-“Riverside. My gal hyar is sick an’ pinin’ fer home.”
-
-Adam had been aware of the rather sharp scrutiny of these travelers and
-that they had exchanged whispers. Such procedures were natural on the
-desert, only in this case they struck Adam as peculiar. Then he shifted
-his gaze to the girl on the burro. He could not see her face, as it
-was bowed. Apparently she was weeping. She made a coarse, drab little
-figure. But her hair shone in the light of the setting sun--rather
-short and curly, a rich dark brown with glints of gold.
-
-Adam replied to the curt good-by of the men, and after another glance
-at them, as they went on, he faced ahead to his own course. Then he
-heard low sharp words, “_Shet up!_” Wheeling, he was in time to see one
-of these men roughly shake the girl, and speak further words too low
-for Adam to distinguish. Adam’s natural conclusion was that the father
-had impatiently admonished the child for crying. Something made Adam
-hesitate and wonder; and presently, as he proceeded on his way, the
-same subtle something turned him round to watch the receding figures.
-Again he caught a gleam of sunlight from that girl’s glossy head.
-
-“Humph! Somehow I don’t like the looks of those fellows,” muttered
-Adam. He was annoyed with himself, first for being so inquisitive,
-and secondly for not having gone over to take a closer look at them.
-Shaking his head, dissatisfied with himself, Adam trudged on.
-
-“They said no water at the cottonwoods,” went on Adam. “No water when
-the peak is still white with snow. Either they lied or didn’t know.”
-
-Adam turned again to gaze after the little party. He had nothing
-tangible upon which to hang suspicions. He went on, then wheeled about
-once more, realizing that the farther on he traveled the stronger
-grew his desire to look back. Suddenly the feeling cleared of its
-vagueness--no longer curiosity. It had been his thoughts that had
-inhibited him.
-
-“I’ll go back,” said Adam. Tying his burros to greasewood bushes near
-the trail, he started to stride back over the ground he had covered.
-After a while he caught a glimmer of firelight through the darkness.
-They had made dry camp hardly five miles beyond the place where Adam
-had passed them.
-
-It developed that these travelers had gone off the trail to camp in a
-wide, deep wash. Adam lost sight of the camp-fire glimmer, and had to
-hunt round until he came to the edge of the wash. A good-sized fire of
-greasewood and sage had been started, so that it would burn down to hot
-embers for cooking purposes. As Adam stalked out of the gloom into the
-camp he saw both men busy with preparations for the meal. The girl sat
-in a disconsolate attitude. She espied Adam before either of the men
-heard him. Adam saw her quiver and start erect. Not fright, indeed, was
-it that animated her. Suddenly one of the men rose, with his hand going
-to his hip.
-
-“Who goes thar?” he demanded, warningly.
-
-Adam halted inside the circle of light. “Say, I lost my coat. Must have
-fallen off my pack. Did you fellows find it?”
-
-“No, we didn’t find no coat,” replied the man, slowly. He straightened
-up, with his hand dropping to his side. The other fellow was on his
-knees mixing dough in a pan.
-
-Adam advanced with natural manner, but his eyes, hidden under the
-shadow of his wide hat brim, took swift stock of that camp.
-
-“Pshaw! I was sure hoping you’d found it,” he said, as he reached the
-fire. “I had a time locating your camp. Funny you’d come way off the
-trail, down in here.”
-
-“Funny or not, stranger, it’s our bizness,” gruffly replied the man
-standing. He peered keenly at Adam.
-
-“Sure,” replied Adam, with slow and apparent good nature. He was close
-to the man now, as close as he ever needed to get to any man who might
-make a threatening move. And he looked past him at the girl. She had
-a pale little face, too small for a pair of wonderful dark eyes that
-seemed full of woe and terror. She held out thin brown hands to Adam.
-
-“Reckon you’d better go an’ hunt fer yer coat,” returned the man,
-significantly.
-
-In one stride Adam loomed over him, his leisurely, casual manner
-suddenly transformed to an attitude of menace. He stood fully a foot
-and a half over this stockily built man, who also suddenly underwent a
-change. He stiffened. Warily he peered up, just a second behind Adam
-in decision. His mind worked too slowly to get the advantage in this
-situation.
-
-“Say, I’m curious about this girl you’ve got with you,” said Adam,
-deliberately.
-
-The man gave a start. “Aw, you are, hey?” he rasped out. “Wal, see
-hyar, stranger, curious fellars sometimes die sudden, with their boots
-on.”
-
-Adam’s force gathered for swift action. Keeping a sharp gaze riveted
-on this man, he addressed the girl: “Little girl, what’s wrong? Are
-you----”
-
-“Shet up! If you blab out I’ll slit your tongue,” yelled the fellow,
-whirling fiercely. No father ever spoke that way to his child. And no
-child ever showed such terror of her father.
-
-“Girl, don’t be afraid. Speak!” called Adam, in a voice that rang.
-
-“Oh, save me--save me!” she cried, wildly.
-
-Then the man, hissing like a snake, was reaching for his gun when
-Adam struck him. He fell clear across the fire and, rolling over some
-packs, lay still. The other one, cursing, started to crawl, to reach
-with flour-whitened hand for a gun lying in a belt upon the sand. Adam
-kicked the gun away and pounced upon the man. Fiercely he yelled and
-struggled. Adam bore him down, burrowing his face in the sand. Then
-placing a ponderous knee on the back of the man’s neck, he knelt there,
-holding him down.
-
-“Girl, throw me that piece of rope,” said Adam, pointing.
-
-She shakily got up, her bare feet sinking in the sand, and, picking up
-the rope, she threw it to Adam. In short order he bound the man’s arms
-behind his back.
-
-“Now, little girl, you can tell me what’s wrong,” said Adam, rising.
-
-“Oh, they took me away--from mother!” she whispered.
-
-“Your mother? Where?”
-
-“She’s at the cottonwoods. We live there.”
-
-Adam could not see her plainly. The fire had burned down. He threw on
-more greasewood and some sage, that flared up with sparkling smoke.
-Then he drew the girl to the light. What a thin arm she had! And in the
-small face and staring eyes he read more than the fear that seemed now
-losing its intensity. Starvation! No man so quick as Adam to see that!
-
-“You live there? Then he lied about the water?” asked Adam.
-
-“Oh yes--he lied.”
-
-“Who are these men?”
-
-“I don’t know. They camped at the water. I--I was out--gathering
-firewood. One of them--the one you hit--grabbed me--carried me off. He
-put his hand--on my mouth. Then the other man came--with the burros....
-My mother’s sick. She didn’t know what happened. She’ll be terribly
-frightened.... Oh, please take me--home!”
-
-“Indeed I will,” replied Adam, heartily. “Don’t worry any more. Come
-now. Walk right behind me.”
-
-Adam led the way out of camp without another glance at the two men, one
-of whom was groaning. The girl kept close at Adam’s heels. Away from
-the circle of camp-fire glow, he could see the gray aisles of clean
-sand between the clumps of greasewood, and he wound in and out between
-these until he found the trail. Suddenly he remembered the girl had no
-shoes.
-
-“You’ll stick your feet full of cactus,” he said. “You should have on
-your shoes.”
-
-“I have no shoes,” she replied. “But cactus doesn’t hurt me--except the
-_cholla_. Do you know _cholla_? Even the Indians think _cholla_ bad.”
-
-“Guess I do, little girl. Let me carry you.”
-
-“I can walk.”
-
-So they set off on the starlit trail, and here she walked beside him.
-Adam noted that she was taller than he would have taken her to be,
-her small head coming up to his elbow. She had the free stride of an
-Indian. He gazed out across the level gray and drab desert. Whatever
-way he directed his wandering steps over this land of waste, he was
-always gravitating toward new adventure. For him the lonely reaches and
-rock-ribbed canyons were sure to harbor, sooner or later, some humanity
-that drew him like a magnet. Everywhere the desert had its evil, its
-suffering, its youth and age. The heat of Adam’s anger subsided with
-the thought that somehow he had let the ruffians off easily; and the
-presence of this girl, a mere child, apparently, for all her height,
-brought home to him the mystery, the sorrow, the marvel of life on the
-desert. A sick woman with a child living in the lonely shadow of San
-Jacinto! Adam felt in this girl’s presence, as he had seen starvation
-in her face, a cruelty of life, of fate. But how infinitely grateful he
-felt for the random wandering steps which had led him down that trail!
-
-All at once a slim, rough little hand slipped into his. Instinctively
-Adam closed his own great hand over it. That touch gave him such a
-thrill as he had never before felt in all his life. It seemed to link
-his strength and this child’s trust. The rough little fingers and
-calloused little palm might have belonged to a hard-laboring boy,
-but the touch was feminine. Adam, desert trained by years that had
-dominated even the habits ingrained in his youth, and answering mostly
-to instinct, received here an unintelligible shock that stirred to the
-touch of a trusting hand, but was nothing physical. His body, his mind,
-his soul seemed but an exhaustive instrument of creation over which the
-desert played masterfully.
-
-“It was lucky you happened along,” said the girl.
-
-“Yes,” replied Adam, as if startled.
-
-“They were bad men. And, oh, I was so glad to see them--at first. It’s
-so lonely. No one ever comes except the Indians--and they come to
-_beg_ things to eat--never to _give_. I thought those white men were
-prospectors and would give me a little flour or coffee--or something
-mother would like. We’ve had so little to eat.”
-
-“That so? Well, I have a full pack,” replied Adam. “Plenty of flour,
-coffee, sugar, bacon, canned milk, dried fruit.”
-
-“And you’ll give us some?” she asked, eagerly, in a whisper.
-
-“All you need.”
-
-“Oh, you’re good--good as those men were bad!” she exclaimed, with a
-throb of joy. “Mother has just starved herself for me. You see, the
-Indian who packed supplies to us hasn’t come for long. Nobody has
-come--except those bad men. And our food gave out little by little.
-Mother starved herself for me.... Oh, I couldn’t make her eat. She’d
-say she didn’t want what I’d cook. Then I’d have to eat it.”
-
-“Isn’t your mother able to get about?” asked Adam, turning to peer down
-into the dark little face.
-
-“Oh no! She’s dying of consumption,” was the low, sad reply.
-
-“And your father?” asked Adam, a little huskily.
-
-“He died two years ago. I guess it’s two, for the peak has been white
-twice.”
-
-“Died?--here in the desert?”
-
-“Yes. We buried him by the running water where he loved to sit.”
-
-“Tell me--how did your parents and you come to be here.”
-
-“They both had consumption long before I was born,” replied the girl.
-“Father had it--but mother didn’t--when they were married. That was
-back in Iowa. Mother caught it from him. And they both were going to
-die. They had tried every way to get well, but the doctors said they
-couldn’t.... So father and mother started West in a prairie schooner.
-I was born in it, somewhere in Kansas. They tried place after place,
-trying to find a climate that would cure them. I remember as far back
-as Arizona. But father never improved till we got to this valley. Here
-he was getting strong again. Then my uncle came and he found gold
-over in the mountains. That made father mad to get rich--to have gold
-for me. He worked too hard--and then he died. Mother has been slowly
-failing ever since.”
-
-“It’s a sad story, little girl,” replied Adam. “The desert is full of
-sad stories.... But your uncle--what became of him?”
-
-“He went off prospecting for gold. But he came back several times. And
-the last was just before father died. Then he said he would come back
-again for me some day and take me out of the desert. Mother lives on
-that hope. But I don’t want him to come. All I pray for is that she
-gets well. I would never leave her.”
-
-“So you’ve lived all your life on the desert?”
-
-“Yes. Mother says I never slept under a real roof.”
-
-“And how old are you?”
-
-“Nearly fourteen.”
-
-“So old as that? Well! I thought you were younger. And, little
-girl--may I ask how you learned to talk so--as if you had been to
-school?”
-
-“My mother was a school-teacher. She taught me.”
-
-“What’s your name?”
-
-“It’s Eugenie Linwood. But I don’t like Eugenie. Father and mother
-always called me Genie.... What’s your name?”
-
-“Mine is Wansfell.”
-
-“You’re the biggest man I ever saw. I thought the Yuma Indians were
-giants, but you’re bigger. My poor father was not big or strong.”
-
-Presently Adam saw the dark-gray forms of his burros along the trail.
-Jennie appeared to be more contrary than usual, and kicked spitefully
-at Adam as he untied her. And as Adam drove her ahead with the other
-burro she often lagged to take a nip at the sage. During the several
-miles farther down the trail Adam was hard put to it to keep her
-going steadily. The girl began to tire, a circumstance which Adam
-had expected. She refused to be assisted, or to be put on one of
-the burros. The trail began to circle round the black bulge of the
-mountain, finally running into the shadow, where objects were hard to
-see. The murmur of flowing water soon reached Adam’s ears--most welcome
-and beautiful sound to desert man. And then big cottonwoods loomed up,
-and beyond them the gleam of starlight on stately palm trees. Adam,
-peering low down through the shadows, distinguished a thatch-roofed hut.
-
-“We’ll not tell mother about the bad men,” whispered the girl. “It’ll
-only scare her.”
-
-“All right, Genie,” said Adam, and he permitted himself to be led to a
-door of the hut. Dark as pitch was it inside.
-
-“Mother, are you awake?” called Genie.
-
-“Oh, child, where have you been?” rejoined a voice, faint and weak,
-with a note of relief. “I woke up in the dark.... I called. You didn’t
-come.”
-
-Then followed a cough that had a shuddering significance for Adam.
-
-“Mother, I’m sorry. I--I met a man on the trail. A Mr. Wansfell. We
-talked. And he came with me. He has a new pack of good things to eat.
-And, oh, mother! he’s--he’s different from those men who were here;
-he’ll help us.”
-
-“Madam, I’ll be happy to do anything I can for you and your little
-girl,” said Adam, in his deep, kindly tones.
-
-“Sir, your voice startled me,” replied the woman, with a gasp. “But
-it’s a voice I trust. The looks of men in this hard country deceive me
-sometimes--but never their voices.... Sir, if you will help us in our
-extremity, you will have the gratitude of a dying woman--of a mother.”
-
-The darkness was intense inside the hut, and Adam, leaning at the
-door, could see nothing. The girl touched his arm timidly, almost
-appealingly, as Adam hesitated over his reply.
-
-“You can--trust me,” he said, presently. “My name is Wansfell. I’m just
-a desert wanderer. If I may--I’ll stay here--look after your little
-girl till her uncle comes.”
-
-“At last--God has answered my--prayer!” exclaimed the woman, pantingly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam unpacked his burros a half dozen rods from the hut, under a
-spreading cottonwood and near the juncture of two little streams of
-water that flowed down out of the gloom, one on each side of the great
-corner of mountain. And Adam’s big hands made short shift of camp well
-made, with upright poles and thatch, covered by a thatched roof of palm
-leaves. The girl came out and watched him, and Adam had never seen
-hungrier eyes even in an Indian.
-
-“It’d be fun to watch you--you’re so quick--if I wasn’t starved,” said
-Genie.
-
-What a slender, almost flat slip of a girl. Her dress was in tatters,
-showing bare brown flesh in places. The pinched little face further
-stirred Adam’s pity. And there waved over him a strange pride in his
-immense strength, his wonderful hands, his desert knowledge that now
-could be put to the greatest good ever offered him in his wanderings.
-
-“Genie, when you’re starved you must eat very slowly--and only a
-little.”
-
-“I know. I’ve known all about people starving and thirsting. But I’m
-not that badly off. I’ve had a _little_ to eat.”
-
-“Honest Injun?” he queried.
-
-She had never heard that expression, so he changed it to another of
-like meaning.
-
-“I wouldn’t lie,” she replied, with direct simplicity that indeed
-reminded Adam of an Indian.
-
-Never had Adam prepared so good a camp dinner in such short time.
-And then, hungry as Genie was, she insisted that her mother should
-be served first. She took a lighted candle Adam gave her and led the
-way into the hut, while he followed, carrying food and drink that he
-believed best for a woman so weak and starved. The hut had two rooms,
-the first being a kitchen with stone floor and well furnished with camp
-utensils. The second room contained two rude cots made of poles and
-palm leaves, upon one of which Adam saw a pale shadow of a woman whose
-eyes verified the tragic words she had spoken.
-
-Despite the way Adam stooped as he entered, his lofty head brushed the
-palm-leafed roof. Genie laughed when he bumped against a crossbeam.
-
-“Mother, he’s the tallest man!” exclaimed the girl. “He could never
-live in our hut.... Now sit up, mother dear.... Doesn’t it all smell
-good. Oooooo! The Indian fairy has come.”
-
-“Genie, will you hold the candle so I can see the face of this kind
-man?” asked the woman, when she had been propped up in bed.
-
-The girl complied, with another little laugh. Adam had not before been
-subjected to a scrutiny like the one he bore then. It seemed to come
-from beyond this place and time.
-
-“Sir, you are a man such as I have never seen,” she said, at length.
-
-Plain it was to Adam that the sincerity, or whatever she saw in him,
-meant more to her than the precious food of which she stood in such
-dire need. Her hair was straggly and gray, her brow lined by pain and
-care, her burning eyes were sunk deep in dark hollows, and the rest of
-her features seemed mere pale shadows.
-
-“I’m glad for your confidence,” he said. “But never mind me. Try to eat
-some now.”
-
-“Mother, there’s plenty,” added Genie, with soft eagerness. “You can’t
-fib to me about _this_. Oh, smell that soup! And there’s rice--clean
-white rice with sugar and milk!”
-
-“Child, if there’s plenty, go and eat.... Thank you, sir, I can help
-myself.”
-
-Adam followed Genie out, and presently the look of her, as she sat on
-the sand, in ravenous bewilderment of what to eat first, brought back
-poignantly to him the starvation days of his earlier experience. How
-blessed to appreciate food! Indeed, Genie would have made a little
-glutton of herself had not Adam wisely obviated that danger for her.
-
-Later, when she and her mother were asleep, he strolled under the
-cottonwoods along the murmuring stream where the bright stars shone
-reflected in the dark water. The place had the fragrance of spring,
-of fresh snow water, of green growths and blossoming flowers. Frogs
-were trilling from the gloom, a sweet, melodious music seldom heard by
-Adam. A faint, soft night breeze rustled in the palm leaves. The ragged
-mountain-side rose precipitously, a slanted mass of huge rocks, their
-shining surfaces alternating with the dark blank spaces. Above spread
-the sky, a wonderful deep blue, velvety, intense, from which blazed
-magnificent white stars, and countless trains and groups of smaller
-stars.
-
-Rest and thought came to him then. Destiny had dealt him many parts
-to play on the desert. So many violent, harsh, and bitter tasks! But
-this was to be different. Not upon evil days had he fallen! Nor had
-his wandering steps here taken hold of hell! The fragrance under the
-shadow of this looming mountain was the fragrance of an oasis. And in
-that silent shadow slept a child who would soon be an orphan. Adam
-had his chance to live awhile in one of the desert’s fruitful and
-blossoming spots. Only a desert man could appreciate the rest, the
-ease, the joy, the contrast of that opportunity. He could befriend
-an unfortunate child. But as refreshing and splendid as were these
-things, they were as naught compared to the blessing that would be
-breathed upon his head by a dying mother. Adam, lifting up his face
-to the starlight, felt that all his intense and passionate soul could
-only faintly divine what the agony of that mother had been, what now
-would be her relief. She knew. Her prayer had been answered. And
-Adam pondered and pondered over the meaning of her prayer and the
-significance of his wandering steps. He seemed to feel the low beat
-of a mighty heart, the encompassing embrace of a mighty and invisible
-spirit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-Daylight showed to Adam the cottonwood oasis as he had it pictured in
-memory, except for the palm-thatched hut.
-
-He was hard at camp duties when Genie came out. The sun was rising,
-silver and ruddy and gold, and it shone upon her, played around her
-glossy head as she knelt on the grass beside the running water. While
-she bathed there, splashing diamond drops of water in the sunshine,
-she seemed all brightness and youth. But in the merciless light of day
-her face was too small, too thin, too pinched to have any comeliness.
-Her shining hair caught all the beauty of the morning. In one light
-it was auburn and in another a dark brown, and in any light it had
-glints and gleams of gold. It waved and curled rebelliously, a rich,
-thick, rippling mass falling to her shoulders. When, presently, she
-came over to Adam, to greet him and offer to help, then he had his
-first look at her eyes by day. Gazing into them, Adam hardly saw the
-small, unattractive, starved face. Like her hair, her eyes shone dark
-brown, and the lighter gleams were amber. The expression was of a
-straightforward soul, unconscious of unutterable sadness, gazing out at
-incomprehensible life, that should have been beautiful for her, but was
-not.
-
-“Good morning, Genie,” said Adam, cheerily. “Of course you can help me.
-There’s heaps of work. And when you help me with that I’ll play with
-you.”
-
-“Play!” she murmured, dreamily. She had never had a playmate.
-
-Thus began the business of the day for Adam. When breakfast was over
-and done with he set to work to improve that camp, and especially with
-an eye to the comfort of the invalid. Adam knew the wonderful curative
-qualities of desert air, if it was wholly trusted and lived in. On
-the shady side of the hut he erected a wide porch with palm-thatched
-roof that cut off the glare of the sky. With his own canvases, and
-others he found at the camp, he put up curtains that could be rolled
-up or let down as occasion required. Then he constructed two beds, one
-at each end of the porch, and instead of palm leaves he used thick
-layers of fragrant sage and greasewood. Mrs. Linwood, with the aid of
-Genie, managed to get out to her new quarters. Her pleasure at the
-change showed in her wan face. The porch was shady, cool, fragrant. She
-could look right out upon the clean, brown, beautiful streams where
-they met, and at the camp fire where Adam and Genie would be engaged,
-and at night she could see it blaze and glow, and burn down red. The
-low-branching cottonwoods were full of humming birds and singing birds,
-and always the innumerable bees. The clean white sand, the mesquites
-bursting into green, the nodding flowers in the grassy nooks under the
-great iron-rusted stones, the rugged, upheaved slope of mountain, and
-to the east an open vista between the trees where the desert stretched
-away gray and speckled and monotonous, down to the dim mountains over
-which the sun would rise; these could not but be pleasant and helpful.
-Love of life could not be separated from such things.
-
-“Mrs. Linwood, sleeping outdoors is the most wonderful experience,”
-said Adam, earnestly. “You feel the night wind. The darkness folds
-around you. You look up through the leaves to the dark-blue sky and
-shining stars. You smell the dry sand and the fresh water and the
-flowers and the spicy desert plants. Every breath you draw is new,
-untainted. Living outdoors, by day and night, is the secret of my
-strength.”
-
-“Alas! We always feared the chill night air,” sighed Mrs. Linwood.
-“Life teaches so many lessons--too late.”
-
-“It is never too late,” returned Adam.
-
-Then he set himself to further tasks, and soon that day was ended.
-Other days like it passed swiftly, and each one brought more hope
-of prolonging Mrs. Linwood’s life. Adam feared she could not live,
-yet he worked and hoped for a miracle. Mrs. Linwood improved in some
-mysterious way that seemed of spirit rather than of flesh. As day after
-day went by and Adam talked with her, an hour here, an hour there, she
-manifestly grew stronger. But was it not only in mind? The sadness
-of her changed. The unhappiness of her vanished. The tragic cast and
-pallor of her face remained the same, but the spirit that shone from
-her eyes and trembled in her voice was one of love, gratitude, hope.
-Adam came at length to understand that the improvement was only a
-result of the inception of faith she had in him. With terrible tenacity
-she had clung to life, even while starving herself to give food to
-her child; and now that succor had come, her spirit in its exaltation
-triumphed over her body. Happiness was more powerful than the ravages
-of disease. But if that condition, if that mastery of mind over body,
-had continued, it would have been superhuman. The day came at last in
-which Mrs. Linwood sank back into the natural and inevitable state
-where the fatality of life ordered the eminence of death.
-
-When she was convulsed with the spasms of coughing, which grew worse
-every day, Adam felt that if he could pray to the God she believed in,
-he would pray for her sufferings to be ended. He hated this mystery
-of disease, this cruelty of nature. It was one of the things that
-operated against his acceptance of her God. Why was life so cruel? Was
-life only nature? Nature was indeed cruel. But if life was conflict,
-if life was an endless progress toward unattainable perfection, toward
-greater heights of mind and soul, then was life God, and in eternal
-conflict with nature? How hopelessly and impotently he pondered these
-distressing questions! Pain he could endure himself, and he had
-divined that in enduring it he had enlarged his character. But to
-suffer as this poor woman was suffering--to be devoured by millions of
-infinitesimal and rapacious animals feasting on blood and tissue--how
-insupportably horrible! What man could endure that--what man of huge
-frame and physical might--of intense and pulsing life? Only a man in
-whom intellect was supreme, who could look upon life resignedly as not
-the ultimate end, who knew not the delights of sensation, who had no
-absorbing passion for the gray old desert or the heaving sea, or the
-windy heights and the long purple shadows, who never burned and beat
-with red blood running free--only a martyr living for the future, or a
-man steeped in religion, could endure this blight of consumption. When
-Adam considered life in nature, he could understand this disease. It
-was merely a matter of animals fighting to survive. Let the fittest
-win! That was how nature worked toward higher and stronger life. But
-when he tried to consider the God this stricken woman worshiped, Adam
-could not reconcile himself to her agony. Why? The eternal Why was
-flung at him. She was a good woman. She had lived a life of sacrifice.
-She had always been a Christian. Yet she was not spared this horrible
-torture. Why?
-
-What hurt Adam more than anything else was the terror in Genie’s mute
-lips and the anguish in her speaking eyes.
-
-One day, during an hour when Mrs. Linwood rested somewhat easily, she
-called Adam to her. It happened to be while Genie was absent, listening
-to the bees or watching the flow of water.
-
-“Will you stay here--take care of Genie--until her uncle comes back?”
-queried the woman, with her low, panting breaths.
-
-“I promised you. But I think you should not want me to keep her here
-too long,” replied Adam, earnestly. “Suppose he does not come back in a
-year or two?”
-
-“Ah! I hadn’t thought of that. What, then, is your idea?”
-
-“Well, I’d wait here a good long time,” said Adam, soberly. “Then if
-Genie’s uncle didn’t come, I’d find a home for her.”
-
-“A home--for Genie!... Wansfell, have you considered? That would take
-money--to travel--to buy Genie--what she ought to--have.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose so. That part need not worry you. I have money. I’ll
-look out for Genie. I’ll find a home for her.”
-
-“You’d do--all that?” whispered the woman.
-
-“I promise you. Now, Mrs. Linwood, please don’t distress yourself.
-It’ll be all right.”
-
-“It _is_ all right. I’m not--in distress,” she replied, with something
-tremulous and new in her voice. “Oh, thank God--my faith--never failed!”
-
-Adam was not sure what she meant by this, but as he revolved it in
-his mind, hearing again the strange ring of joy which had been in her
-voice, he began to feel that somehow he represented a fulfillment and a
-reward to her.
-
-“Wansfell--listen,” she whispered, with more force. “I--I should have
-told you.... Genie is not poor. No!... She’s rich!... Her father
-found gold--over in the mountains.... He slaved at digging.... That
-killed him. But he found gold. It’s hidden inside the hut--under the
-floor--where I used to lie.... Bags of gold! Wansfell, my child will be
-rich!”
-
-“Well!... Oh, but I’m glad!” exclaimed Adam.
-
-“Yes. It sustains me.... But I’ve worried so.... My husband expected
-me--to take Genie out of the desert.... I’ve worried about that money.
-Genie’s uncle--John Shaver is his name--he’s a good man. He loved
-her. He used to drink--but I hope the desert cured him of that. I
-think--he’ll be a father to Genie.”
-
-“Does he know about the gold that will be Genie’s?”
-
-“No. We never told him. My husband didn’t trust John--in money
-matters.... Wansfell, if you’ll say you’ll go with Genie--when her
-uncle comes--and invest the money--until she’s of age--I will have no
-other prayer except for her happiness.... I will die in peace.”
-
-“I promise. I’ll do my best,” he declared.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next time she spoke to him was that evening at dusk. Frogs were
-trilling, and a belated mocking bird was singing low, full-throated
-melodies. Yet these beautiful sounds only accentuated the solemn desert
-stillness.
-
-“Wansfell--you remember--once we talked of God,” she said, very low.
-
-“Yes, I remember,” replied Adam.
-
-“Are you just where you were--then?”
-
-“About the same, I guess.”
-
-“Are you sure you understand yourself?”
-
-“Sure? Oh no. I change every day.”
-
-“Wansfell, what do you call the thing in you--the will to tarry here?
-The manhood that I trusted?... The forgetfulness of self?... What do
-you call this strength of yours that fulfilled my faith--that gave
-me to God utterly--that enables me to die happy--that will be the
-salvation of my child?”
-
-“Manhood? Strength?” echoed Adam, in troubled perplexity. “I’m just
-sorry for you--for the little girl.”
-
-“Ah yes, sorry! Indeed you are! But you don’t know yourself....
-Wansfell, there was a presence beside my bed--just a moment before I
-called you. Something neither light nor shadow in substance--something
-neither life nor death.... It is gone now. But when I am dead it will
-come to you. _I_ will come to you--like that.... Somewhere out in the
-solitude and loneliness of your desert--at night when it is dark and
-still--and the heavens look down--there you will face your soul....
-You’ll see the divine in man.... You’ll realize that the individual
-dies, but the race lives.... You’ll have thundered at you from the
-silence, the vast, lonely land you love, from the stars and the
-infinite beyond--that your soul is immortal.... That this _Thing_ in
-you is God!”
-
-When the voice ceased, so vibrant and full at the close, so more than
-physical, Adam bowed his head and plodded over the soft sand out to the
-open desert where mustering shadows inclosed him, and he toiled to and
-fro in the silence--a man bent under the Atlantean doubt and agony and
-mystery of the world.
-
-The next day Genie’s mother died.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long before sunrise of a later day Adam climbed to the first
-bulge of the mountain wall. On lofty heights his mind worked more
-slowly--sometimes not at all. The eye of an eagle sufficed him. Down
-below, on the level, during these last few days, while Genie sat mute,
-rigid, stricken, Adam had been distracted. The greatest problem of his
-desert experience confronted him. Always a greater problem--always
-a greater ordeal--that was his history of the years. Perhaps on the
-heights might come inspiration. The eastern sky was rosy. The desert
-glowed soft and gray and beautiful. Gray lanes wound immeasurably
-among bronze and green spots, like islands in a monotonous sea. The
-long range of the Bernardinos was veiled in the rare lilac haze of the
-dawn, and the opposite range speared the deep blue of sky with clear
-black-fringed and snowy peaks. Far down the vast valley, over the dim
-ridge of the Chocolates, there concentrated a bright rose and yellow
-and silver. This marvelous light intensified, while below the wondrous
-shadows deepened. Then the sun rose like liquid silver, bursting to
-flood the desert world.
-
-The sunrise solved Adam’s problem. His kindness, his pity, his patience
-and unswerving interest, his argument and reason and entreaty, had all
-failed to stir Genie out of her mute misery. Nothing spiritual could
-save her. But Genie had another mother--nature--to whom Adam meant to
-appeal as a last hope.
-
-He descended the slope to the oasis. There, near a new-made grave that
-ran parallel with an old one, mossy and gray, sat Genie, clamped in her
-wretchedness.
-
-“Genie,” he called, sharply, intending to startle her. He did startle
-her. “I’m getting sick. I don’t have exercise enough. I used to walk
-miles every day. I must begin again.”
-
-“Then go,” she replied.
-
-“But I can’t leave you alone here,” he protested. “Some other bad men
-might come. I’m sorry. You _must_ come with me.”
-
-At least she was obedient. Heavily she rose, ready to accompany him, a
-thin shadow of a girl, hallowed eyed and wan, failing every hour. Adam
-offered his hand at the stream to help her across. But for that she
-would have fallen. She left her hand in his. And they set out upon the
-strangest walk Adam had ever undertaken. It was not long, and before it
-ended he had to drag her, and finally carry her. That evening she was
-so exhausted she could not repel the food he gave her, and afterward
-she soon fell asleep.
-
-Next day he took her out again, and thereafter every morning and every
-afternoon, relentless in his determination, though his cruelty wrung
-his heart. Gentle and kind as he was, he yet saw that she fell into
-the stream, that she pricked her bare feet on cactus, that she grew
-frightened on the steep slopes, that she walked farther and harder
-every day. Nature was as relentless as Adam. Soon Genie’s insensibility
-to pain and hunger was as if it had never been. Whenever she pricked or
-bruised the poor little feet Adam always claimed it an accident; and
-whenever her starved little body cried out in hunger he fed her. Thus
-by action, and the forcing of her senses, which were involuntary, he
-turned her mind from her black despair. This took days and weeks. Many
-and many a time Adam’s heart misgave him, but just as often something
-else in him remained implacable. He had seen the training of Indian
-children. He knew how the mother fox always threw from her litter the
-black cub that was repugnant to her. The poor little black offspring
-was an outcast. He was soon weaned, and kicked out of the nest to
-die or survive. But if he did survive the cruel, harsh bitterness
-of strife and heat and thirst and starvation--his contact with his
-environment--he would grow superior to all the carefully mothered and
-nourished cubs. Adam expected this singular law of nature, as regarded
-action and contact and suffering, to be Genie’s salvation, provided it
-did not kill her; and if she had to die he considered it better for her
-to die of travail, of effort beyond her strength, than of a miserable
-pining away.
-
-One morning, as he finished his camp tasks, he missed her. Upon
-searching, he found her flat on the grassy bank of the stream, face
-downward, with her thin brown feet in the air. He wondered what she
-could be doing, and his heart sank, for she had often said it would be
-so easy and sweet to lie down and sleep in the water.
-
-“Genie, child, what are you doing?” he asked.
-
-“Look! the bees--the honey bees! They’re washing themselves in the
-water. First I thought they were drinking. But no!... They’re washing.
-It’s so funny.”
-
-When she looked up, Adam thrilled at sight of her eyes. If they had
-always been beautiful in shape and color, what were they now, with
-youth returned, and a light of the birth of wonder and joy in life?
-Youth had won over tragedy. Nature hid deep at the heart of all
-creation. The moment also had a birth for Adam--an exquisite birth of
-the first really happy moment of his long desert years.
-
-“Let me see,” he said, and he lowered his ponderous length and
-stretched it beside her on the grassy bank. “Genie, you’re right about
-the bees being funny, but wrong about what they’re doing. They are
-diluting their honey. Well, I’m not sure, but I think bees on the
-desert dilute their honey with water. Watch!... Maybe they drink at
-the same time. But you see--some of them have their heads turned away
-from the water, as if they meant to back down.... Bees are hard to
-understand.”
-
-“By the great horn spoon!” ejaculated Genie, and then she laughed.
-
-Adam echoed her laugh. He could have shouted or sung to the skies.
-Never before, indeed, had he heard Genie use such an expression, but
-the content of it was precious to him. It revealed hitherto unsuspected
-depths in her, as the interest in bees hinted of an undeveloped love of
-nature.
-
-“Genie, do you care about bees, birds, flowers--what they do--how they
-live and grow?”
-
-“Love them,” she answered, simply.
-
-“You do! Ah, that’s fine! So do I. Why, Genie, I’ve lived so long on
-the desert, so many years! What would I have done without love of
-everything that flies and crawls and grows?”
-
-“You’re not old,” she said.
-
-“It’s good you think that. We’ll be great pards now.... Look, Genie!
-Look at that humming bird! There, he darts over the water. Well! What’s
-he doing?”
-
-Adam’s quick ear had caught the metallic hum of tiny, swift wings. Then
-he had seen a humming bird poised over the water. As he called Genie’s
-attention it hummed away. Then, swift as a glancing ray, it returned.
-Adam could see the blur of its almost invisible wings. As it quivered
-there, golden throat shining like live fire, with bronze and green
-and amber tints so vivid in the sunlight, it surely was worthy reason
-for a worship of nature. Not only had it beauty, but it had singular
-action. It poised, then darted down, swift as light, to disturb the
-smooth water, either with piercing bill or flying wings. Time and again
-the tiny bird performed this antic. Was the diminutive-winged creature
-playing, or drinking, or performing gyrations for the edification of
-a female of his species, hidden somewhere in the overhanging foliage?
-Adam knew that some courting male birds cooed, paraded, strutted,
-fought before the females they hoped to make consorts. Why not a
-humming bird?
-
-“By your great horn spoon, Genie!” exclaimed Adam. “I wonder if that’s
-the way he drinks.”
-
-But all that Adam could be sure of was the beautiful opal body of
-the tiny bird, the marvelous poise as it hung suspended in air, the
-incredibly swift darts up and down, and the little widening, circling
-ripples on the water. No, there was more Adam could be sure of, and
-Genie’s delight proved the truth of it--and that was how sure the
-harvest of thought, how sure the joy of life which was the reward for
-watching!
-
- * * * * *
-
-One morning when Adam arose to greet the sunrise he looked through the
-gap between the trees, and low down along the desert floor he saw a
-burst of yellow. At first he imagined it to be a freak of sunlight or
-reflection, but he soon decided that it was a _palo verde_ in blossom.
-Beautiful, vivid, yellow gold, a fresh hue of the desert spring. May
-had come. Adam had forgotten the flight of time. What bittersweet
-stinging memory had that flushing _palo verde_ brought back to him! He
-had returned to the desert land he loved best, and which haunted him.
-
-Genie responded slowly to the Spartan training. She had been frail,
-at best, and when grief clamped her soul and body she had sunk to the
-verge. The effort she was driven to, and the exertion needful, wore her
-down until she appeared merely skin and bones. Then came the dividing
-line between waste and repair. She began to mend. Little by little her
-appetite improved until at last hunger seized upon her. From that time
-she grew like a weed. Thus the forced use of bone and muscle drove her
-blood as Adam had driven her, and the result was a natural functioning
-of physical life. Hard upon that change, and equally as natural, came
-the quickening of her mind. Healthy pulsing blood did not harbor morbid
-grief. Action was constructive; grief was destructive.
-
-Adam, giving himself wholly to this task of rehabilitation, added to
-his relentless developing of Genie’s body a thoughtful and interesting
-appeal to her mind. At once he made two discoveries--first, that Genie
-would give herself absorbingly to any story whatsoever, and secondly,
-that his mind seemed to be a full treasure house from which to draw. He
-who had spoken with so few men and women on the desert now was inspired
-by a child.
-
-He told Genie the beautiful Indian legend of Taquitch as it had been
-told to him by Oella, the Coahuila maiden who had taught him her
-language.
-
-When he finished Genie cried out: “Oh, I know. Taquitch is up on the
-mountain yet! In summer he hurls the lightning and thunder. In winter
-he lets loose the storm winds. And always, by day and night, he rolls
-the rocks.”
-
-“Yes, Genie, he’s there,” replied Adam.
-
-“Why did he steal the Indian maidens?” she asked, wonderingly.
-
-Genie evolved a question now and then that Adam found difficult to
-answer. She had the simplicity of an Indian, and the inevitableness,
-and a like ignorance of the so-called civilization of the white people.
-
-“Well, I suppose Taquitch fell in love with the Indian maidens,”
-replied Adam, slowly.
-
-“Fell in love. What’s that?”
-
-“Didn’t your mother ever tell you why she married your father?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Why do you think she married him?”
-
-“I suppose they wanted to be together--to work--and go places, like
-they came West when they were sick. To help each other.”
-
-“Exactly. Well, Genie, they wanted to be together because they loved
-each other. They married because they fell in love with each other.
-Didn’t you ever have Indians camp here, and learn from them?”
-
-“Oh yes, different tribes have been here. But I didn’t see any Indians
-falling in love. If a chief wanted a wife he took any maiden or squaw
-he wanted. Some chiefs had lots of wives. And if a brave wanted a wife
-he bought her.”
-
-“Not much falling in love there,” confessed Adam, with a laugh. “But,
-Genie, you mustn’t think Indians can’t love each other. For they can.”
-
-“I believe I’ve seen birds falling in love,” went on Genie, seriously.
-“I’ve watched them when they come to drink and wash. Quail and road
-runners, now--they often come in pairs, and they act funny. At least
-one of each pair acted funny. But it was the pretty one--the one with a
-topknot--that did all the falling in love. Why?”
-
-“Well, Genie, the male, or the man-bird, so to speak, always has
-brighter colors and crests and the like, and he--he sort of shines up
-to the other, the female, and shows off before her.”
-
-“Why doesn’t she do the same thing?” queried Genie. “That’s not fair.
-It’s all one-sided.”
-
-“Child, how you talk! Of course love isn’t one-sided,” declared Adam,
-getting bewildered.
-
-“Yes, it is. She ought to show off before him. But I’ll tell you
-what--after they began to build a nest I never saw any more falling
-in love. It’s a shame. It ought to last always. I’ve heard mother say
-things to father I couldn’t understand. But now I believe she meant
-that after he got her--married her--he wasn’t like he was before.”
-
-Adam had to laugh. The old discontent of life, the old mystery of the
-sexes, the old still, sad music of humanity spoken by the innocent and
-unknowing lips of this child! How feminine! The walls of the inclosing
-desert, like those of an immense cloister, might hide a woman all her
-days from the illuminating world, but they could never change her
-nature.
-
-“Genie, I must be honest with you,” replied Adam. “I’ve got to be
-parents, brother, sister, friend, everybody to you. And I’ll fall
-short sometimes in spite of my intentions. But I’ll be honest....
-And the fact is, it seems to be a sad truth that men and man-birds,
-and man-creatures generally, are all very much alike. If they want
-anything, they want it badly. And when they fall in love they do act
-funny. They will do anything. They show off, beg, bully, quarrel, are
-as nice and sweet as--as sugar; and they’ll fight, too, until they
-get their particular wives. Then they become natural--like they were
-before. It’s my idea, Genie, that all the wives of creation should
-demand always the same deportment which won their love. Don’t you agree
-with me?”
-
-“I do, you bet. That’s what _I’ll_ have.... But will _I_ ever be
-falling in love?”
-
-The eyes that looked into Adam’s then were to him as the wonder of the
-world.
-
-“Of course you will. Some day, when you grow up.”
-
-“With you?” she asked, in dreamy speculation.
-
-“Oh, Genie! Not me. Why--I--I’m too old!” he ejaculated. “I’m old
-enough to be your daddy.”
-
-“You’re not old,” she replied, with a finality that admitted of no
-question. “But if you were--and still like you are--what difference
-would it make?”
-
-“Like I am! Well, Genie, how’s that?” he queried, curiously.
-
-“Oh, so big and strong! You can do so much with those hands. And your
-voice sort of--of quiets something inside me. When I lie down to sleep,
-knowing you’re there under the cottonwood, I’m not afraid of the
-dark.... And your eyes are just like an eagle’s. Oh, you needn’t laugh!
-I’ve seen eagles. An Indian here once had two. I used to love to watch
-them look. But then their eyes were never kind like yours.... I think
-when I get big I’ll go falling in love with you.”
-
-“Well, little girl, that’s a long way off,” said Adam, divided between
-humor and pathos. “But let’s get back to natural history. A while ago
-you mentioned a bird called a road runner. That’s not as well-known a
-name among desert men as chaparral cock. You know out in the desert
-there are no roads. This name road runner comes from a habit--and it’s
-a friendly habit--of the bird running along the road ahead of a man or
-wagon. Now the road runner is the most wonderful bird of the desert.
-That is saying a great deal. Genie, tell me all you know about him.”
-
-“Oh, I know all about him,” declared Genie, brightly. “There’s one
-lives in the mesquite there. I see him every day, lots of times. Before
-you came he was very tame. I guess now he’s afraid. But not so afraid
-as he was.... Well, he’s a long bird, with several very long feathers
-for a tail. It’s a funny tail, for when he walks he bobs it up and
-down. His color is speckled--gray and brown and white. I’ve seen dots
-of purple on him, too. He has a topknot that he can put up and lay
-down, as he has a mind to. When it’s up it shows some gold color,
-almost red underneath. And when it’s up he’s mad. He snaps his big
-bill like--like--oh, I don’t know what like, but it makes you shiver.
-I’ve never seen him in the water, but I know he goes in, because he
-shakes out his feathers, picks himself, and sits in the sun. He can
-fly, only he doesn’t fly much. But, oh, how he can run! Like a streak!
-I see him chase lizards across the sand. You know how a lizard can run!
-Well, no lizard ever gets away from a road runner. There’s a race--a
-fierce little tussle in the sand--a snap! snap!--and then old killer
-road runner walks proudly back, carrying the lizard in his bill. If it
-wasn’t for the way he kills and struts I could love him. For he was
-very tame. He used to come right up to me. But I never cared for him as
-I do for other birds.”
-
-“Genie, you’ve watched a road runner, all right. I didn’t imagine you
-knew so much. Yes, he’s a killer, a murderer. But no worse than other
-desert birds. They all kill. They’re all fierce. And if they weren’t
-they’d die.... Now I want to tell you the most wonderful thing a road
-runner does. He’ll fight and kill and eat a rattlesnake!”
-
-“No! Honest Injun?” cried Genie.
-
-“Yes. I’ve watched many a battle between a road runner and a
-rattlesnake, and nearly all of those battles were won by the birds.
-But _that_ is not the most wonderful thing a road runner does. I’ll
-tell you. I’ve never seen this thing myself, but a friend of mine, an
-old prospector named Dismukes, swears it’s true. He knows more about
-the desert than any man I ever met, and he wouldn’t tell a lie. Well,
-here’s what it is. He says he saw a road runner come upon a sleeping
-rattlesnake. But he didn’t pounce upon the snake. It happened to be
-that the snake slept on the sand near some bushes of _cholla_ cactus.
-You know how the dead cones fall off and lie around. This wonderful
-bird dragged these loose pieces of cactus and laid them close together
-in a circle, all around the rattlesnake. Built a fence around him!
-Penned him in! Now I can vouch for how a rattlesnake hates cactus....
-Then the fierce bird flew up and pounced down upon the snake. Woke him
-up! The rattlesnake tried to slip away, but everywhere he turned was a
-cactus which stuck into him, and over him the darting, picking bird. So
-round and round he went, striking as best he could. But he was unable
-to hit the bird, and every pounce upon him drew the blood. You’ve heard
-the snap of that big long beak. Well, the rattlesnake grew desperate
-and began to bite himself. And what with his own bites and those of his
-enemy he was soon dead.... And then the beautiful, graceful, speckled
-bird proceeded to tear and devour him.”
-
-“I’ll bet it’s true!” ejaculated Genie. “A road runner could and would
-do just that.”
-
-“Very likely. It’s strange, and perhaps true. Indeed, the desert is the
-place for things impossible anywhere else.”
-
-“Why do birds and beasts kill and eat each other?” asked Genie.
-
-“It is nature, Genie.”
-
-“Nature could have done better. Why don’t people eat each other? They
-do _kill_ each other. And they eat animals. But isn’t that all?”
-
-“Genie, some kinds of people--cannibals in the South Seas--and
-savages--do kill and eat men. It is horrible to believe. Dismukes told
-me that he came upon a tribe of Indians on the west coast of Sonora
-in Mexico. That’s not more than four hundred miles from here. He went
-down there prospecting for gold. He thought these savages--the Seri
-Indians, they’re called--were descended from cannibals and sometimes
-ate man flesh themselves. No one knows but that they do it often.
-I’ve met prospectors and travelers who scouted the idea of the Seris
-being cannibals. But I’ve heard some bad stories about them. Dismukes
-absolutely believed that in a poor season for meat, if chance offered,
-they would kill and eat a white man. Prospectors have gone into that
-country never to return.”
-
-“Ughh! I’ve near starved, but I’d never get that hungry. I’d die.
-Wouldn’t you?”
-
-“Indeed I would, child.”
-
-And so, during the leisure hours, that grew more and longer as the
-hot summer season advanced, Adam led Genie nearer to nature, always
-striving with his observations to teach the truth, however stern, and
-to instruct and stimulate her growing mind. All was not music of birds
-and perfume of flowers and serene summer content at the rosy dawns and
-the golden sunsets. The desert life was at work. How hard to reconcile
-the killing with the living! But when Adam espied an eagle swooping
-down from the mountain heights, its wings bowed, and its dark body
-shooting so wondrously, then he spoke of the freedom of the lonely king
-of birds, and the grace of his flight, and the noble spirit of his life.
-
-Likewise when Adam heard the honk of wild geese he made haste to have
-Genie see them winging wide and triangular flight across the blue sky,
-to the north. He told her how they lived all the winter in the warm
-south, and when spring came a wonderful instinct bade them rise and fly
-far northward, to the reedy banks of some lonely lake, and there gobble
-and honk and feed and raise their young.
-
-On another day, and this was in drowsy June when all the air seemed
-still, he was roused from his siesta by cries of delight from Genie.
-She knelt before him on the sand, and in one hand she held a beautiful
-horned toad, and the other hand she stretched out to Adam.
-
-“Look! Oh, look!” she cried, ecstatically, and her eyes then rivaled
-the jeweled eyes of the desert reptile. Some dark-red drops of bright
-liquid showed against the brown of Genie’s hand. “There! It’s blood! I
-picked him up as I had all the others, so many hundreds of times. Only
-this time I felt something warm and wet. I looked at my hand. There! He
-had squirted the drops of blood! And, oh, I was quick to look at his
-eyes! One was still wet, bloody. I know he squirted the drops of blood
-from his eyes!”
-
-Thus Adam had confirmed for him one of the mysteries of the desert.
-Dismukes had been the first to tell Adam about the strange habit of
-horned toads ejecting blood from their eyes. One other desert man, at
-least, had corroborated Dismukes. But Adam, who had seldom passed a
-horned toad without picking it up to gaze at the wondrous coloration,
-and to see it swell and puff, had never come upon the peculiar
-phenomenon. And horned toads on his trails had been many. To interest
-Genie, he built her a corral of flat stones in the sand, and he
-scoured the surrounding desert for horned toads. What a miscellaneous
-collection he gathered! They all had the same general scalloped
-outlines and tiny horns, but the color and design seemed to partake of
-the physical characteristics of the spot where each was found. If they
-squatted in the sand and lay still, it was almost impossible to see
-them, so remarkable was their protective coloration. Adam turned the
-assortment over to Genie with instruction to feed them, and play with
-them, and tease them in the hope that one might sometime eject drops of
-blood from his eyes. When it actually happened, Genie’s patience was
-rewarded.
-
-Adam’s theory that the reward of the faithful desert watcher would
-always come was exemplified in more than one way. Genie had never
-seen or heard of a tarantula wasp. She had noticed big and little
-tarantulas, but of the fierce, winged, dragon-fly hawk of the
-desert--the tarantula wasp--she had no knowledge. Adam, therefore, had
-always kept a keen lookout for one.
-
-They were up in the canyon on a hot June day, resting in the shade of
-the rustling palms. A stream babbled and splashed over the stones,
-and that was the only sound to break the dreaming silence of the
-canyon. All at once Adam heard a low whir like the hum of tiny wings.
-As he turned his head the sound became a buzz. Then he espied a huge
-tarantula wasp. Quickly he called to Genie, and they watched. It flew
-around and around about a foot from the ground, a fierce-looking, yet
-beautiful creature, with yellow body and blue gauzy wings. It was fully
-two inches and more long.
-
-“He sees a tarantula. Now watch!” whispered Adam.
-
-Suddenly the wasp darted down to the edge of a low bush, into some
-coarse grass that grew there. Instantly came a fierce whiz of wings,
-like the buzz of a captured bumblebee, only much louder and more
-vibrant. Adam saw the blades of grass tumble. A struggle to the death
-was going on there. Adam crawled over a few yards, drawing Genie with
-him; and they saw the finish of a terrific battle between the wasp and
-a big hairy tarantula.
-
-“There! It’s over, and the tarantula is dead,” said Adam. “Genie, I
-used to watch this kind of a desert fight, and not think much more
-about it. But one day I made a discovery. I had a camp over here, and
-I watched a tarantula wasp kill a tarantula. I didn’t know it then,
-but this wasp was a female, ready to lay her eggs. Well, she rolled
-the big spider around until she found a place that suited her. Then
-she dug a hole, rolled him into it, covered him over, and flew away. I
-wondered then why she did that. I went away from that camp, and after a
-while I came back. Then one day I remembered about the wasp burying the
-tarantula. And so, just for fun and curiosity, I found the grave--it
-was near the end of a stone--and I opened it up. What do you think I
-discovered?”
-
-“Tell me!” exclaimed Genie, breathlessly.
-
-“I found the tarantula almost eaten up by a lot of tiny wasps, as
-much like worms as wasps! Then I understood. That tarantula wasp had
-killed the tarantula, laid her eggs inside his body, tumbled him into
-his grave, and covered him over. By and by those eggs hatched, and the
-little wasps ate the tarantula--lived and grew, and after a while came
-out full-fledged tarantula wasps like their mother.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Time passed. The days slipped by to make weeks, and weeks merged into
-months. Summer with its hot midday hours, when man and beast rested or
-slept, seemed to shorten its season by half. No human creature ever
-entered a desert oasis without joy, nor left it without regret. As
-time went fleeting by Adam now and then remembered Dismukes, and these
-memories were full of both gladness and pathos. He tried to visualize
-the old prospector in the new role of traveler, absorber of life,
-spendthrift, and idler. Nevertheless, Adam could never be sure in his
-heart that Dismukes would find what he sought.
-
-But for the most part of the still, hot, waking hours, Adam, when he
-was not working or sleeping, devoted himself to Genie. The girl changed
-every day--how, he was unable to tell. Most wondrous of all in nature
-was human life, and beyond all sublimity was the human soul!
-
-Every morning at sunrise Genie knelt by her mother’s grave with bowed
-head and clasped hands, and every evening at sunset or in the golden
-dusk of twilight she again knelt in prayer.
-
-“Genie, why do you kneel there--now?” asked Adam once, unable to
-contain his curiosity. “You did not use to do it. Only the last few
-weeks or month.”
-
-“I forgot I’d promised mother,” she replied. “Besides, could I pray
-when I wanted to die?”
-
-“No, I suppose not. It would be hard,” replied Adam, gravely. “Please
-don’t think me curious. Tell me, Genie, what do you pray for?”
-
-“I used to pray, ‘Now I lay me down to sleep,’ as mother taught me
-when I was little. But now I make up my own prayers. I ask God to keep
-the souls of mother and father in heaven. I pray I may be good and
-happy, so when they look down and see me they will be glad. I pray for
-you, and then for every one in the world.”
-
-Slow, strong unrest, the endless moving of contending tides, heaved in
-Adam’s breast.
-
-“So you pray for me, Genie?... Well, it is good of you. I hope I’m
-worthy.... But, _why_ do you pray?”
-
-She pondered the question. Thought was developing in Genie. “Before
-mother died I prayed because she taught me. Since then--lately--it--it
-lifts me up--it takes away the sorrow here.” And she put a hand over
-her heart.
-
-“Genie, then you believe in God--the God who is supposed to answer your
-prayers?”
-
-“Yes. And he is not a god like Taquitch--or the beasts and rocks that
-the Indians worship. My God is all around me, in the sunshine, in the
-air, in the humming bees and whispering leaves and murmuring water. I
-feel him everywhere, and in me, too!”
-
-“Genie, tell me one prayer, just _one_ of yours or your mother’s that
-was truly answered,” appealed Adam, with earnest feeling.
-
-“We prayed for some one to come. I know mother prayed for some one to
-save me from being alone--from starving. And I prayed for some one to
-come and help her--to relieve her terrible dread about me.... And _you_
-came!”
-
-Adam was silenced. What had he to contend with here? Faith and fact
-were beyond question, as Genie represented them. What little he knew!
-He could not even believe that a divine guidance had been the spirit
-of his wandering steps. But he was changing. Always the future--always
-the unknown calling--always the presentiment of sterner struggle, of
-larger growth, of ultimate fulfillment! His illusion, his fetish, his
-phantasmagoria rivaled the eternal and inexplicable faith of his friend
-Dismukes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Andreas Canyon was far from the camp under the cottonwoods, but Adam
-and Genie, having once feasted their eyes upon its wildness and
-beauty and grandeur, went back again and again, so that presently the
-distance in the hot sun was no hindrance, and the wide area of white,
-glistening, terrible _cholla_ cactus was no obstacle.
-
-For that matter the cactus patch was endurable because of its singular
-beauty. Adam could not have told why _cholla_ fascinated him, and,
-though Genie admitted she liked to look at the frosty silver-lighted
-cones and always had an impulse to prick her fingers on the cruel
-thorns, she could not explain why.
-
-“Genie, the Yaqui Indians in Sonora love this _cholla_,” said Adam.
-“Love it as they hate Mexicans. They will strip a Mexican naked, tear
-the skin off the soles of his feet, and drive him through the _cholla_
-until he’s dead. It wouldn’t take long!... All prospectors hate
-_cholla_. I hate it, yet I--I guess I’m a little like the Yaquis. I
-often prick my finger on _cholla_ just to feel the sting, the burn, the
-throb. The only pain I could ever compare to that made by _cholla_ is
-the sting of the sharp horn of a little catfish back in Ohio. Oh! I’ll
-never forget that! A poison, burning sting!... But _cholla_ is terrible
-because the thorns stick in your flesh. When you jerk to free yourself
-the thorns leave the cones. Each thorn has an invisible barb and it
-works deeper and deeper into flesh.”
-
-“Don’t _I_ know!” exclaimed Genie, emphatically. “I’ve spent whole
-hours digging them out of my feet and legs. But how pretty the _cholla_
-shines! Only it doesn’t tell the truth, does it, Wanny?”
-
-“Child, please don’t call me Wanny. It’s so--so silly,” protested Adam.
-
-“It’s not. No sillier than your calling me child! I’m nearly fifteen.
-I’m growing right out of my clothes.”
-
-“Call me Adam.”
-
-“No, I don’t like that name. And I can’t call you mister or father or
-brother.”
-
-“But what’s wrong with Adam?”
-
-“I read in mother’s bible about Adam and Eve. I hated her when the
-devil got into her. And I didn’t like Adam. And I don’t like the _name_
-Adam. You’d never have been driven from heaven.”
-
-“I’m not so sure about that,” said Adam, ruefully. “Genie, I was wicked
-when I was a--a young man.”
-
-“You were! Well, I don’t care. _You’d_ never be tempted to disobey the
-Lord--not by Eve with all her stolen apples!”
-
-“All right, called me Wanny,” returned Adam, and he made haste to
-change the subject. There were times when Genie, with her simplicity,
-her directness, her curiosity, and her innocence, caused Adam extreme
-perplexity, not to say embarrassment. He remembered his own bringing
-up. It seemed every year his childhood days came back closer. And
-thrown as he was in constant companionship with this child of nature,
-he began to wonder if the sophisticated education of children,
-especially girls, as it had been in his youth, was as fine and simple
-and true to life as it might have been.
-
-Andreas Canyon yawned with wide mouth and huge yellow cliffs. Just
-beyond the mouth of the canyon and across the wide space from cliff
-to slope bloomed the most verdant and beautiful oasis of that desert
-region. Huge gray bowlders, clean and old, and russet with lichen, made
-barricade for a clear stream of green water, as if to protect it from
-blowing desert sand. Yet there were little beaches of white sand, lined
-by colored pebbles. Green rushes and flags grew in the water. Beyond
-the stream, on the side of the flat-rocked slope, lay a many-acred
-thicket of mesquite, impenetrable except for birds and beasts. The
-green of the leaves seemed dominated by bronze colors of the mistletoe.
-
-The oasis proper, however, was the grove of cottonwoods, sycamores,
-and palms. How bright green the foliage of cottonwoods--and smooth
-white the bark of sycamores! But verdant and cool as it was under
-their shade, Adam and Genie always sought the aloof and stately palms,
-wonderful trees not native there, planted years and years before by the
-Spanish padres.
-
-“Oh, I love it here!” exclaimed Genie. “Listen to the palms whisper!”
-
-They stood loftily, with spreading green fanlike leaves at the tops,
-and all the trunks swathed and bundled apparently in huge cases of
-straw. These yellow sheaths were no less than the leaves that had died.
-As the palms grew the new leaves kept bursting from the tufted tops,
-and those leaves lowest down died and turned yellow.
-
-“Genie, your uncle seems a long time coming back for you,” remarked
-Adam.
-
-“I hope he never comes,” she replied.
-
-Adam was surprised and somewhat disconcerted at her reply, and yet
-strangely pleased.
-
-“Why?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, I never liked him and I don’t want to go away with him.”
-
-“Your mother said he was a good man--that he loved you.”
-
-“Uncle Ed was good, and very kind to me. I--I ought to be ashamed,”
-replied Genie. “But he drank, and when he drank he kissed me--he put
-his hands on me. I hated that.”
-
-“Did you ever tell your mother?” inquired Adam.
-
-“Yes. I told her. I asked her why he did that. And she said not to
-mind--only to keep away from him when he drank.”
-
-“Genie, your uncle did wrong, and your mother did wrong not to tell you
-so,” declared Adam, earnestly.
-
-“Wrong? What do you mean--wrong? I only thought I didn’t like him.”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you some day.... But now, to go back to what you said
-about leaving--you know I’m going with you when your uncle comes.”
-
-“Wanny, do _you_ want that time to come soon?” she asked, wistfully.
-
-“Yes, of course, for your sake. You’re getting to be a big girl. You
-must go to school. You must get out to civilization.”
-
-“Oh! I’m crazy to go!” she burst out, covering her face. “Yet I’ve a
-feeling I’ll hate to leave here.... I’ve been so happy lately.”
-
-“Genie, it relieves me to hear you’re anxious to go. And it pleases me
-to know you’ve been happy lately. You see I’m only a--a man, you know.
-How little I could do for you! I’ve tried. I’ve done my best. But at
-that best I’m only a poor old homeless outcast--a desert wanderer!
-I’m----”
-
-“Hush up!” she cried, with quick, sweet warmth. Swiftly she enveloped
-him, hugged him close, and kissed his cheek. “Wanny, you’re grand!...
-You’re like Taquitch--you’re _my_ Taquitch with face like the sun! And
-I love you--love you as I never loved anyone except my mother! And I
-hope Uncle Ed never comes, so you’ll have to take care of me always.”
-
-Adam gently disengaged himself from Genie’s impulsive arms, yet,
-despite his embarrassment and confused sense of helplessness, he felt
-the better for her action. Natural, spontaneous, sincere, it warmed his
-heart. It proved more than all else what a child she was.
-
-“Genie, let me make sure you understand,” he said, gravely. “I love
-you, too, as if you were my little sister. And if your uncle doesn’t
-come I’ll take you somewhere--find you a home. But I never--much as I
-would like to--never can take care of you always.”
-
-“Why?” she flashed, with her terrible directness.
-
-Adam had begun his development of Genie by telling the truth; he had
-always abided by it; and now, in these awakening days for her, he must
-never veer from the truth.
-
-“If I tell you why--will you promise never to speak of it--so long as
-you live?” he asked, solemnly.
-
-“Never! I promise. Never, Wanny!”
-
-“Genie, I am an outcast. I am a hunted man. I can never go back to
-civilization and stay.”
-
-Then he told her the story of the ruin of his life. When he finished
-she fell weeping upon his shoulder and clung to him. For Adam the
-moment was sad and sweet--sad because a few words had opened up the
-dark, tragic gulf of his soul; and sweet because the passionate grief
-of a child assured him that even he, wanderer as he was, knew something
-of sympathy and love.
-
-“But, Wanny, you--could--go and--be--pun--ished--and then--come back!”
-she cried, between sobs. “You’d--never--have to--hide--any more.”
-
-Out of her innocence and simplicity she had spoken confounding truth.
-What a terrible truth! Those words of child wisdom sowed in Adam the
-seed of a terrible revolt. Revolt--yea, revolt against this horrible
-need to hide--this fear and dread of punishment that always and forever
-so bitterly mocked his manhood! If he could find the strength to rise
-to the heights of Genie’s wisdom--divine philosophy of a child!--he
-would no longer hate his shadowed wandering steps down the naked
-shingles and hidden trails of the lonely desert. But, alas! whence
-would come that strength? Not from the hills! Not from the nature that
-had made him so strong, so fierce, so sure to preserve his life! It
-could only come from the spirit that had stood in the dusky twilight
-beside a dying woman’s side. It could come only from the spirit to whom
-a child prayed while kneeling at her mother’s grave. And for Adam that
-spirit held aloof, illusive as the specters of the dead, beyond his
-grasp, an invisible medium, if indeed it was not a phantom, that seemed
-impossible of reality in the face of the fierce, ruthless, inevitable
-life and death and decay of the desert. Could God be nature--that
-thing, that terrible force, light, fire, water, pulse--that quickening
-of plant, flesh, stone, that dying of all only to renew--that endless
-purpose and progress, from the first whirling gas globe of the
-universe, throughout the ages down to the infinitesimal earth so fixed
-in its circling orbit, so pitiful in its present brief fertility? The
-answer was as unattainable as to pluck down the stars, as hopeless as
-to think of the fleeting of the years, as mysterious as the truth of
-where man came from and whence he was to go.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Snow on the gray old peak! It reminded Adam how, long ago, from far
-down the valley, he had watched the mountain crown itself in dazzling
-white. Snow on the heights meant winter that tempered the heat, let
-loose the storm winds; and therefore, down in the desert, comfort and
-swiftly flying days. Indeed, so swift were they that Adam, calling out
-sad and well-remembered words, “Oh, time, stand still here!” seemed
-to look at a few more golden sunsets and, lo! again it was spring.
-Time would not stand still! Nor would the budding, blossoming youth of
-Genie! Nor would the slow-mounting might of the tumult in Adam’s soul!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Then swifter than the past, another year flew by. Genie’s uncle did
-not come. And Adam began to doubt that he would ever come. And the
-hope of Genie’s, that he never would come began insidiously to enter
-into Adam’s thought. Again the loneliness, the solitude and silence,
-and something more he could not name, began to drag Adam from duty,
-from effort of mind. The desert never stopped its work, on plant, or
-rock, or man. Adam knew that he required another shock to quicken his
-brain, to stir again the spiritual need, to make him fight the subtle,
-all-pervading, ever-present influence of the desert.
-
-In all that time Adam saw but two white men, prospectors passing by
-down the sandy trails. Indians came that way but seldom. Across the
-valley there was an encampment, which he visited occasionally to buy
-baskets, skins, meat, and to send Indians out after supplies. The great
-problem was clothes for Genie. It was difficult to get materials,
-difficult for Genie to make dresses, and impossible to keep her from
-tearing or wearing or growing out of them. Adam found that Indian
-moccasins, and tough overalls such as prospectors wore, cut down to
-suit Genie, and woolen blouses she made herself, were the only things
-for her. Like a road runner she ran over the rocks and sand! For Genie,
-cactus was as if it were not! As for a hat, she would not wear one.
-Adam’s responsibility weighed upon him. When he asked Genie what in
-the world she would wear when he took her out of the desert, to pass
-through villages and ranches and towns, where people lived, she naïvely
-replied, “What I’ve got on!” And what she wore at the moment was, of
-course, the boyish garb that was all Adam could keep on her, and which
-happened just then to be minus the moccasins. Genie loved to scoop up
-the warm white sand with her bare brown feet, and then to dabble them
-in the running water.
-
-“Well, I give up!” exclaimed Adam, resignedly. “But when we do get to
-Riverside or San Diego, where there’s a store, you’ve _got_ to go with
-me to buy girl’s dresses and things--and you’ve _got_ to wear them.”
-
-“Oh, Wanny, that will be grand!” she cried, dazzled at the prospect.
-“But--let’s don’t go--just yet!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the early fall--what month it was Adam could not be sure--he crossed
-the arm of the valley to the encampment of the Coahuilas. The cool
-nights and tempering days had made him hungry for meat. He found the
-Indian hunters at home, and, in fact, they had just packed fresh sheep
-meat down from the mountain. They were of the same tribe as the old
-chief, Charley Jim, who had taught Adam so much of the desert during
-those early hard years over in the Chocolates. Adam always asked for
-news of Charley Jim, usually to be disappointed. He was a nomad, this
-old chieftain, and his family had his wandering spirit. Adam shouldered
-his load of fresh meat and took his way down out of the canyon where
-the encampment lay, to the well-beaten trail that zigzagged along the
-irregular base of the mountain.
-
-Adam rested at the dividing point of the trails. It was early in the
-day, clear and still. How gray and barren and monotonous the desert!
-All seemed dead. A strange, soft, creeping apathy came over Adam, not
-a dreaminess, for in his dreams he lived the past and invented the
-future, but a state wherein he watched, listened, smelled, and felt,
-all unconscious that he was doing anything. Whenever he fell into this
-trance and was roused out of it, or came out of it naturally, then
-he experienced a wonderful sense of vague content. That feeling was
-evanescent. Always he longed to get it back, but could not.
-
-In this instant his quick eye caught sight of something that was
-moving. A prospector with a brace of burros--common sight indeed it was
-to Adam, though not for the last few years.
-
-The man was coming from the south, but outside of the main trail, for
-which, no doubt, he was heading. Adam decided to wait and exchange
-greetings with him. After watching awhile Adam was constrained to
-mutter, “Well, if that fellow isn’t a great walker, my eyes are
-failing!” That interested him all the more. He watched burros and
-driver grow larger and clearer. Then they disappeared behind a long,
-low swell of sand fringed by sage and dotted by mesquite. They would
-reappear presently, coming out behind the ridge at a point near Adam.
-
-Some minutes later he saw that the burros and driver had not only
-cleared the end of the ridge, but were now within a hundred yards of
-where he sat. The burros were trotting, with packs bobbing up and down.
-Only the old slouch hat of the prospector showed above the packs.
-Manifestly he was a short man.
-
-“Say, but he’s a walker!” ejaculated Adam.
-
-Suddenly sight of that old slouch hat gave Adam a thrill. Then the
-man’s shoulders appeared. How enormously broad! Then, as the burros
-veered to one side, the driver’s whole stature was disclosed. What
-a stride he had, for a man so short! Almost he seemed as wide as he
-was long. His gait was rolling, ponderous. He wore old, gray, patched
-clothes that Adam wildly imagined he had seen somewhere.
-
-Suddenly he yelled at the burros: “Hehaw! Gedap!”
-
-That deep voice, those words, brought Adam leaping to his feet,
-transfixed and thrilling. Had he lost his mind? What trick of desert
-mirage or illusion! No--the burros were real--they kicked up the
-dust--rattled the pebbles in the sage; no--the man was real, however he
-seemed a ghost of Adam’s past.
-
-“_Dismukes!_” shouted Adam, hoarsely.
-
-The prospector halted his long, rolling stride and looked. Then Adam
-plunged over sand and through sage. He could not believe his eyes.
-He must get his hands on this man, to prove reality. In a trice the
-intervening space was covered. Then Adam, breathless and aghast, gazed
-into a face that he knew, yet which held what he did not know.
-
-“Howdy, Wansfell! Thought I’d meet you sooner or later,” said the man.
-
-His voice was unmistakable. He recognized Adam. Beyond any possibility
-of doubt--Dismukes! In the amaze and gladness of the moment Adam
-embraced this old savior and comrade and friend--embraced him as a
-long-lost brother or as a prodigal son. Then Adam released him, with
-sudden dawning consciousness that Dismukes seemed to have no feeling
-whatever about this meeting.
-
-“Dismukes! I had to grab you--just to feel if it was you. I’m knocked
-clean off my pins,” declared Adam, breathing hard.
-
-“Yes, it’s me, Wansfell,” replied Dismukes. His large, steady eyes,
-dark brown like those of an ox, held an exceeding and unutterable
-sadness.
-
-“Back on the desert? _You!_” exclaimed Adam. “Dismukes, then you lost
-your gold--bad luck--something happened--you never went to the great
-cities--to spend your fortune--to live and live?”
-
-“Yes, friend, I went,” replied Dismukes.
-
-A great awe fell upon Adam. His keen gaze, cleared of the mist of
-amaze, saw Dismukes truly. The ox eyes had the shadow of supreme
-tragedy. Their interest was far off, as if their sight had fixed on a
-dim, distant mountain range of the horizon. Yet they held peace. The
-broad face had thinned. Gone was the dark, healthy bronze! And the
-beard that had once been thick and grizzled was now scant and white.
-The whole face expressed resignation and peace. Those wonderful wide
-shoulders of Dismukes appeared just as wide, but they sagged, and the
-old, tremendous brawn was not there. Strangest of all, Dismukes wore
-the ragged gray prospector’s garb which had been on his person when
-Adam saw him last. There! the yellow stain of Death Valley clay--and
-darker stains--sight of which made Adam’s flesh creep!
-
-“Ah! So you went, after all,” replied Adam, haltingly. “Well! Well!...
-Let’s sit down, old comrade. Here on this stone. I confess my legs feel
-weak.... Never expected to see you again in this world!”
-
-“Wansfell, no man can ever tell. It’s folly to think an’ toil an’ hope
-for the future.”
-
-What strong, sad history of life revealed itself in that reply!
-
-“Ah!... I-- But never mind what I think. Dismukes, you’ve not been on
-the desert long.”
-
-“About a week. Outfitted at San Diego an’ came over the mountain trail
-through El Campo. Landed in Frisco two weeks an’ more ago. By ship from
-Japan.”
-
-“Did you have these old clothes hid away somewhere?” inquired Adam. “I
-remember them.”
-
-“No. I packed them wherever I went for the whole three years.”
-
-“Three years! Has it been that long?”
-
-“Aye, friend Wansfell, three years.”
-
-Adam gazed out across the desert with slowly dimming eyes. The
-wasteland stretched there, vast and illimitable, the same as all the
-innumerable times he had gazed. Solemn and gray and old, indifferent to
-man, yet strengthening through its passionless fidelity to its own task!
-
-“Dismukes, I want you to tell me where you went, what you did, why you
-came back,” said Adam, with earnestness that was entreaty.
-
-Dismukes heaved a long sigh. He wagged the huge, shaggy head that was
-now gray. But he showed no more indication of emotion. How stolid he
-seemed--how locked in his aloofness!
-
-“Yes, I’ll tell you,” he said. “Maybe it’ll save you somethin’ of what
-I went through.”
-
-Then he became lost in thought, perhaps calling upon memory, raking
-up the dead leaves of the past. Adam recalled that his own memory of
-Dismukes and the past brought note of the fact how the old prospector
-had loved to break his habit of silence, to talk about the desert, and
-to smoke his black pipe while he discoursed. But now speech did not
-easily flow and he did not smoke.
-
-“Lookin’ back, I seem to see myself as crazy,” began Dismukes. “You’ll
-remember how crazy. You’ll remember before we parted up there on the
-Mohave at that borax camp where the young man was--who couldn’t drive
-the mules.... Wansfell, from the minute I turned my back on you till
-now I’ve never thought of that. Did you drive the ornery mules?”
-
-“Did I?” Adam’s query was a grim assertion. “Every day for three
-months! You remember Old Butch, that gray devil of a mule. Well,
-Dismukes, the time came when _he_ knew me. If I even picked up the long
-bull whip Old Butch would scream and run to lay his head on me.”
-
-“An’ you saw the young driver through his trouble?”
-
-“That I did. And it was more trouble than he told us then. The boss
-Carricks had was low-down and cunning. He’d got smitten with the lad’s
-wife--a pretty girl, but frail in health. He kept Carricks on jobs
-away from home. We didn’t meet the lad any too soon.”
-
-“Humph! That’s got a familiar sound to me,” declared Dismukes.
-“Wansfell, what’d you do to thet low-down boss?”
-
-“Go on with _your_ story,” replied Adam.
-
-“Aha! That’s so. I want to make Two Palms Well before dark....
-Wansfell, like a horned-toad on the desert, I changed my outside at
-Frisco. Alas! I imagined all within--blood--mind--soul had changed!...
-Went to Denver, St. Louis, an’ looked at the sights, not much
-disappointed, because my time seemed far ahead. Then I went to my old
-home. There I had my first jar. Folks all dead! Not a relation livin’.
-Could not even find my mother’s grave. No one remembered me an’ I
-couldn’t find any one I ever knew. The village had grown to a town.
-My old home was gone. The picture of it--the little gray cottage--the
-vines an’ orchard--lived in my mind. I found the place. All gone! Three
-new houses there. Forty years is a long time! I didn’t build the church
-or set out a park for the village of my boyhood.... Then I went on to
-Chicago, Philadelphia, New York. Stayed long in New York. At first
-it fascinated me. I felt I wanted to see it out of curiosity. I was
-lookin’ for some place, somethin’ I expected. But I never saw it. The
-hotels, theaters, saloons, gamblin’ hells, an’ worse--the operas an’
-parks an’ churches--an’ the wonderful stores--I saw them all. Men an’
-women like ants rushin’ to an’ fro. No rest, no sleep, no quiet, no
-peace! I met people, a few good, but most bad. An’ in some hotels an’
-places I got to be well known. I got to have a name for throwin’ gold
-around. Men of business sought my acquaintance, took me to dinners,
-made much of me--all to get me to invest in their schemes. Women! Aw!
-the women were my second disappointment! Wansfell, women are like
-desert mirages. Beautiful women, in silks an’ satins, diamonds blazin’
-on bare necks an’ arms, made eyes at me, talked soft an’ sweet, an’
-flattered me an’ praised me an’ threw themselves at me--all because
-they thought I had stacks an’ rolls an’ bags of gold. Never a woman did
-I meet who liked _me_, who had any thought to hear my story, to learn
-my hope! Never a kind whisper! Never any keen eye that saw through my
-outside!
-
-“Well, I wasn’t seein’ an’ findin’ the life I’d hoped for. That New York
-is as near hell as I ever got. I saw men with quiet faces an’ women who
-seemed happy. But only in the passin’ crowds. I never got to meet any
-of them. They had their homes an’ troubles an’ happiness, I figured,
-an’ they were not lookin’ for anyone to fleece. It was my habit to get
-into a crowd an’ watch, for I come to believe the mass of busy, workin’
-ordinary people were good. Maybe if I’d somehow made acquaintance with
-a few of them it’d have been better. But that wasn’t seein’ life. I
-thought I knew what I wanted.
-
-“All my yearnin’s an’ dreams seemed to pall on me. Where was the
-joy? Wansfell, the only joy I had was in findin’ some poor beggar or
-bootblack or poor family, an’ givin’ them gold. The great city was full
-of them. An’ I gave away thousands of dollars. God knows _that_ was
-some good. An’ now I see if I could have stuck it out, livin’ among
-such people, I might have been of some use in the world. But, man!
-livin’ was not possible in New York. All night the hotels roared. All
-night the streets hummed an’ clanged. There was as many people rushin’
-around by night as by day, an’ different from each other, like bats
-an’ hawks. I got restless an’ half sick. I couldn’t sleep. I seemed
-suffocatin’ for fresh air. I wanted room to breathe. When I looked up
-at night I couldn’t see the stars. Think of that for a desert man!
-
-“At last I knew I couldn’t find what I wanted in New York, an’ I
-couldn’t hunt any longer there. I had to leave. My plans called for
-goin’ abroad. _Then_ came a strange feelin’ that I must have had all
-the time, but didn’t realize. The West called me back. I seemed to
-want the Middle West, where I’d planned to buy the green farm. But
-you know I’m a man who sticks to his mind, when it’s made up. There
-were London, Paris, Rome I’d dreamed about an’ had planned to see.
-Well, I had a hell of a fight with somethin’ in myself before I could
-get on that ship. Right off then I got seasick. Wansfell, the bite of
-a rattlesnake never made me half as sick as that dirty-gray, windy
-sea. The trip across was a nightmare.... London was a dreary place as
-big as the Mohave an’ full of queer fishy-eyed people whom I couldn’t
-understand. But I liked their slow, easy-goin’ ways. Then Paris....
-Wansfell, that Paris was a wonderful, glitterin’ beautiful city, an’
-if a city had been a place for me, Paris would have been it. But I was
-lost. I couldn’t speak French--couldn’t learn a word. My tongue refused
-to twist round their queer words. All the same, I saw what I’d set
-out to see.... Wansfell, if a man fights despair for the women of the
-world, he’ll get licked in Paris. An’ the reason is, there you see the
-same thing in the homely, good, an’ virtuous little wives as you see in
-those terrible, fascinatin’, dazzlin’ actresses. What that somethin’ is
-I couldn’t guess. But you like all Frenchwomen. They’re gay an’ happy
-an’ square. If I applied the truth of this desert to these Frenchwomen,
-I’d say the somethin’ so fascinatin’ in them is that the race is
-peterin’ out an’ the women are dyin’ game.
-
-“From Paris I went to Rome, an’ there a queer state of mind came to me.
-I could look at temples an’ old ruins without even seein’ them--with
-my mind on my own country. All this travel idea, seein’ an’ learnin’
-an’ doin’, changed so that it was hateful. I cut out Egypt, an’ I can’t
-remember much of India an’ Japan. But when I got on ship bound for
-Frisco I couldn’t see anythin’ for a different reason, an’ that was
-tears. I’d come far to find joy of life, an’ now I wept tears of joy
-because I was homeward bound. It was a great an’ splendid feelin’!
-
-“The Pacific isn’t like the Atlantic. It’s vast an’ smooth an’
-peaceful, with swells like the mile-long ridges of the desert. I didn’t
-get seasick. An’ on that voyage I got some rest. Maybe the sea is
-like the desert. Anyway, it calmed me, an’ I could think clear once
-more. As I walked the deck by day, or hung over the rail by night,
-my yearnin’s an’ dreams came back. When I reached Frisco I’d take
-train for the Middle West, an’ somewhere I’d buy the green ranch an’
-settle down to peace an’ quiet for the rest of my life. The hope was
-beautiful. I believed in it. That wild desire to search for the joy
-of life had to be buried. I had been wrong about that. It was only a
-dream--a boy’s dream, on the hope of which I had spent the manhood of
-my best years. Ah! it was bitter--bitter to realize that. I--who had
-never given in to defeat!... But I conquered my regret because I knew
-I had just mistaken what I wanted. An’ it was not wholly too late!...
-Wansfell, you’ve no idea of the size of the old earth. I’ve been round
-it. An’ that Pacific! Oh, what an endless ocean of waters! It seemed
-eternal, like the sky. But--at last--I got to--Frisco.”
-
-Here Dismukes choked and broke down. The deep, rolling voice lost its
-strength for a moment. He drew a long, long breath that it hurt Adam to
-hear.
-
-“Wansfell, when my feet once more touched land it was as though I’d
-really found happiness,” presently went on Dismukes, clearing his
-throat of huskiness. “I was in the clouds. I could have kissed the
-very dirt. My own, my native land!... Now for the last leg of the
-journey--an’ the little farm--the home to be--friends to make--perhaps
-a sweet-faced woman an’ a child! Oh, it was as glorious as my lost
-dreams!
-
-“But suddenly somethin’ strange an’ terrible seized hold of me. A hand
-as strong as the wind gripped my heart.... _The desert called me!_...
-Day an’ night I walked the streets. Fierce as the desert itself I
-fought. Oh, I fought my last an’ hardest fight!... On one hand was
-the dream of my life--the hope of a home an’ happiness--what I had
-slaved for. Forty years of toil! On the other hand the call of the
-desert! Loneliness, solitude, silence, the white, hot days, the starlit
-nights, the vast open desert, free and peaceful, the gray wastes, the
-colored mountains, sunrise and sunset. Ah! The desert was my only
-home. I belonged to the silence an’ desolation. Forty years a wanderer
-on the desert, blindly seekin’ for gold! But, oh, it was not gold I
-wanted! Not gold! Nor fortune! That was my dream, my boyish dream. Gold
-did not nail me to the desert sands. That was only my idea. That was
-what brought me into the wastelands. I misunderstood the lure of the
-desert. I thought it was gold, but, no! For me the desert existed as
-the burrow for the fox. For me the desert linked my strange content to
-the past ages. For me the soul of the desert was my soul.... _I had to
-go back!_... I could live nowhere else.... Forty years! My youth--my
-manhood!... I’m old now--old! My dreams are done.... Oh, my God!... I
-HAD TO COME BACK!”
-
-Adam sat confounded in grief, in shock. His lips were mute. Like
-a statue he gazed across the wasteland, so terribly magnified, so
-terribly illumined by the old prospector’s revelation. How awful the
-gigantic red rock barriers! How awful the lonely, limitless expanse of
-sand! The eternal gray, the eternal monotony!
-
-“Comrade, take the story of my life to heart,” added Dismukes. “You’re
-a young man still. Think of my forty years of hell, that now has made
-me a part of the desert. Think of how I set out upon my journey so
-full of wild, sweet hope! Think of my wonderful journey, through the
-glitterin’ cities, round the world, only to find my hope a delusion!...
-A desert mirage!”
-
-“Man, I cannot think!” burst out Adam. “I am stunned.... Oh, the
-pity of it--the sickening, pitiless fatality! Oh, my heart breaks
-for you!... Dismukes, of what use is hope? Oh, why do we fight?
-Where--where does joy abide for such as you and me?”
-
-The great, rolling ox eyes gleamed upon Adam, strong with the soul of
-peace, of victory in their depths.
-
-“Wansfell, joy an’ happiness, whatever makes life worth livin’, is in
-_you_. No man can go forth to find what he hasn’t got within him.”
-
-Then he gazed away across the desert, across sand and cactus and
-mesquite, across the blue-hazed, canyon-streaked ranges toward the
-north.
-
-“I go to Death Valley,” he continued, slowly, in his deep voice. “I had
-left enough gold to grub-stake me. An’ I go to Death Valley, but not
-to seek my fortune. It will be quiet and lonely there. An’ I can think
-an’ rest an’ sleep. Perhaps I’ll dig a little of the precious yellow
-dust, just to throw it away. Gold!... The man who loves gold is ruined.
-Passion makes men mad.... An’ now I must go.”
-
-“Death Valley? No! No!” whispered Adam.
-
-“Straight for Death Valley! It has called me across half the earth. I
-remember no desert place so lonely an’ silent an’ free. So different
-from the noisy world of men that crowds my mind still! There I shall
-find peace, perhaps my grave. See! life is all a hopin’ to find! I
-go on my way. Wansfell, we never know what drives us. But I am happy
-now.... Our trails have crossed for the last time. Good-by.”
-
-He wrung Adam’s hand and quickly whirled to his burros.
-
-“Hehaw! Gedap!” he shouted, with a smack on their haunches. Adam
-whispered a farewell he could not speak. Then, motionless, he watched
-the old prospector face the gray wastes toward the north and the
-beckoning mountains. Adam had an almost irresistible desire to run
-after Dismukes, to go with him. But the man wanted to be alone. What a
-stride he had! The fruitless quest had left him that at least. The same
-old rolling gait, the same doggedness! Dismukes was a man who could not
-be halted. Adam watched him--saw him at last merge and disappear in
-the gray, lonely sage. And then into Adam’s strained sight seemed to
-play a quivering mirage--a vision of Death Valley, ghastly and white
-and naked, the abode of silence and decay set down under its dark-red
-walls--the end of the desert and the grave of Dismukes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-The November morning was keen and cold and Adam and Genie were on their
-way to spend the day at Andreas Canyon. Adam carried a lunch, a gun,
-and a book. Genie seemed so exuberant with wonderful spirits that she
-could scarcely keep her little moccasined feet on the sand. Adam had an
-unconscious joy in the sight of her.
-
-A dim old Indian trail led up one of the slopes of Andreas Canyon, to
-which Adam called Genie’s attention.
-
-“We’ll climb this some day--when it comes time to take you away,” said
-Adam. “It’s a hard climb, but the shortest way out. And you’ll get to
-see the desert from the top of old Jacinto. That will be worth all the
-climb.”
-
-His words made Genie pensive. Of late the girl had become more and
-more beyond Adam’s comprehension--wistful and sad and dreamy by turns,
-now like a bird and again like a thundercloud, but mostly a dancing,
-singing creature full of unutterable sweetness of life.
-
-Beyond the oasis, some distance up the canyon, was a dense growth of
-mesquite and other brush. It surrounded a sandy glade in which bubbled
-forth a crystal spring of hot water. The bottom was clean white sand
-that boiled up in the center like shining bubbles. Indians in times
-past had laid stones around the pool. A small cottonwood tree on the
-west side of the glade had begun to change the green color of the
-leaves to amber and gold. All around the glade, like a wild, untrimmed
-hedge, the green and brown mesquites stood up, hiding the gray desert,
-insulating this cool, sandy, beautiful spot, hiding it away from the
-stern hardness outside.
-
-Genie had never been here. Quickly she lost her pensiveness and began
-to sing like a lark. She kicked one moccasin one way and the other in
-another direction. Straightway she was on the stones, with her bare,
-slender, brown feet in the water.
-
-“Ooooo! It’s hot!” she cried, ecstatically. “But, oh, it’s fine!” And
-she dipped them back.
-
-“Genie, you stay here and amuse yourself,” said Adam. “I’m going to
-climb. Maybe I’ll be back soon--maybe not. You play and read, and eat
-the lunch when you’re hungry.”
-
-“All right, Wanny,” she replied, gayly. “But I should think you’d
-rather stay with me.”
-
-Adam had to be alone. He needed to be high above the desert, where he
-could look down. Another crisis in his transformation was painfully
-pending. The meeting with Dismukes had been of profound significance,
-and its effect was going to be far-reaching.
-
-He climbed up the zigzag, dim trail, rising till the canyon yawned
-beneath him, and the green thicket where he had left Genie was but a
-dot. Then the way led round the slope of the great foothill, where he
-left the trail and climbed to the craggy summit. It was a round, bare
-peak of jagged bronze rock, and from this height half a mile above the
-desert the outlook was magnificent. Beyond and above him the gray walls
-and fringed peaks of San Jacinto towered, sculptored and grand against
-the azure blue.
-
-Finding a comfortable seat with rest for his back, Adam faced the
-illimitable gulf of color and distance below. Always a height such as
-this, where, like a lonely eagle, he could command an unobstructed
-view, had been a charm, a strange delight of his desert years. Not
-wholly had love of climbing, or to see afar, or to feel alone, or to
-travel in beauty, been accountable for this habit.
-
-Adam’s first reward for this climb, before he had settled himself to
-watch the desert, was sight of a condor. Only rarely did Adam see this
-great and loneliest of lonely birds--king of the eagles and of the blue
-heights. Never had Adam seen one close. A wild, slate-colored bird,
-huge of build, with grisly neck and wonderful, clean-cut head, cruelty
-beaked! Even as Adam looked the condor pitched off the crag and spread
-his enormous wings.
-
-A few flaps of those wide wings--then he sailed out over the gulf, and
-around, rising as he circled. When he started he was below Adam; on
-the first lap of that circle he rose even with Adam’s position; and
-when he came round again he sailed over Adam, perhaps fifty feet. Adam
-thrilled at the sight. The condor was peering down with gleaming, dark,
-uncanny eyes. He saw Adam. His keen head and great, crooked beak moved
-to and fro; the sun shone on his gray-flecked breast; every feather of
-his immense wings seemed to show, to quiver in the air, and the tip
-feathers were ragged and separate. He cut the air with a soft swish.
-
-Around he sailed, widening his circle, rising higher, with never a
-movement of his wings. That fact, assured by Adam’s sharp sight, was so
-marvelous that it fascinated him. What power enabled the condor to rise
-without propelling himself? No wind stirred down there under the peaks,
-so he could not lift himself by its aid. He sailed aloft. He came down
-on one slope of his circle, to rise up on the other, and always he went
-higher. How easily! How gracefully! He was peering down for sight of
-prey in which to sink cruel beak and talons. Once he crossed the sun
-and Adam saw his shadow on the gleaming rocks below. Then his circles
-widened across the deep canyon, high above the higher foothills, until
-he approached the lofty peak. Higher still, and here the winds of the
-heights caught him. How he breasted them, sailing on and up, soaring
-toward the blue!
-
-Adam watched the bird with strained eyes that hurt but never tired.
-To watch him was one of the things Adam needed. On and ever upward
-soared the condor. His range had changed with the height. His speed
-had increased with the wind. His spirit had mounted as he climbed. The
-craggy gray peak might have harbored his nest and his mate, but he gave
-no sign. High over the lonely cold heights he soared. There, far above
-his domain, he circled level for a while, then swooped down like a
-falling star, miles across the sky, to sail, to soar, to rise again.
-Away across the heavens he flew, wide winged and free, king of the
-eagles and of the winds, lonely and grand in the blue. Never a movement
-of his wings! Higher he sailed. Higher he soared till he was a fading
-speck, till he was gone out of sight to his realm above.
-
-“Gone!” sighed Adam. “He is gone. And for all I know he may be a spirit
-of the wind. From his invisible abode in the heavens he can see the
-sheep on the crags--he can see me here--he can see Genie below--he can
-see the rabbit at his burrow.... Nature! Life! Oh, what use to think?
-What use to torture myself over mystery I can never solve? I learn one
-great truth only to find it involved in greater mystery.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam had realized the need of shocks, else the desert influence would
-insulate him forever in his physical life. The meeting with Dismukes
-had been one.
-
-Why had Dismukes been compelled to come back to the desert? What
-was the lure of the silent places? How could men sacrifice friends,
-people, home, love, civilization for the solitude and loneliness of the
-wastelands? Where lay the infinite fascination in death and decay and
-desolation? Who could solve the desert secret?
-
-Like white, living flames, Adam’s thoughts leaped in his mind.
-
-These wanderers of the wastelands, like Dismukes and himself, were
-not laboring under fancy or blindness or ignorance or imagination
-or delusion. They were certainly not actuated by a feeling for some
-nameless thing. The desert was a fact. The spell it cast was a fact.
-Also it began to dawn upon Adam that nothing in civilization, among
-glittering cities and moving people, in palaces or hovels, in wealth
-or poverty, in fame or ignominy, in any walk of worldly life, could
-cast a spell of enchantment, could swell women’s hearts and claim men’s
-souls like the desert. The secret then had to do with a powerful
-effect of the desert--that was to say, of lonely and desolate and wild
-places--upon the minds of human beings.
-
-Adam remembered how Dismukes had loved to travel alone. If he had any
-selfishness in his great heart, it had been to gloat over the lonely
-places by himself. Even with Adam he seldom shared those moments of
-watching and listening. Always, some part of every day, he would spend
-alone on a ridge, on a height, or out on the sage, communing with this
-strange affinity of the desert. Adam had known Dismukes, at the end of
-a hard day’s travel, to walk a mile and climb to a ledge, there to do
-nothing at all but watch and listen. It was habit. He did it without
-thinking. When Adam confronted him with the fact he was surprised. On
-Adam’s side, this strange faculty or obsession, whatever it was, seemed
-very much more greatly marked. Dismukes had, or imagined he had, the
-need to seek gold. Adam had little to do but wander over the waste ways
-of the desert.
-
-And now Adam, stirred to his depths by the culminating, fatal tragedy
-of Dismukes’ life, and a passionate determination to understand it,
-delved into his mind and memory as never before, to discover forgotten
-lessons and larger growths. But not yet in his pondering did they
-prove to him why every day of his desert life, and particularly in the
-last few years, had he gone to this or that lonely spot for no reason
-at all except that it gave him strange, vague happiness. Here was an
-astounding fact. He could have seen the same beauty, color, grandeur,
-right from his camp. The hours he had passed thus were innumerable.
-
-What had he done, what had gone on in his mind, during all these
-seemingly useless and wasted hours? Nothing! Merely nothing it seemed
-to sit for hours, gazing out over the desolate, gray-green, barren
-desert, to sit listening to the solitude, or the soft wind, or the
-seep of sand, or perhaps the notes of a lonely bird. Nothing, because
-most of all that time he did not have in his mind the significance of
-his presence there. He really did not know he was there. This state
-of apparent unconsciousness had never been known to Adam at all until
-Magdalene Virey had given him intimation of it. He had felt the thing,
-but had never thought about it. But during these three years that he
-had lived near San Jacinto it had grown until he gained a strange and
-fleeting power to exercise it voluntarily. Even this voluntary act
-seemed unthinking.
-
-Adam, now, however, forced it to be a thinking act. And after many
-futile efforts he at last, for a lightning flash of an instant, seemed
-to capture the state of mind again. He recognized it because of an
-equally swift, vague joy that followed. Joy, he called it, for want
-of a better name. It was not joy. But it was wildly sweet--no--not
-so--but perhaps sweetly wild. That emotion, then, was the secret of
-the idle hours--the secret of the doing nothing. If he could only
-grasp the secret of the nothing! Looked at with profound thought, this
-nothing resolved itself into exactly what it had seemed to his first
-vague, wandering thought--merely listening, watching, smelling, feeling
-the desert. That was all. But now the sense of it began to assume
-tremendous importance. Adam believed himself to be not only on the
-track of the secret of the desert’s influence, but also of life itself.
-
-Adam realized that during these lonely hours he was one instant a
-primitive man and the next a thinking, or civilized, man. The thinking
-man he understood; all difficulty of the problem lay hid in this other
-side of him. He could watch, he could feel without thinking. That
-seemed to be the state of the mind of an animal. Only it was a higher
-state--a state of intense, feeling, waiting, watching suspension! Adam
-divined that it was the mental state of the undeveloped savage, and
-that it brought fleeting moments of strange emotion.
-
-Beyond all comprehension was the marvel of inscrutable nature. Somehow
-it had developed man. But the instincts of the ages were born with
-him when he was born. In blood, bone, tissue, heart, and brain! Wonder
-beyond that was the wonder that man had ever become civilized at all!
-Some infinite spirit was behind this.
-
-In the illumination of his mind Adam saw much that had been mystery
-to him. When he had hunted meat, why had the chase been thrilling,
-exciting, pressing his heart hot against his side, sending his blood
-in gusts over his body? What a joy to run and leap after the quarry!
-Strange indeed had been his lust to kill beasts when, after killing,
-he was sorry. Stranger than this was a fact keen in his memory--the
-most vivid and intense feeling--come back from his starvation days when
-he had a wild rapture in pursuit of birds, rats, snakes that he had
-to kill with stones. Never, in all the years, had this rapture faded.
-Relic of his cruel boyhood days, when, like all boys, he had killed for
-the sake of killing, until some aspect of his bloody, quivering victim
-awakened conscience! Conscience then must be the great factor in human
-progress--the difference between savage and civilized man. Terribly
-strange for Adam to look at his brawny hands and remember what they had
-done to men! Over him, then, gushed the hot blood, over him quivered
-the muscular intensity, over him waved the fierce passion which,
-compared with that of his boyhood, was as the blaze of sun to a candle.
-He had killed men in ruthless justice, in strife of self-defense, but
-always afterward he had regretted. He had fought men in a terrible,
-furious joy, with eyes tingeing red, with nerves impervious to pain,
-with the salt taste of a fellow creature’s blood sweet on his snarling
-lips, but always afterward he was full of wonder and shame.
-
-Just under the skin of every man and every woman, perhaps stronger
-in one than another, flowed red blood in which primitive instincts
-still lived and would always live. That was the secret of the desert.
-The lonely, desolate land, the naked sand and rock-ribbed hills, the
-wilderness of silence and solitude stirred the instinctive memory of a
-primitive day. Men watched and listened unthinkingly in the wastelands,
-for what they knew not, but it was for the fleeting trancelike
-transformation back to savage nature. There were many reasons for
-which men became wanderers in the wastelands--love of gold; the need
-to forget or to remember; passion and crime and wanderlust; the appeal
-of beauty and sublimity--but what nailed them to the forbidding and
-inhospitable desert was the instinct of the savage. That was the secret
-of the spell of the desert. Men who had been confined to cities,
-chained to dull and humdrum toils, stagnating in the noisy haunts, sore
-and sick and deflated, standing for some impossible end, when let loose
-in the gray, iron-walled barrens of the desert were caught by a subtle
-and insidious enchantment that transfigured some, made beasts of most,
-and mysteriously bound all. Travelers passing across could not escape
-it, and they must always afterward remember the desert with a thrill
-of strange pleasure and of vague regret. Women who had been caught by
-circumstance and nailed to homes along the roads or edges of the desert
-must feel that nameless charm, though they hated the glaring, desolate
-void. Magdalene Virey, resigned to her doom in Death Valley, had
-responded to the nature that was in her.
-
-Through this thing Adam saw the almost inconceivable progress of
-men upward. If progress had not been slow, nature would never have
-evolved him. And it seemed well that something of the wild and the
-primitive must forever remain instinctive in the human race. If the
-primitive were eliminated from men there would be no more progress.
-All the gladness of the senses lived in this law. The sweetness of
-the ages came back in thoughtless watching. The glory of the sunrise,
-the sadness of the sunset, the whisper of the wind and the murmur of
-the stream, the music of birds and their beauty--the magic of these
-came back from the dim, mystic dreamland of the primal day, from the
-childhood of the race. Nature was every man’s mother. Nevertheless,
-the wonder and the splendor of life was the age-long progress of man
-toward unattainable perfection, the magnificent victory of humanity
-over mastery by primal instincts. And the fact that this seemed true to
-Adam made him wonder if the spirit of this marvelous life was not God.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The sun was westering when he descended the long, zigzag trail. He
-walked slowly, tired from his mental strain. And when he got down the
-sun was just tipping the ramparts above, flooding the canyon with
-golden haze and ruddy rays. Adam thought that Genie, weary from long
-waiting, would be asleep on the sand, or at least reading, and that he
-could slip into the glade to surprise her. They played a game of this
-sort, and to her had gone most of the victories.
-
-Like a panther he slid through the grasping mesquite boughs, and
-presently, coming to the denser brush, he stooped low to avoid making
-a rustle. As he moved along, bending so that he touched the sand with
-his hands, he came upon two fat beetles wagging and contesting over
-possession of some little particle. Scooping up a handful of sand,
-he buried them, and then, as they so ludicrously scrambled out, he
-gathered them up, intending, if he could get behind Genie unobserved,
-to drop them on her book or bare feet.
-
-Thus it happened that he did not look ahead until after he had
-straightened up inside the glade. All before him seemed golden gleams
-and streaks of sunset rose. The air was thick with amber haze. Genie
-stood naked, ankle-deep in the bubbling spring. Like an opal her
-slender white body caught glimmer and sheen. Wondrously transparent
-she looked, for the sunlight seemed to shine through her! The red-gold
-tints of her hair burned like a woven cord of fire in bronze.
-Glistening crystal drops of water fell from her outstretched hands and
-her round arms gleamed where the white met the line of tan. The light
-of the sun shone upon her pensive, beautiful face as she stood wholly
-unaware of intrusion. Then she caught the sound of Adam’s stifled
-gasp. She saw him. She burst into a scream of startled, wild laughter
-that rang with a trill through the dell.
-
-Adam, breaking the spell of that transfixed instant, rushed headlong
-away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-Gaining the open, Adam strode swiftly down the trail to where the
-canyon spread wide and ended in the bowlder-strewn desert.
-
-The world in which he moved seemed transfigured, radiant with the last
-glow of dying day, with a glory of golden gleam. His heart pounded and
-his blood flooded to and fro, swelling his veins. Life on the earth
-for him had been shot through and through with celestial fire. His
-feet were planted on the warm sands and his hands reached to touch
-the gray old bowlders. He needed these to assure himself that he had
-not been turned into the soft, cool wind or the slanting amber rays
-so thickly glistening with particles of dust, or the great, soaring
-king of the eagles. Adam crushed a bunch of odorous sage to his face,
-smelled it, breathed it, tasted it; and the bitter sweetness thrilled
-his senses. It was real. It was a part of the vast and glowing desert,
-of the wonderful earth, of the infinite universe that he yearned to
-incorporate into his being. The last glorious rays of the setting sun
-shone upon him and magnified his stature in a long, purple shadow. How
-the last warmth seemed to kiss his cheek as it sank behind the rim of
-the range! The huge bowlders were warm and alive under his hands. He
-pricked his fingers upon the _cholla_ thorns just to see the ruddy
-drops of his life’s current; and there was strange joy in the sting
-which proved him flesh and blood and nerve. He stood alone, as he had
-many thousands of times on the gray old desert, his feet on the sand,
-his knees in the sage; but the being alone then was inexpressibly
-different. It was as if he had, like the tarantula wasp, been born from
-a cocoon stage in a dark, dead cell, into a beautiful world of light,
-of freedom, of color, of beauty, of all that was life. He felt the
-glory of his beating heart, his throbbing pulse, his sight and all his
-sense. He turned his face to the cool, sweet, sage-scented breeze, and
-then he lifted it to the afterglow of sunset. Ah! the new, strange joy
-of life--the incalculable force of the natural man!
-
-The luminous desert stretched before him, valley and mountain, and
-beyond them was other range and other valley, leading to the sea, and
-across its heaving bosom were other lands; and above him was the vast,
-deep-blue sky with its pale evening star, and beyond them began the
-infinite.
-
-Adam felt himself a part of it all. His ecstasy was that he lived.
-Nature could not deny him. He stood there, young and strong and vital.
-
-Then he heard Genie calling him. With a start he turned to answer.
-She was running down the trail. How swift, how lithe, how light! The
-desert had given her the freedom, the grace, the suppleness of its wild
-denizens. Like a fawn she bounded over the stones, and her hair caught
-the last gleams of glowing sunlight. When she neared Adam she checked
-her flying steps, pattering to a halt, one brown hand over her breast.
-
-“Wheooo!” she burst out, panting. “I--couldn’t--find--you. Why’d--you
-come--so far?”
-
-The something that had come between Adam’s sight and the desert now
-surrounded Genie. Immeasurably she was transformed, and the change
-seemed a mystery.
-
-“We must hurry back. It’ll soon be dark. Come,” he replied.
-
-With step as free and swift as his she kept pace with him.
-
-“Wanny, you stole up on me--tried to scare me--while I was bathing,”
-she said, with arch reproach.
-
-“Genie, it was an accident,” he returned, hurriedly, and how strangely
-the blood tingled in his face! “I meant to scare you--yes. But I--I
-never thought--I never dreamed ... Genie, I give you my word....
-Please say you believe me!”
-
-“Why, Wanny,” she said, in surprise, “of course I believe you! It’s
-nothing to mind about. I didn’t mind.”
-
-“Thank you. I--I’m glad you take it that way,” replied Adam. “I’m sorry
-I was so--so stupid.”
-
-“How funny you are!” she exclaimed, and her gay laugh pealed out.
-“What’s there to be sorry about?... You see, I forgot it was getting
-late.... Ooooo! how good the water felt! I just couldn’t get enough....
-You did scare me just a little. I heard you--and was scared before I
-looked.... Wanny, I guess I was imagining things--dreaming, you call
-it. I was all wet, and looking at myself in the sunlight. I’d never
-seen myself like that. I’d read of mermaids with shining scales of
-gold, and nymphs of the woods catching falling blossoms. And I guess I
-thought I was them--and everything.”
-
-Then Adam scorned the old husk of worldliness that had incased his
-mind in his boyhood, and clung round it still. This child of nature
-had taught him many a thought-provoking lesson, and here was another,
-somehow elevating and on a level with his mental progress of the day.
-Genie had never lived in the world, nor had she been taught many of
-its customs. She was like a shy, wild young fawn; she was a dreaming,
-exuberant girl. Genie had been taught to write and study and read, and
-was far from being ignorant; but she had not understood the meaning of
-Adam’s apology. What struck Adam so deeply and confounded him again
-was the fact that her innocent and sweet smile now, as she gazed up
-at him, was little different from the one upon her face when she saw
-him staring at her nude. She had been surprised at his concern and had
-laughed at his contrition. And that low, rippling laugh, so full of
-vital and natural life, seemed to blow, as the desert wind blew worn
-and withered leaves, all of Adam’s recalled sophistications back into
-the past whence they had come.
-
-Adam and Genie walked hand in hand down the long bowlder-strewn
-slope to the valley floor, where the _cholla_ shone paling silver in
-gathering twilight, and the delicate crucifixion tree deceived the
-eye. The lonely November twilight deepened into night. The stars shone
-bright. The cool wind blew. The sage rustled.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sleep did not soon woo Adam’s eyelids this night, with the consequence
-that he awoke a little later than his usual hour. The rose of the dawn
-had bloomed.
-
-Then Adam, on his knees by the brown running stream, in the midst of
-his ablutions, halted to stare at the sunrise. Had it ever before been
-so strangely beautiful? During his sleep the earth had revolved, and,
-lo! here was the sun again. Wonderful and perennial truth! Not only
-had it revolved, but it had gone on its mysterious journey, hurtling
-through space with inconceivable rapidity. While he slept! Again he
-had awakened. A thousand years ago he had awakened just like this, so
-it seemed, to the sunrise, to the loneliness of lonely places, to the
-beauty of nature, to the joy of life. He sensed some past state, which,
-when he thought about it, faded back illusively and was gone. But he
-knew he had lived somewhere before this. All of life was in him. The
-marvelous spirit he felt now would never die.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There dawned upon Adam a sudden consciousness of Genie’s beauty. She
-was the last realized and the most beautiful creation of the desert
-around him.
-
-It came to him as a great surprise. She, too, knelt at the stream,
-splashing the cool water, bathing her face, wetting the dark,
-gold-tinted locks and brushing them back. Curiously and absorbingly
-Adam gazed at her, with eyes from which some blinding shutter had
-fallen. Yes, she was beautiful. It seemed a simple fact that he had
-overlooked, yet it was amazing. It distracted him.
-
-“Wanny, you’re all eyes,” cried Genie, gayly. “What’s the matter with
-me? Why do you look so?”
-
-“Genie, you’re growing up,” he replied, soberly.
-
-“Well, you’d have known that before if you’d seen me sewing,” she said.
-
-“How old are you?” he asked.
-
-“Guess I’m nearly seventeen,” she said, and the words brought back the
-dreams.
-
-“Why, you’re a young lady!” ejaculated Adam. “And--and----” He had been
-about to add that she was beautiful, but he held his tongue.
-
-“I guess that, too.... Hold out your arm.”
-
-Adam complied, and was further amazed to see, as she walked under
-his outstretched arm, that the glossy, wavy crown of her head almost
-touched it. She was as tall and slim and graceful as an arrowweed.
-
-“There! I’ll have you know you’re a mighty big man,” she said. “And if
-you weren’t so big I’d come clear up to your shoulder.”
-
-“Genie, don’t you want to leave this desert?” he queried, bluntly.
-
-“Oh no,” she replied, instantly. “I love it. And--and--please don’t
-make me think of towns, of lots of people. I want to run wild like a
-road runner. I’d be perfectly happy if I didn’t have to spend half
-the day mending these old clothes.... Wanny, if they get any worse
-they’ll fall off me--and _then_ I’ll have to run around like you saw me
-yesterday!... Oh, but for the thorns, that’d be grand!”
-
-Her light, rippling laugh rang out, sweet and gay.
-
-Adam waited for her later, in the shade of Taquitch Canyon, where from
-the topmost of a jumble of bowlders he watched a distant waterfall,
-white and green as it flashed over a dark cliff.
-
-He watched her coming. Her ragged boy’s garb with its patches and rents
-no longer hid her femininity and her charm from his eyes. He saw anew.
-The litheness of her, the round and graceful figure from flying feet to
-glinting hair, cried aloud to the loneliness of Adam’s heart the truth
-of her. An enchantment hung upon her very movements. She traveled from
-rock to rock, poising, balancing, leaping, and her curly hair danced
-on her head. Quick as those of a wildcat were her leaps. And her gay,
-sweet call or cry, birdlike and wild, echoed from the cliffs.
-
-She was coming to Adam across the great jumble of rocks--a girl
-wonderful as a sprite. And her coming was suddenly realized as
-fulfillment of dreams. Adam faced the truth of some facts about his
-dreaming. Lonely hours on lonely slopes, of waiting and watching, had
-created the shadow of a woman or a girl gliding in the golden glow of
-the afternoon sunlight, coming to charm away forever the silence and
-solitude. So innumerable times he had dreamed, but never realized till
-now those dreams. She was coming, and the sleepy shade awoke to a gleam
-and a voice. The lacy waterfall shone white and its murmur seemed music
-of many streams. A canyon swallow twittered.
-
-Adam thought how passing strange had been the tortures, the awakenings,
-and changings of his desert experience. And here was a vague dream
-fulfilled! This realization was unutterably sweet--so sweet because
-these years had been barren of youth, steeped in unconscious growing
-worship of beauty, spent alone with pains and toils. He watched her
-coming. Fresh as the foam of the waterfall, clean as the winds of
-the heights, wild as the wild young fawn--so she seemed! Youth and
-gayety--beauty and life!
-
-But suddenly Adam seemed struck by an emotion, if not of terror, then
-of dread at some inconceivable and appalling nature of her presence.
-That emotion was of the distant past as was the vague peril of her
-approach. A girl--a woman creature--mystery of the ages--the giver of
-life as the sun gave heat--had come to him, out of the clouds or the
-desert sands, and the fatality of her coming was somewhat terrible.
-
-Genie reached the huge bowlder upon which Adam sat, and like a squirrel
-she ran up its steep side, to plump herself breathless and panting down
-against his knees.
-
-“Ah! Old Taquitch--here’s another--Indian maiden--for you to steal,”
-she said, roguishly. “But before you--carry me up to the clouds--duck
-me under the waterfall!”
-
-All the accumulated thought and emotion of recent hours concentrated in
-the gaze he fixed upon her face.
-
-Her trilling laugh pealed out. She thought he was playing Taquitch, god
-of the heights. He was teasing her with his piercing eyes.
-
-“Look! Look at me, O Taquitch!” she cried, with deep, pretended
-solemnity. “I am Ula, princess of the Coahuilas. I have left my
-father’s house. I have seen the sun shining in your face, oh, god of
-the lightnings! And I love--I love--I love with all the Indian’s heart.
-I will go with you to the peaks. But never--never more shall you steal
-another maiden!”
-
-Adam scarcely heard Genie. He was piercing through eyes and face to the
-mind and soul and life and meaning of her beauty. Her skin was creamy,
-golden brown, transparent, with tiny tracery of veins underneath and
-faint tints of rose. The low forehead and level brows showed moist
-and soft and thoughtful under the dark, damp curls with their amber
-glints. A hint of desert leanness hid in the contour of her oval face.
-Her mouth was strong, with bowed upper lip, the under sensitive and
-sad--a red, sweet mouth, like a flower. And her eyes, now meeting his
-so frankly, losing the mock solemnity and the fun, became deep-brown,
-crystal gulfs of light and shade, of thought and feeling, beautiful
-with the beauty of exquisite color, but lovelier for the youth, the joy
-and wonder of life, the innocence of soul.
-
-“Wanny--are you--playing?” she asked, tremulously, and her warm little
-hand clasped his.
-
-That changed the spell of her. To look at her beauty was nothing
-comparable with the warm throb of her young, pulsing life. Out of
-Adam’s slow and painful and intense thought at last evolved a nucleus
-of revelation. But those clear eyes strangely checked this growing
-sense of a truth about to overwhelm him. They made him think, and
-thought had begun to waver and pale beside some subtler faculty of his
-being. Thus he realized the slow preponderance of feeling over thought,
-of body over soul, of physical over spiritual. And in this realization
-of unequal conflict he divined the meaning of his strange sense of
-peril in Genie’s presence. The peril lay in the sophistication of his
-mind, not in Genie’s beauty. Naturally as the mating of the birds he
-wanted her. That was all. It was like her simplicity, inevitable as
-life itself, and true to nature! But in his thoughts, flashing after
-comprehension, the simple fact loomed with staggering, overwhelming
-significance.
-
-Bidding Genie rest or amuse herself, Adam climbed to a ledge above the
-waterfall, and there, with the mighty mass of mountain crowding out the
-light, he threw himself upon the bare stone.
-
-Not long did he torment himself with wonder and fury and bewilderment
-over an indubitable fact. Almost at once he sank into a self-accusing
-state which grew from bad to worse, until he was sick, sore, base, and
-malignant in his arraignment of self. Again the old order of mind, the
-habit of youthful training, the learned precepts and maxims and laws,
-flooded back to augment his trouble. And when they got their sway he
-cursed himself, he hated himself, he beat his breast in the shame of an
-abasement terribly and inevitably and irretrievably true at that hour.
-
-But this was a short-lived passion. It did not ring true to Adam. It
-was his youth had suffered shame--the youth trained by his mother--the
-youth that had fallen upon wild and evil days at old Picacho. His youth
-flaming up with all its chivalry, its ideals, its sense of honor and
-modesty, its white-hot shame at even an unconscious wrong to a girl!
-Not the desert philosophy of manhood that saw nature clearly and saw it
-whole!
-
-“Peace!” he cried, huskily, as if driving back a ghost of his youth. “I
-am no beast--no animal!”
-
-Nay, he was a lonely wanderer of the wastelands, who many and many
-a time had dreamed himself sweetheart, lover, husband of all the
-beautiful women in the world. Ah! it was his love of beauty, of life!
-
-And so in his dreams, nature, like a panther in ambush, had come
-upon him unawares to grip him before he knew. Aye--he wanted Genie
-now--yearned for her with all that intense and longing desire which had
-falsely seemed love and joy of the whole living world. But it was not
-what it seemed. All the tenderness of a brother, all the affection of
-a father Adam had for Genie--emotions that now faded before the master
-spirit and the imperious flame of life. How little and pitiful arose
-the memory of Margarita Arallanes--how pale beside this blood fire of
-his senses! Life had failed him in his youth; life had cheated him.
-Yet he had arisen on stepping stones of agony to intenser love of that
-life. He had been faithful, while life had mocked him.
-
-Passionate love of life, to see, to hear, to feel, to touch, had come
-to him with its saving grace, after the ruthless and violent strife
-of the desert had taught him to survive. But these were not the soul
-of nature. This was not nature’s secret. He was a man, a creature
-of inherited instincts that the desert had intensified. In nature’s
-eyes he was no different from the lonely desert bird or beast seeking
-its mate. The law was not wrong, but all the progress of mankind as
-represented in Adam’s revolt made that law wrong.
-
-When at last he had driven shame from his mind and justified his
-manhood over the instincts of which he could have no control, then he
-faced the ordeal.
-
-Contending tides of passion and strife! That had been his desert life.
-And as the years had passed each new mounting tumult in heart or soul,
-each fight against men or elements, had exceeded the last. Would there
-never be an end? Was this his great ordeal--the last--before which
-he must go down in defeat? No--by all the gods false or true--no, it
-should never be! Thus he shot arrowy lightnings of soul at the fiery
-army of instincts trooping on to overwhelm his consciousness.
-
-For a long time the ordeal never got so far as argument. It was revel
-of the senses, unleashed at last, untamed by the past, fiercer and
-stronger and more irresistible for all disuse. Melancholy and terrible
-was the truth that his desert years, so hard, so clean, so cold,
-so pure, the restraint of his enforced exile, had developed in him
-instincts masterless in their importunity. Life shrieking out of his
-flesh and blood for the future that nature demanded! There was revolt
-here, conscienceless revolt against the futility of manhood, voices
-from the old bones of his ancestors, from the dim and mystic past. Here
-at last was revealed the deepest secret of the desert, the eternal law
-men read in its lonely, naked face--self-preservation and reproduction.
-The individual lived and fought and perished, but the species survived.
-
-Adam’s instinctive reaction seemed that of a savage into whose surging
-blood had been ejected some inhibitory current of humanism which chafed
-at the quivering shores of his veins and tried to dam the flood. He was
-like a strong man convulsed by fever. Like the strung thread of a bent
-bow he vibrated.
-
-There came a knocking at the gate of his mind. The tempter! The voice
-of the serpent! Nature or devil, it was all one--a mighty and eloquent
-and persuasive force. It whispered to Adam that he was alone on the
-desert. Fate had been cruel. Love had betrayed him. Life had denied
-him. A criminal, surely not forgotten by justice, he could never leave
-the lonely wastelands to live. A motherless, fatherless girl, with no
-kith or kin, had been left in his care, and he had saved her, succored
-her. Care and health and love had made her beautiful. By all the laws
-of nature she was his, to hold, to cherish, to cheer the lonely, gray
-years. He had but to open his arms and call to her, reveal to her the
-mystery and glory of life, and she would be his forever. Unconsciously
-she herself leaned toward this fate, tempting him in all her innocence.
-She would grow into a glorious woman--the keen, sweet, fierce youth of
-her answering to the work of the desert. Were not all desert flowers
-more rare and vivid--were not all desert creatures more beautiful and
-strong than their like elsewhere? Genie would be his, as the eagle
-had its mate, and she would never know any other life. She would be
-compensation for his suffering, a companion for his wandering. Think!
-the joy of her, the thrill of her! The wonderful fire of her dark
-eyes and the dance of her curls and the red lips ripe for kisses! No
-man had any right to deny himself immortality. What was the world and
-its customs to him? Where was the all-wise and beneficent God who
-looked after the miserable and forlorn? Life was life, and that was
-everything. Beauty in life--that was eternal, the meaning of nature,
-and every man must love it, share it, and mark the image of himself
-upon the future. Lastly and most potent, the present fleeting hour
-that must soon pass! Let him grasp his precious jewel before it was
-too late--live in the moment. Life might be eternal, but not for him.
-Soon the seeping sand would nestle round his bleached bones and fill
-the sockets where once his eyes had burned. Genie was a gift of chance.
-He had wandered down into this valley, and now his life should never
-be lonely again. Lover of beauty and worshiper of nature, he had but
-to extend his arms to receive a treasure far greater than the gold of
-the desert, more beautiful than its flaming flowers, more mysterious
-than its fierce and inevitable life. A girl whose white body, like a
-transparent opal, let the sunshine through! A woman, gift of the ages
-to man, flame of love and life, most beautiful of all things quick or
-dead, a mystery for man to cherish, to love, to keep, to bind!
-
-Then, at the instant when Adam’s fall was imminent, and catastrophe
-leaned like the huge overhanging mountain mass, he wrestled up to fling
-the supremity of his soul into the teeth of nature.
-
-“_No!... No!_” he gasped, hoarsely. “Not for me!”
-
-At the last he saw clearly. The love he had for Genie now proclaimed
-itself. The other had not been love, whatever its greatness, its
-importunity, its almost blasting power. He was an outcast, and any day
-a man or men might seek him out to kill him or be killed. What madness
-was this of his to chain a joyous girl to his wandering steps? What
-but woe to her and remorse to him could ever come of such relation?
-Genie was so full of life and love that she hated to leave even the
-loneliness of the desert. To her, in the simplicity and adaptation of
-her nature, he was all. But she was a child, and the day he placed her
-in an environment where youth called to youth, and there were work,
-play, study, cheer, and love, he would become a memory. The kisses of
-her red ripe lips were not for him. The dance of her glinting curls,
-the flash of her speaking eyes, the gold-brown flesh of her, had been
-created by nature; and nature must go on with its inscrutable design,
-its eternal progress, leaving him outside the pale. The joy he was
-to feel in Genie must come of memory, when soon he had gone on down
-into the lonely wastelands. She would owe life and happiness to him,
-and, though she might not know it, he always would. A child, a girl,
-a woman--and some day perhaps a wife and mother--some happy man’s
-blessing and joy--and these by the same inevitable nature that had
-tortured him would reward him in the solemn white days and the lonely
-starlit nights. For he had been and would be the creator of their
-smiles. How fierce and false had been his struggle, in the light of
-thought, when the truth was that he would give his life to spare Genie
-a moment’s pain!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-That afternoon when Adam returned to camp sore in body and spent in
-force, yet with strangely tranquil soul, there was an old Indian
-waiting for him. Genie had gone back long before Adam, and she sat on
-the sand, evidently having difficult but enjoyable conversation with
-the visitor.
-
-At sight of his hard, craggy, bronze face, serried and seamed with
-the lines of years, it seemed that a bolt shot back in Adam’s heart,
-opening a long-closed door.
-
-“Charley Jim!” he ejaculated, in startled gladness.
-
-“How, Eagle!” His deep voice, the familiar yet forgotten name, the lean
-brown hand, confirmed Adam’s sight.
-
-“Chief, the white man has not forgotten his Indian friend,” replied
-Adam.
-
-“Eagle no same boy like mescal stalk. Heap big! Many moon! Snows on
-the mountain!” said Charley Jim, with a gleam of a smile breaking the
-bronze face. His fingers touched the white hair over Adam’s temples.
-Pathos and dignity marked the action.
-
-“Boy no more, Charley Jim,” returned Adam. “Eagle has his white
-feathers now!”
-
-Genie burst into a trill of laughter.
-
-“You funny old people! You make me feel old, too,” she protested, and
-she ran away.
-
-Charley Jim’s somber eyes followed her, then returned to question Adam.
-
-“She same girl here--long time--sick man’s girl?” And he made signs to
-show the height of a child and the weakness of a man’s lungs.
-
-“Yes, chief. He her father. Dead. Mother dead, too,” replied Adam, and
-he pointed to the two green graves across the stream.
-
-“Ugh! No live good. No get well.... Eagle, sick man have brother--him
-dead. Jim find ’um. Him dig gold--no water--dead.... Jim find ’um heap
-bones.”
-
-It was thus Adam heard the story of the tragedy of Genie’s uncle.
-Charley Jim told it more clearly, though just as briefly, in his own
-tongue. Moons before he had found a prospector’s pack and then a pile
-of rags and bones half buried in the sand over in a valley beyond the
-Cottonwood Mountains. He recognized the man’s pack as belonging to the
-brother of the sick man, Linwood, both of whom he knew. Adam could
-trust an Indian’s memory. Genie’s uncle had come to the not rare end
-of a wandering prospector’s life. The old desert tragedy--thirst! All
-at once Adam’s eyes seemed to burn blind with a red dim veil, and his
-tongue clove to the roof of his mouth, and through his body passed a
-cold shudder, and he had strange vision of himself staggering blindly
-in a circle, plunging madly for the false mirage. The haunting plague
-passed away. Adam turned to examine the few pack articles Charley Jim
-had brought for possible identification of the dead. One of these,
-a silver belt buckle of odd design, oxidized and tarnished, might
-possibly be remembered by Genie. Adam called her, placed it in her
-hands.
-
-“Genie, did you ever see that?” he asked.
-
-“Yes,” she replied, with a start of recognition. “It was my father’s.
-He gave it to my uncle.”
-
-Adam nodded to the Indian. “Chief, you were right.”
-
-“Oh, Wanny--it means he’s found my uncle--dead!” exclaimed Genie, in
-awe.
-
-“Yes, Genie,” replied Adam, with a hand of sympathy upon her shoulder.
-“We know now. He’ll never come back.”
-
-With the buckle in her hands the girl slowly walked toward the graves
-of her parents.
-
-Charley Jim mounted his pony to ride away.
-
-“Chief--tell me of Oella,” said Adam.
-
-The Indian gazed down upon Adam with somber eyes. Then his lean, sinewy
-hand swept up with stately and eloquent gesture to be pressed over his
-heart.
-
-“Oella dead,” he replied, sonorously, and then he looked beyond Adam,
-out across the lonesome land, beyond the ranges, perhaps to the realm
-of his red gods. Adam read the Indian gesture. Oella had died of a
-broken heart.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He stood there at the edge of the oasis, stricken mute, as his old
-Indian friend turned to go back across the valley to the Coahuila
-encampment. A broken heart! That superb Indian maiden, so lithe and
-tall and strong, so tranquil, so sure--serene of soul as the steady
-light of her midnight eyes--dead of a broken heart! She had loved
-him--a man alien to her race--a wanderer and a stranger within her
-gates, and when he had gone away life became unendurable. Another
-mystery of the lonely, gray, melancholy wastelands! Adam quivered there
-in the grip of it all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Later when he returned to Genie it was to say, simply, “My dear, as
-soon as I can find my burros we pack for the long trail.”
-
-“No!” she exclaimed, with lighting eyes.
-
-“Yes. I shall take you out to find you a home.”
-
-“Honest Injun?” she blazed at him, springing erect.
-
-“Genie, I would not tease about that. We know your uncle is dead. The
-time to go has come. We’ll start at sunrise.”
-
-Forgotten were Genie’s dreams of yesterday! A day at her time of
-life meant change, growth, oblivion for what had been. With a cry of
-wondering delight she flung herself upon Adam, leaped and climbed to
-the great height of his face, and there, like a bird, she pecked at him
-with cool, sweet lips, and clung to him in an ecstasy.
-
-“Don’t!... Still a child, Genie,” he said, huskily, as he disengaged
-himself from her wild embrace. He meant that she was not still a child.
-It amazed him and hurt him to see her radiance at the thought of
-leaving the desert oasis which had been home for so long. Fickleness
-of youth! Yesterday she had wanted to live there forever; to-day the
-enchantments of new life, people, places, called alluringly. It was
-what Adam had expected. It was what he wanted for her. How clear had
-been his vision of the future! How truly, the moment he had fought down
-his selfish desires, had he read her innocent heart! His own swelled
-with gladness, numbing out the pang. For him, some little meed of
-praise! Not little was it to have conquered self--not little was it to
-have builded the happiness of an orphan!
-
-Adam’s burros had grown gray in their years of idle, contented life at
-the oasis. Like the road runners, they enjoyed the proximity of camp;
-and he found them shaggy and fat, half asleep while they grazed. He
-drove them back to the shade of the cottonwoods, where Genie, seeing
-this last and immutable proof of forthcoming departure, began to dance
-over the sand in wild glee.
-
-“Genie, you’ll do well to save some of your nimbleness,” admonished
-Adam. “We’ll have a load. You’ve got to climb the mountain and walk
-till I can buy another burro.”
-
-“Oh, Wanny, I’ll fly!” she cried.
-
-“Humph! I rather think you will fly the very first time a young fellow
-sees you--a big girl in those ragged boy’s clothes.”
-
-Then Adam thrilled anew with the sweetness, the wonder of her. His cold
-heart warmed to the core. How he would live in the hope and happiness
-and love that surely must be awaiting this girl! His mention of a young
-fellow suddenly rendered Genie amazed, shy, bewildered.
-
-“But--but--Wanny--you--you won’t let any yo-young fellow see me _this_
-way!” she pleaded.
-
-“How can I help it? You just wouldn’t sew and make dresses. Now you’re
-in for it. We’ll meet a lot of lads.... And, Genie, just the other day
-you didn’t care how _I_ saw you.”
-
-“Oh, but you’re different! You’re my dad, my brother, old Taquitch, and
-everything.”
-
-“Thank you. That makes me feel a little better.”
-
-Suddenly she turned her dark eyes upon him, piercing now and dilating
-with thought.
-
-“Wanny! Are you _sorry_ to leave?”
-
-“Yes,” he replied, sadly.
-
-“Then I’ll stay, if you want me--ever--always,” she said, very low. The
-golden flush paled on her cheek. She was a child, yet on the verge of
-womanhood.
-
-“Genie, I’m sorry, but I’m glad, too. What I want most is to see you
-settled in a happy home, with a guardian, young friends about you--all
-you want.”
-
-She appeared sober now, and Adam gathered that she had thought more
-seriously than he had given her credit for.
-
-“Wanny, you’re good, and your goodness makes you see all that for me.
-But a guardian--a happy home--all I want!... I’ll be poor. I’ll have to
-work for a living. I won’t have _you_!”
-
-Then suddenly she seemed about to weep. Her beautiful eyes dimmed. But
-Adam startled her out of her weakness.
-
-“Poor! Well, Genie Linwood, you’ve got a surprise in store for you.”
-
-Wherewith he led her to the door of the hut and, tearing up the old
-wagon boards that had served as a floor, he dug in the sand underneath
-and dragged forth bag after bag, which he dropped at her feet with
-sodden, heavy thumps.
-
-“Gold, Genie! Gold! Yours!... You’ll be rich.... All this was dug by
-your father. I don’t know how much, but it’s a fortune.... Now what do
-you say?”
-
-The rapture Adam had anticipated did not manifest itself. Genie seemed
-glad, certainly, but the significance of the gold did not really strike
-her.
-
-“And you never told me!... Well, by the great horn spoon, I’m rich!...
-Wanny, will _you_ be my guardian?”
-
-“I will, till I can find you one,” he replied, stoutly.
-
-“Oh, never look for one--then I _will_ have all I want!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The last sunlight, the last starlight night, the last sunrise for Adam
-and Genie at the oasis, were beautiful memories of the past.
-
-Adam, driving the burros along the dim old Indian trail, meditated on
-the inevitableness of the end of all things. For nearly three years he
-had seen that trail every few days and always he had speculated on the
-distant time when he would climb it with Genie. That hour had struck.
-Genie, with the light feet of an Indian, was behind him, now chattering
-like a magpie and then significantly silent. She had her bright face
-turned to the enchanting adventures of the calling future; she was
-turning her back upon the only home she could remember.
-
-“Look, Genie, how gray and dry the canyon is,” said Adam, hoping to
-divert her. “Just a little water in that white wash, and you know it
-never reaches the valley. It sinks in the sand.... Now look way above
-you--high over the foothills. See those gleams of white--those streaks
-of black.... Snow, Genie, and the pines and spruces!”
-
-They camped at the edge of the spruces and pines. How sweet and cool
-and damp the air to desert dwellers! The wind sang through the trees
-with different tone. Adam, unpacking the burros, turned them loose,
-sure of their delight in the rich green grass. Genie, tired out with
-the long climb, fell upon one of the open packs to rest.
-
-With his rifle Adam strode away among the scattered pines and clumps
-of spruce. The smell of this forest almost choked him, yet it seemed
-he could not smell and breathe enough. The dark-green, spear-pointed
-spruces and the brown-barked pines, so lofty and spreading, intoxicated
-his desert eyes. He looked and reveled, forgetting the gun in his
-hands, until his aimless steps frightened deer from right before him.
-Then, to shoot was habit, the result of which was regret. These deer
-were tame, not like the wary, telescope-eyed mountain sheep; and Adam,
-after his first exultant thrill--the old recurrent thrill from out the
-past--gazed down with sorrow at the sleek, beautiful deer he had slain.
-What dual character he had--what contrast of thrill and pang, of blood
-and brain, of desert and civilization, of physical and spiritual, of
-nature and--But he did not know what!
-
-He laughed later, and Genie laughed, too, at how ravenous he was at
-supper, how delicious the venison tasted, how good it was to eat.
-
-“Guess I’ll give myself up as a bad job,” he told her.
-
-“Wanny, for me you’ll always be Taquitch, giant of the desert and god
-of the clouds.”
-
-“Ah! You’ll forget me in ten days after you meet _him_!” replied Adam,
-somewhat bitterly.
-
-Genie could only stare her amaze.
-
-“Forgive me, child. I don’t mean that. I know you’ll never forget
-me.... But you’ve been my--my little girl so long that it hurts to
-think of your being some other man’s.”
-
-Then he was to see the marvel of Genie’s first blush.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was well that Adam had thought to pack extra blankets for Genie. She
-had never felt the nip of frost. And when night settled down black,
-with the wind rising, she needed to be warmly wrapped. Adam liked the
-keen air, and also the feel of the camp-fire heat upon his outstretched
-palms.
-
-Next morning the sky was overcast with broken, scudding clouds, and
-a shrill wind tossed the tips of the pines. Genie crawled out of
-her blankets to her first experience of winter. When she dipped her
-hands into the water she squealed and jerked them out. Then at Adam’s
-bantering laughter she bravely dashed into the ordeal of bathing face
-and hands with that icy water.
-
-Adam did not have any particular objective point in mind. He felt
-strangely content to let circumstances of travel or chance or his old
-wandering instinct guide him.
-
-They traveled leisurely through the foothills on the western side of
-the Sierra Madres, finding easy trails and good camp sites, and meeting
-Indians by the way. Six days out from the desert they reached a wagon
-road, and that led down to a beautiful country of soft velvety-green
-hills and narrow, pleasant valleys where clumps of live oaks grew, and
-here and there nestled a ranch.
-
-So they traveled on. The country grew less rugged and some of it
-appeared to belong to great ranches, once the homes of the Spanish
-grandees. Late one afternoon travel brought them within sight of
-Santa Ysabel. Adam turned off the main road, in search of a place to
-camp, and, passing between two beautiful hills, came upon a little
-valley, all green with live oaks and brown with tilled ground. He saw
-horses, cattle, and finally a farmhouse, low and picturesque, of the
-vine-covered adobe style peculiar to a country first inhabited by the
-Spanish.
-
-Adam went toward the house, which was mostly concealed by vines and
-oaks, and presently happened upon a scene that seldom gladdened the
-eyes of a desert wanderer. On a green plot under the trees several
-children stopped their play to stare at Adam, and one ran to the open
-door. There were white pigeons flying about the roof, and gray rabbits
-in the grass, and ducks wading in the brook. Adam heard the cackle of
-hens and the bray of a burro. A column of blue smoke lazily rose upward
-from a gray, adobe, fire-blackened oven.
-
-Before Adam got to the door a woman appeared there, with the child at
-her skirts. She was middle-aged and stout, evidently a hard-working
-rancher’s wife. She had a brown face, rather serious, but kind, Adam
-thought. And he looked keenly, because he was now getting into the
-civilized country that he expected would become Genie’s home.
-
-“Good evening, ma’am!” he said. “Will you let me camp out there by the
-oaks?”
-
-“How d’ye do, stranger,” she replied. “Yes, you’re welcome. But you’re
-only a mile or so from Santa Ysabel. There’s a good inn.”
-
-“Time enough to go there to-morrow or next day,” replied Adam. “You
-see, ma’am, I’m not alone. I’ve a young girl with me. We’re from the
-desert. And I want her to have some--some decent clothes before I take
-her where there are people.”
-
-The woman laughed pleasantly.
-
-“Your daughter?” she asked, with interest.
-
-“No relation,” replied Adam. “I--I was a friend of her mother, who died
-out on the desert.”
-
-“Stranger, you’re welcome to my house overnight.”
-
-“Thank you, but I’d rather not trouble you. We’ll be very comfortable.
-It’s a nice place to camp.”
-
-“Come far?” asked the woman, whose honest blue eyes were taking stock
-of Adam.
-
-“Yes, far for Genie. We’ve been about ten days coming over the
-mountains.”
-
-“Reckon you’d like some milk and eggs for supper?”
-
-“Well, now, ma’am, if you only knew how I would like some,” returned
-Adam, heartily. “And poor Genie, who has fared so long on desert grub,
-she’d surely appreciate your kindness.”
-
-“I’ll fetch some over, or send it by my boy,” she said.
-
-Adam returned thoughtfully to the little grove where he had elected
-to camp. This woman’s kindness, the glint of sympathy in her eyes,
-brought him up short with the certitude that they were the very virtues
-he was looking for in the person to whom he intended to trust Genie.
-It behooved him from now on to go keenly at the task of finding that
-person. It would not be easy. For the present he meant to hide any hint
-of Genie’s small fortune, and had cautioned her to that end.
-
-Genie appeared tired and glad to sit on the green grassy bank. “I’ll
-help--in a little while,” she said. “Isn’t this a pretty place? Oh, the
-grass feels so cool and smells so sweet!... Wanny, who’d you see at the
-house?”
-
-“Some youngsters and a nice woman,” replied Adam. It was on his tongue
-to tell Genie about the milk and eggs for supper, but in the interest
-of a surprise he kept silent.
-
-Sunset had passed when Adam got the packs spread, the fire built, and
-supper under way.
-
-At length the supper appeared to be about ready, except for the milk
-and eggs that had been promised. Adam set the pot and pan aside at the
-edge of the fire, and went off in search of some wood that would be
-needed later. He packed a big log of dead oak back to camp, bending
-under its weight.
-
-When he looked up he saw a handsome, stalwart lad, bareheaded and in
-shirt sleeves, standing just beyond the fire, holding out with brown
-muscular arms a big pan of milk. The milk was spilling over the edges.
-And on one of his fingers hung a small bucket full of eggs. He had to
-balance himself carefully while he stooped to deposit the bucket of
-eggs on the ground.
-
-“Hey, Johnnie, where’ll I put the milk?” he called, cheerily.
-
-Adam was astounded, and suddenly tickled to see Genie trying to hide
-behind one of the packs. She succeeded in hiding all but her head,
-which at the moment wore an old cap that made her look more than ever
-like a boy.
-
-“My name’s not Johnnie,” she flashed, with spirit.
-
-The lad appeared nonplused, probably more at the tone of voice than the
-speech. Then he laughed. Adam liked the sound of that laugh, its ring,
-its heartiness.
-
-“Sammy, then.... Come get this milk,” called the boy.
-
-Genie maintained silence, but she glared over the top of the pack.
-
-“Look here, bub,” the lad went on, plaintively, “I can’t stand this way
-all night. Mother wants the pan.... Boy, are you deaf?... Say, bub, I
-won’t eat you.”
-
-“How dare you call me bub!” cried Genie, hotly.
-
-“Well, I’ll be doggoned!” exclaimed the young fellow. “Listen to the
-kid!... I’ll call you worse than bub in a minute. Hurry, bubbie!”
-
-Genie made a quick movement that whirled her around, with her cap
-flying off, and then she got to her knees. Thus, with face disclosed
-and blazing eyes, and curls no boy ever had, she presented a vastly
-different aspect.
-
-“I’m no boy! I--I’m a--a lady!” she declared, with angry, trembling
-voice of outraged dignity.
-
-“What!” gasped the lad. Then, in his amaze and horror, he dropped the
-pan of milk, that splashed all over, nearly drowning the fire.
-
-“Hello! What’s the trouble?” asked Adam, genially, appearing from the
-oaks.
-
-“I--I--spilled the milk--mother sent,” he replied, in confusion.
-
-“That’s too bad! No wonder, such a lot of milk!... What’s your name?”
-
-“It’s Eugene--sir--Eugene Blair.”
-
-“Well, that’s queer--Eugene Blair.... My name’s Wansfell, and I’m
-glad to meet you,” said Adam, offering his hand. “Now let me make you
-acquainted with Miss Eugenie Linwood.”
-
-The only acknowledgment Genie gave to her first introduction was a slow
-sinking down behind the pack. Her expression delighted Adam. As for the
-young man--he appeared to be about twenty years old--he was overcome
-with embarrassment.
-
-“Glad to--to know you Miss--Miss Linwood,” he gulped. “Please ex-excuse
-me. Mother never said--there was a--a girl.... And you looked so--I
-took you for a boy.”
-
-“That’s all right, son,” put in Adam, kindly. “Genie did look like a
-boy. So I’ve been telling her.”
-
-“Now--if you’ll excuse me I’ll run back after more milk,” said the lad,
-hurriedly, and, grasping up the pan, he ran away.
-
-“Well, Miss Know-it-all,” said Adam, banteringly, “_what_ did I tell
-you? Didn’t I tell you we’d meet some nice young fellow?”
-
-“He--he didn’t see me--_all_ of me,” replied Genie, tragically.
-
-“What? Why, a fellow with eyes like his could see right through that
-pack!” declared Adam.
-
-“He called me bub!” suddenly exclaimed Genie, her tone changing from
-one of tragic woe to one of tragic resentment. “_Bub!_... The--the
-first boy I ever met in my whole life!”
-
-“Why shouldn’t he call you bub?” queried Adam. “There’s no harm in
-that. And when he discovered his mistake he apologized like a little
-man.”
-
-“I _hate_ him!” flashed Genie. “I’d starve to death before I’d eat his
-eggs and milk.” With that she flounced off into the clump of oaks.
-
-Adam was seeing Genie in a new light. It amused him greatly, yet
-he could not help but look ruefully after her, somewhat uncertain.
-Feminine reactions were unknown quantities. Genie reminded him
-wonderfully of girls he had known when he was seventeen.
-
-Presently young Blair returned with more milk, and also considerably
-more self-possession. Not seeing Genie, he evidently took the hint and
-quickly left.
-
-“Come over after supper,” called Adam, after him.
-
-“All right,” he replied, and then was gone.
-
-Very shortly then Adam had supper prepared, to which he cheerfully
-invited Genie. She came reluctantly, with furtive eyes on the green
-beyond camp, and sat down to fold her feet under her, after the manner
-of an Indian. Adam, without any comment, served her supper, not
-omitting a generous quantity of fragrant fried eggs and a brimming
-cupful of creamy milk. Wherewith Genie utterly forgot, or magnificently
-disdained, any recollection of what she had said. She even asked for
-more. But she was vastly removed from the gay and lightsome Genie.
-
-“What’d you ask him back here for?” she demanded.
-
-“I want to talk to him. Don’t you?” replied Adam, innocently.
-
-“Me!... When he called me bub?”
-
-“Genie, be sensible. They’re nice people. I think I’ll camp here a day
-or so. We’ll rest up, and that’ll give me time to look around.”
-
-“Look around!... What’ll become of _me_?” wailed Genie, miserably.
-
-“You can watch camp. I dare say young Blair will forget your rudeness
-and be nice to you.”
-
-Then Genie glared with terrible eyes upon Adam, and she seemed between
-tears and rage.
-
-“I--I never--never knew--you could be like this.”
-
-“Like what? Genie, I declare, I’m half ashamed of you! Nothing has
-happened. Only this lad mistook you for a boy. Anyone would think the
-world had come to an end. All because you woke up and found out you
-had on boy’s clothes. Well, you’ve got to take your medicine now. You
-_would_ wear them. You never minded _me_. You didn’t care _how_ I saw
-you!”
-
-“I don’t care how _he_ saw me or sees me, either, so there,” declared
-Genie, enigmatically.
-
-“Oh! Well, what’s wrong, then?” queried Adam, more curious than ever.
-
-“I--he--it--it was what he called me,” replied Genie, confusedly.
-
-Adam gazed at her downcast face with speculative eyes, intuitively
-feeling that she had not told the whole truth. He had anticipated
-trouble with this spirited young wild creature from the desert, once
-they got into civilization.
-
-“Genie, I’ve been mostly in fun. Now I’m serious.... I want you to be
-perfectly natural and nice with these Blairs, or anyone else we meet.”
-
-Manifestly she took that seriously enough. Without another word she
-dragged her blankets and canvas away from the firelight, and at the
-edge of the gathering gloom under the oaks she made her bed and crawled
-into it.
-
-A little while after dark, young Blair presented himself at Adam’s
-fire, and took a seat to which he was invited.
-
-“I suppose you folks are ranching it?” asked Adam, by way of opening
-conversation.
-
-“It’s hardly a ranch, though we have hopes,” replied Blair. “Mother
-and I run the farm. My father’s not--he’s away.”
-
-“Looks like good soil. Plenty of water and fine grass,” observed Adam.
-
-“Best farming country all around--these valleys,” declared the lad,
-warming to enthusiasm. “Ranchers taking it all up. Only a few valleys
-left. There’s one just below this--about a hundred acres--if I could
-only get that!... But no such luck for me.”
-
-“You can never tell,” replied Adam, in his quiet way. “You say ranchers
-are coming in?”
-
-“Yes. San Diego is growing fast. People are buying out the Mexicans and
-Indians up in these hills. In a few years any rancher with one of these
-valleys will be rich.”
-
-“How much land do you own?”
-
-“My mother bought this little farm here--ten acres--and the valley,
-which was about ninety. But my father--we lost the valley. And we
-manage to live here.”
-
-Adam’s quick sympathy divined that something pertaining to the lad’s
-father was bitter and unhappy. He questioned further about the farm,
-what they raised, where they marketed it, how many cattle, horses,
-chickens, ducks they had. In half an hour Adam knew the boy and liked
-him.
-
-“You’re pretty well educated for a farmer boy,” remarked Adam.
-
-“I went to school till I was sixteen. We’re from Indiana--Vincennes.
-Father got the gold fever. We came West. Mother and I took to a surer
-way of living.”
-
-“You like ranching, then?”
-
-“Gee! but I’d love to be a real rancher! There’s not only money in
-cattle and horses, on a big scale, but it’s such a fine life. Outdoors
-all the time!... Oh, well, I _do_ have the outdoors as much as anybody.
-But for mother and the kids--I’d like to do better by them.”
-
-“I saw the youngsters and I’d like to get acquainted. Tell me about
-them.”
-
-“Nothing much to tell. They’re like little Indians. Tommy’s three,
-Betty’s four, Hal’s five. He was a baby when we came West. The trip
-was too hard on him. He’s been delicate. But he’s slowly getting
-stronger.”
-
-“Well! You’ve a fine family. How are you going to educate them?”
-
-“That’s our problem. Mother and I must do our best--until--maybe we can
-send them to school at San Diego.”
-
-“When your ship comes in?”
-
-“Yes; I’m always hoping for that. But first I’d like my ship to start
-out, so it can come back loaded.”
-
-The lad laughed. He was imaginative, full of fire and pathos, yet clear
-headed and courageous, neither blind to the handicap under which he
-labored nor morose at his fetters.
-
-“Yes, if a man _waits_ for his ship to come in--sometimes it never
-comes,” said Adam.
-
-“I suppose you’ll be on your way to town early?” asked Blair, as he
-rose.
-
-“Guess I’ll not break camp to-morrow. Genie is tired. And I won’t mind
-a little rest. Hope we’ll see you again.”
-
-“Thank you. Good night.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When he was gone, Adam took to pacing along the edge of the oaks. In
-the light of the camp fire he saw the gleam of Genie’s wide-open eyes.
-She had heard every word of Adam’s conversation with young Blair. He
-felt a great sympathy for Genie. Like a child, she was face to face
-with new life, new sensations, poignant and bewildering. How might he
-best help her?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next morning, when Adam returned from a look around, he discovered
-Genie up, puttering at the camp fire. She greeted him with undue
-cheerfulness. She was making a heroic effort to show that this
-situation was perfectly natural. She did pretty well, but Adam’s keen
-eyes and sense gathered that Genie felt herself on the verge of great
-and tremendous events.
-
-After breakfast Adam asked Genie to accompany him to the farmhouse.
-She went, but the free, lithe step wanted something of its old grace.
-Adam espied the children in the yard, and now he took cognizance of
-them. Tommy was a ragged, tousle-headed, chubby little rascal, ruddy
-cheeked and blue eyed. Betty resembled the lad, Eugene, having his fine
-dark eyes and open countenance. Hal was the largest, a red-headed,
-freckle-faced imp if Adam ever saw one. They regarded the newcomers
-with considerable interest. Genie approached them and offered to swing
-Betty, who was sitting in a clumsy little hammock-like affair made of
-barrel staves. And Adam, seeing the children’s mother at the door, went
-that way.
-
-“Good morning, Mrs. Blair!” he said. “We’ve come over to chat a bit and
-see your youngsters.”
-
-She greeted them smilingly, and came out wiping her hands on her apron.
-“Goodness knows we’re glad to have you. Gene has gone to work. Won’t
-you sit on the bench here?...”
-
-Then she espied Genie. “For land’s sake! That your girl in the boy’s
-clothes? Gene told me what a dunce he’d been.... Oh, she’s pretty! What
-shiny hair!”
-
-“That’s Genie. I want you to meet her--and then, Mrs. Blair, perhaps
-you can give an old desert codger a little advice,” said Adam.
-
-He called Genie, and she came readily, though not without shyness.
-Despite her garb and its rents, Adam could not but feel proud of her.
-Mrs. Blair’s kindliness quickly put the girl at ease. After a little
-talk, in which Genie’s part augured well for the impression she was to
-make upon people, Adam bade her play with the children.
-
-“No wonder Gene spilled the milk!” ejaculated Mrs. Blair.
-
-“Why?” queried Adam.
-
-“The girl’s more than pretty. Never saw such hair. And her eyes!
-They’re not the color of hair and eyes I know.”
-
-“That’s the desert’s work, Mrs. Blair. On the desert nature makes
-color, as well as life, more vivid, more intense.”
-
-“And this Genie--isn’t it odd--her name is like my boy Gene’s--she’s no
-relation of yours?”
-
-Briefly then Adam related Genie’s story and the circumstances of his
-association with her.
-
-“Laws-a-me! Poor child!... And now she has no people--no home--not a
-friend in the world but you?”
-
-“Not one. It’s pretty sad, Mrs. Blair.”
-
-“Sad? It’s worse than that.... Strikes me, though, Mr. Wansfell, you
-must be family and friends and all to that girl.... And let a mother
-tell you what a noble thing you’ve done--to give three years of your
-life to an orphan!”
-
-“What I did was good for me. Better than anything I ever did before,”
-replied Adam, earnestly. “I’d go on if it were possible. But Genie
-needs a home, young people, work, to learn and live her life. And I--I
-must go back to the desert.”
-
-“Ah! So that’s it!” exclaimed the woman, nodding. “My husband spoke
-just like you do. He took to the desert--sold my farm to get money to
-work his gold claims. Always he had to go back to the desert.... And
-now he’ll never come home again.”
-
-“Yes, the desert claims many men. But I could and would sacrifice
-whatever the desert means to me, for Genie’s sake, if it--if there was
-not a reason which makes that impossible.”
-
-“And now you’re hunting a home for her?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“She’s well educated, you said?”
-
-“Her mother was a school-teacher.”
-
-“Then she could teach children.... Things work out strangely in life,
-don’t they? My Betty might be left alone. Any girl may become an
-orphan.”
-
-“Now, Mrs. Blair, will you be so kind as to take Genie, or go with us
-into town, and help us get some clothes for her? A few simple dresses
-and things she needs. I’d be helpless. And Genie knows so little. She
-ought to have a woman go with her.”
-
-“Indeed she shall have,” declared Mrs. Blair. “I’ll be only too glad
-to go. I need some things----” Then she struck her forehead with a
-plump hand. “I’ve a better idea. There’s not much to be bought in the
-store at Santa Ysabel. But my neighbor up the valley--his name is
-Hunt--he has a granddaughter. They’re city folks. They’ve been somebody
-once. This granddaughter is older than Genie--she’s more of a woman’s
-figure--and I heard her say only the other day that she brought a lot
-of outgrown dresses with her and didn’t know what to do with them. All
-her clothes are fine--not like you buy out here.... I’ll take Genie
-over there right this minute!”
-
-Mrs. Blair got up and began to untie her apron. Kindliness beamed upon
-her countenance and she seemed to have acquired a more thoughtful eye.
-
-“You’re good indeed,” said Adam, gratefully. “I thank you. It will be
-so much nicer for Genie. She dreaded this matter of clothes. You can
-tell Miss Hunt I’d be glad to pay----”
-
-“Shucks! She wouldn’t take your money. She’s quality, I told you. And
-her name’s not Hunt. That’s her grandfather’s name. I don’t know what
-hers is--except he calls her Ruth.”
-
-Ruth! The sudden mention of that name seemed to Adam like a stab. What
-a queer, inexplicable sensation followed it!
-
-“I’ll be right out,” declared Mrs. Blair, bustling into the house.
-
-Adam called Genie to him and explained what was to happen. She grew
-radiant.
-
-“Oh, Wanny, then I won’t have to go into a town--to be laughed at--and
-I can get--get dressed like--like a lady--before he sees me again!” she
-exclaimed, breathlessly.
-
-“He? Who’s that, Genie?” inquired Adam, dryly, though he knew he could
-guess very well.
-
-Genie might have lived on the desert, like a shy, lonely, wild
-creature, but she was eternally feminine enough to bite her tongue at
-the slip she had made, and to blush charmingly.
-
-Then Mrs. Blair bustled out again, in sunbonnet and shawl, and with the
-alacrity of excitement she led Genie away through the grove of oaks
-toward the other end of the valley.
-
-Adam returned to camp, much relieved and pleased, yet finding suddenly
-that a grave, pondering mood had come upon him. In the still noon hour,
-when the sun was hot and the flies buzzed lazily, Adam would surely
-have succumbed to drowsiness had he not been vociferously hailed by
-some one. He sat up to hear one of the little Blairs call, “Say, my maw
-wants you to eat with us.”
-
-Adam lumbered up and, trying to accommodate his giant steps to those
-of the urchin, finally reached the house. He heard Mrs. Blair in the
-kitchen. Then something swift and white rushed upon Adam from somewhere.
-
-“_Look!_” it cried, in ecstatic tones, and pirouetted before his
-dazzled eyes.
-
-Genie! In a white dress, white slippers--all white, even to the rapt,
-beautiful, strangely transformed face! It was a Genie he could not
-recognize. Yet, however her dark gold-glinting tresses were brushed and
-arranged, he would have known their rare, rich color. And the eyes were
-Genie’s--vivid like the heart of a magenta cactus flower, unutterably
-and terribly expressive of happiness. But all else--the girl’s height
-and form and movement--had acquired something subtly feminine. The
-essence of woman breathed from her.
-
-“Oh, Wanny, I’ve a whole _bundle_ of dresses!” she cried, rapturously.
-“And I put this on to please you.”
-
-“Pleased!... Dear girl, I’m--I’m full of joy for you--overcome for
-myself,” exclaimed Adam. How, in that moment, he blessed the nameless
-spirit which had come to him the day Genie’s fate and future hung in
-the balance! What a victory for him to remember--seen now in the light
-of Genie’s lovely face!
-
-Then Mrs. Blair bustled in. Easy indeed was it to see how the
-happiness of others affected her. “It’s good we have dinner at noon,”
-she said, as she put dish after dish upon the table, “else we’d had to
-do with little. Sit at table, folks.... Children, you must wait. We’ve
-company.... Gene, come to dinner.”
-
-Adam found himself opposite Genie, who had suddenly seemed to lose
-her intensity, though not her glow. She had softened. The fierce joy
-had gone. Adam, watching her, received from her presence a thrill of
-expectancy, and realized that at least one of her sensations of the
-moment was being conveyed to him. Then Eugene entered. His face shone.
-He had wet his hair and brushed it and put on a coat. If something new
-and strange was happening to Genie, it had already happened to Eugene
-Blair.
-
-“Folks, help yourselves and help each other,” said Mrs. Blair.
-
-Adam was ready for that. What a happy dinner! He ate with the relish of
-a desert man long used to sour dough and bacon, but he had keen ears
-for Mrs. Blair’s chatter and eyes for Genie and Eugene. The mother,
-too, had a steady and thoughtful gaze for the young couple, and her
-mind was apparently upon weightier matters than her speech indicated.
-
-“Well, folks,” said Mrs. Blair, presently, “if you’ve all had enough,
-I’ll call the children.”
-
-Eugene arose with alacrity. “Let’s go outdoors,” he said, stealing
-a shy look at Genie. She seemed to move in a trance. Adam went out,
-too, and found himself under the oaks. The very air was potent with
-the expectancy that Adam had sensed in the house. Something was about
-to happen. It puzzled him. Yet he liked the suspense. But he was
-nonplused. The young couple did not present a riddle. All the same,
-the instant Adam felt convinced of this he looked at them and lost his
-conviction. They did present a riddle. He had not seen any other lad
-and girl together for many years, but somehow he wagered to himself
-that if he had seen a thousand couples, this one would stand out
-strikingly.
-
-Then Mrs. Blair appeared. She had the look of a woman to whom decision
-had come. The hospitality, the kindly interest in Genie, the happiness
-in seeing others made happy, were in abeyance to a strong, serious
-emotion.
-
-“Mr. Wansfell, if you’ll consent I’ll give Genie a home here with me,”
-she said.
-
-“Consent!... I--I gladly do that,” he replied, with strong agitation.
-“You are a--a good woman, Mrs. Blair. I am overwhelmed with gladness
-for Genie--for her luck.... It’s so sudden--so unexpected.”
-
-“Some things happen that way,” she replied. “They just come about. I
-took to Genie right off. So did my boy. I asked him--when we got back
-from our neighbor’s--if it would not be a good idea to keep Genie.
-We are poor. It’s one more to feed and clothe. But she can help. And
-she’ll teach the children. That means a great deal to me and Gene....
-He would be glad, he said. So I thought it over--and I’ve decided.
-We’ve your consent.... Now, Genie, will you stay and have a home with
-us?”
-
-“Oh, I’ll--I’ll be so happy! I’ll try so--so hard!” faltered Genie.
-
-“Then--it’s settled. My dear girl, we’ll try to make you happy,”
-declared Mrs. Blair, and, sitting beside Genie, she embraced her.
-
-Adam’s happiness was so acute it seemed pain. But was his feeling
-all happiness? What had Genie’s quick look meant--the intense
-soul-searching flash she gave him when Mrs. Blair had said it was all
-settled? Genie’s desert eyes saw separation from the man who had been
-savior, father, brother. One flash of eyes--then she was again lost in
-this immense and heart-numbing idea of a home. Adam saw Eugene look at
-her as his mother enfolded her. And Adam’s heart suddenly lifted to
-exaltation. Youth to youth! The wonderful, the calling, the divine! The
-lad’s look was soulful, absorbing, full of strange, deep melancholy,
-full of dreamy, distant, unconscious enchantment. What had seemed
-mysterious was now as clear as the sunlight. By some happy chance of
-life the homeless Genie had been guided to a good woman and a noble
-lad. Goodness was the commonest quality in the hearts of women; and
-nobility, in youth at least, flowered in the breast of every man.
-
-And while Eugene thus gazed at Genie she lifted her eyelids, so heavy
-with their dreams, and met his gaze. Suddenly she sweetly, strangely
-blushed and looked away, at Adam, through him to the beyond. She seemed
-full of a vague, dreaming sweetness of life; a faint smile played round
-her lips; her face lost its scarlet wave for pearly whiteness; and
-tears splashed down upon her listless hands.
-
-The moment, with all it revealed to Adam, swiftly passed.
-
-“Gene, take her and show her the horses,” said Mrs. Blair. “She said
-she loved horses. Show her all around. We’ll let the work go by to-day.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mrs. Blair talked awhile with Adam, asking to know more about Genie,
-and confiding her own practical plans. Then she bustled off to look
-after the children, who had been forgotten.
-
-Adam was left to the happiest and most grateful reflections of his
-life. Much good must come for him, for his lonely hours, when once
-more the wastelands claimed him; but that was the only thought he gave
-himself. Lounging back on the old rustic bench, he gave himself up to a
-growing delight of anticipation. These good Blairs did not dream that
-in offering Genie a home out of the kindliness of their hearts they
-had touched prosperity. They were poor. But Genie was rich. They meant
-to share with the orphan their little; they had no thought of anything
-Genie might share with them. Adam decided that he would buy the ninety
-acres, and the hundred in the valley beyond it; and horses, cattle,
-all the stock and implements for a fine ranch. Genie, innocent and
-bewildered child that she was, had utterly forgotten her bags of gold.
-On the next day, or soon, Adam meant to borrow Gene’s horse and buggy
-and drive to Santa Ysabel and then to San Diego. He must find some
-good investment for the rest of Genie’s gold, and a good bank, and
-some capable and reliable person to look after her affairs. How like a
-fairy story it would seem to Genie! What amazement and delight it would
-occasion Mrs. Blair! And as for the lad, no gold could enhance Genie’s
-charm for him. Gene would love Genie! Adam had seen it written in their
-unconscious eyes. And Gene would have the working of the beautiful
-ranch his eager heart had longed for. For the first time Adam realized
-the worth of gold. Here it would be a golden harvest.
-
-Dreaming thus, Adam was only faintly aware of voices and footsteps that
-drew nearer; and suddenly he seemed transfixed and thrilling, his gaze
-on a face he knew, the face on the miniature he carried--the lovely
-face of Ruth Virey.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
-“The foxes have holes--the birds of the air have nests!” cried Adam.
-
-Was it he who lay there with aching heart and burning eyes? Ah! Again
-the lonely wasteland claimed him. That illimitable desert was home.
-Whose face was that limned on the clouds, and set into the beaten bossy
-mosaic of the sands, and sculptored in the contour of the dim, colored
-ranges?
-
-His burros nipped the sage behind him as he lay, back against a stone,
-on the lofty height of the Sierra Madre divide, gazing down into that
-boundless void. What was it that had happened? Ah! He had fled! And he
-lived over again for the thousandth time, that week--that fleeting week
-of transport with its endless regrets--in which he had found Genie a
-home, in which the daughter of Magdalene Virey had stormed his soul.
-
-Vague and happy those first days when he bought the valley lands and
-flooded them with cattle--vague because of the slow gathering of
-insupportable and unconscious love--happy because he lived with Genie’s
-rapture and her romance. Vivid were some of the memories--when he
-placed in Genie’s little brown hands papers and deeds and bankbooks,
-and by a gesture, as if by magic, proclaimed to her wondering
-sense the truth of a tale of Aladdin; when, to the serious-faced
-mother, pondering the costs, he announced her once more owner of the
-long-regretted land; when, to a fire-eyed lad, he had drawn aside the
-veil of the future.
-
-But vague, mystic as a troubled dream, the inception of a love that
-rose like the blaze of the sun--vague as the opaque dawn of the
-desert! Whenever he looked up, by night or day, at task or idleness,
-there shone the lovely face, pale as a dawn-hazed star, a face like
-Magdalene Virey’s, with all of its beauty, but naught of its passion;
-with all of its charm, yet none of its havoc. With youth, and bloom,
-and wide-open purple eyes, dark as midnight, staring at fate. And a
-voice like the voice of her mother, sweet, but not mocking, haunted the
-dreams of the man and lived in the winds.
-
-“And you are a desert man,” she had said.
-
-“Yes--a desert man,” he had replied.
-
-“There’s a place I want to go some day--when I am twenty-one.... Death
-Valley! Do you know it? My grandfather says I’m mad.”
-
-“Death Valley! For such as you? Stay--never go near that awful hell!”
-
-The ghastly white pit and its naked red walls, the midnight furnace
-winds with their wailing roar, the long, long slopes to the avalanche
-graves! Ah! the torment of his heart, the tragedy he would hide,
-and the secret he must keep, and the miniature that burned in its
-place--they drew her with the invisible cords of life and fate. What he
-would spare her surged in the air that she breathed.
-
-She had come to him under the oaks, and yet again, quitting her
-friends, drawn to the lonely desert man.
-
-“They told me Genie’s story,” she said, and her eyes spoke eloquent
-praise her lips denied. “And so--her mother and father died on the
-desert.... Tell me, desert man, what does Death Valley look like?”
-
-“It is night; it is hell--death and desolation--the grave of the
-desert, yellow and red and gray--lonely, lonely, lonely silent land!”
-
-“But you love it!... Genie says the Indians call you Eagle--because you
-have the eye of the eagle.... Tell me.... Tell me....”
-
-And she made him talk, and she came again. Vague, sweet, first hours
-they were, with their drawing pain. Was it well to wake in the night,
-with eyes darker than the darkness, peering into his soul? Her mother’s
-eyes--with all the glory and none of the shame! She had come another
-day and then the next, while time stood still with its mocking wait.
-
-Not vaguely came a scene: “I will tell you of the desert,” and a part
-of his story followed, brief and hard.
-
-“Ah! I would be a man,” she said. “I would never run. I would never
-hide.”
-
-Mocking words from a tongue too sweet to mock! She had her mother’s
-spirit. And Adam groped in the gloom, to the glee of his devils of
-scorn. The grass by day and the grass by night felt the impress of
-his face. Then love--first real love of youth, and noble passion of
-man--blazed as the sun in his face. From that revelation all was clear
-in the bursting light of calamity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ruth was coming under the oaks. She liked the cool shade and hated
-the glare. She was nineteen, with a woman’s form and her mother’s
-eyes--proud, sweet, aloof.
-
-“Desert man, I am lonesome,” she said. “My grandfather has gone again.
-He is chasing some new will-o’-the-wisp. Gold and mines, cattle and
-land--and now it’s water. He has an ear for every man.”
-
-“Lonesome? You! What do you know of loneliness?” asked Adam.
-
-“There’s a loneliness of soul.”
-
-“Ah! but you are young. Go help Genie plan her home.”
-
-“Genie and Gene! Two people with but one voice! They cannot hear or see
-anyone but themselves. It’s a pity to invade their paradise. _I_ will
-not.... And, oh, how beautiful the world must be to them!”
-
-“Ruth, is it not so to you?”
-
-“Beautiful lands and greens and waters!” she exclaimed, in restless
-discontent. “But I cannot live on scenery. There is joy here, but none
-for me.... I lost my mother and I can’t forget. She _had_ to leave me
-and go with him--my father. My father who loved me as a child and hated
-me as a girl. Oh, it’s all a mystery! She went with him to the desert.
-Gold mad--she said he was. She had her debt to pay. And _I_ could not
-be taken to Death Valley.”
-
-“You have never heard from her since the parting?”
-
-“Never.... And I am a woman now. Some day I will go to Death Valley.”
-
-“Why?” he asked.
-
-“Because _they_ went there.”
-
-“But no one lives long in that valley of death.”
-
-“Then I will find their graves,” she said.
-
-“Ruth, you must not. What good can come of your traveling there? I’ve
-told you of its desolate and forbidding nature. You are all wrong.
-Wait! Perhaps your mother will--perhaps you will hear of her some day.”
-
-“Oh, desert man, I was a child when we parted. I’m a woman now. I want
-to _know_. The mystery haunts me. _She_ loved me--ah, so well!...
-Sometimes I cannot bear to live. My grandfather hides me in lonely
-places. We meet but few people, and those he repels. It is because of
-_me_.... Desert man, I am lonelier than was Genie. She is like a bird.
-She must have lived on the sun and the winds. But _I_ am no child, and
-_I_ am forlorn.”
-
-Brooding purple eyes of trouble, of longing, of discontent, of fire
-for life! The heart and soul of Ruth Virey--the heritage of need and
-unrest--shone from her eyes. All unconsciously she longed to be loved.
-She stood on the threshold of womanhood like a leaf in a storm.
-
-“Talk with me, walk with me, desert man,” she said, wistfully. “You
-were Taquitch for Genie. Be Eagle for me. Your eyes know the desert
-where my mother sleeps--where perhaps her spirit wanders. You soothe my
-troubled heart. Oh, I can feel _myself_ with you, for you understand.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus Adam’s soul was stormed. Magdalene Virey had presaged the future.
-In the dark stillness of the night, sleepless, haunted, tossed by
-torment, it was revealed to him that Magdalene Virey had risen out of
-the depths on noble love for him, and through that love she had seen
-with mystic eyes into the future. She had projected that love into the
-spirit of the desert, and it had guided Adam’s wandering steps to her
-daughter Ruth. Was this only a wanderer’s dream as he lay on the hills?
-Was it only a knot in the tangled skein of his desert life? Was it
-inscrutable design of a power he disdained?
-
-Be what this might, the one great love of his years possessed him,
-fierce and resistless on its march to his defeat. It mocked his ordeal.
-It flaunted a banner in his face--noble love, noble passion, love of
-the soul, all that revered woman, wife, mother, and babe. He had found
-his mate. Strange how he remembered Margarita Arallanes and the wild
-boy’s love of a day. Poor, pale, wasteful, sinful, lustful little
-gleam! And he recalled the spell of Genie--that strong call of nature
-in the wilderness. Above both he had arisen. But Ruth Virey was _the_
-woman. He could win her. The truth beat at his temples, constricted his
-throat. Ruth was the flower of her mother’s tragic longing to be loved.
-Ruth burned with that longing. And life was not to be denied. Magdalene
-Virey had given him this child of her agony. She trusted the fate of
-Ruth in his hands. She saw with superhuman eyes.
-
-A deep tenderness for Ruth pervaded Adam’s soul. Who, of all men,
-could love her, save her, content her as he? It was not thought of her
-kisses, of her embraces, that plucked at the roots of his will. Like a
-passing wave the thrill of such bliss went out to the might of a nobler
-tide. To save Ruth from the fate of her mother, from the peril of her
-own heart! And in the saving, a home--happiness--the tender smile of a
-mother--and the kiss of a child!
-
-“But I am a criminal! I am a murderer! Any day I might be hanged before
-her very eyes!” he whispered, with his face in the grass, his fingers
-digging the turf. “Still--no one would ever recognize me now.... Ah!
-but _he_--that human wolf Collishaw--would not he know me?... Oh, if
-there be God--help me in my extremity!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once again he met her. As he rode up the valley at sunset she came out
-of the oak grove.
-
-“I’ve been with Genie. Desert man, her happiness frightens me. Oh, I
-love her! You tell me of your hard, lonely, terrible desert life. Why,
-your ears should ring with bells of joy forever. It is _you_ who have
-built her castle. What other deeds, like that, have you done--in those
-bitter years you tell of?”
-
-“Not many, Ruth--perhaps not one.”
-
-“I don’t believe you. I am learning you, desert man. And, oh, I wish
-you knew how it swells my heart to hear Genie tell of what you did for
-her. Every day she tells me something new.... Ah! and more--for to-day
-she said you would be leaving soon.”
-
-“Yes, Ruth--soon,” he said.
-
-“Back to the lonely land?”
-
-“Yes, back to the sage and sand and the big dark hills. Yes, it will be
-a lonely land,” he replied, sadly.
-
-“And you will wander down the trails until you meet some one--some
-woman or child or man--sick or miserable or lost--and then you will
-stop.”
-
-Adam had no answer.
-
-“The Indians called you Eagle,” she went on, and her tone startled him
-with its hint of remembered mockery. “You have the desert eye--you
-see so far.... But you don’t see _here_!... Why should you waste your
-splendid strength, your magnificent manhood, wandering over the desert
-_if_ it’s only for unhappy people? Desert man, you are great. But you
-could do more good here--you could find more misery here.... I know one
-whose heart is breaking. And you’ve never _seen_, for all your eagle
-eye!”
-
-“Listen, you morbid girl,” he returned, stung as with fire. “I am not
-great. I am lost. I go to the desert because it is home.... Don’t think
-of me! But look to yourself. Look into your heart. Fear it, Ruth Virey.
-You are a spoiled, dreamful, passionate child. But you have a mind and
-you have a will. You can conquer your unrest, your discontent. Revere
-the memory of your mother, but grieve no more. The past is dead. Learn
-to fight. You are no fighter. You are weak. You give in to loneliness,
-sadness, longing. Resolve to be a woman! You must live your life.
-Make it worth while. Every man, every woman, has a burden. Lift yours
-cheerfully and begin to climb.... Work for your grandfather. He needs
-your help. Love those with whom fate has placed you. And fight--fight
-the dark moods, the selfish thoughts, the hateful memories! Fight
-like a desert beast for your life. Work--work till you bruise those
-beautiful hands. Work with a hoe, if you can find nothing else. Love to
-see things grow green and flower and give fruit. Love the animals, the
-birds, and learn from them; love all nature, so that when you meet a
-man some day, _the_ man, you can love him. That is what it means to be
-a woman. You are a beautiful, sweet, useless, and petulant girl. But be
-so no more. Be a woman!”
-
-Pale and shocked, with brimming eyes and tremulous lips, she replied:
-
-“Stay--stay, desert man, and make me a woman!”
-
-And those sad dark eyes and those sweet murmured words had made him
-flee--flee like a craven in the night. Yes, for Ruth’s sake he had
-fled. Not a farewell to Genie--not a wave of his hand, but gone in the
-night--gone forever out of their lives!
-
- * * * * *
-
-“The foxes have holes--the birds of the air have nests!” cried Adam, to
-the listening silence.
-
-Was it he who lay there with broken heart and magnified sight? Yes,
-wanderer of the wasteland again! Back to the lonely land! That
-limitless expanse of rock and sand was home. Was not that Ruth’s face
-limned on the clouds? Did not her sad, reproachful eyes haunt him in
-the dim, purple distances?
-
-From the lofty divide of the Sierra Madres Adam gazed down into the
-void he called home. Beyond the gray sands and far beyond the red
-reaches he saw across the California Desert into Arizona, and down into
-Mexico, and to the dim, blue Gulf.
-
-Home! All the years of Adam’s desert experience were needed to grasp
-the meaning of the stupendous scene. The eye of the eagle, the sight
-of the condor, supreme over the desert, most marvelous and delicate
-work of nature, could only behold, could only range that sun-blasted
-burned-out empire of the wastelands. Only the mind of man, the thought
-of man, could understand it. And for Adam it was home, and to his
-piercing eyes a thing, a place, a world, terribly true and beautiful
-and comforting, upon which he seemed driven to gaze and gaze, so that
-forever it must be limned on his vision and his memory.
-
-The day was one of sunlight and storm, of blue sky and purple clouds
-and fleecy white, of palls of swirling gray snow and dark veils of
-downward-streaming rain. The Sierra Madres rolled away on either side,
-range on range, rising to the north in the might of slow league-long
-mountain swell, until far against the stormy sky stood the old
-white-capped heave of San Gorgonio looming over the gray Mohave; and to
-the south, like the wave undulations of a calm sea, sank the long low
-lines of the arid arm of desert land.
-
-Beneath Adam piled the foothills, round and old and gray, sage gray,
-lavender gray, lilac gray, all so strangely gray--upheaved hills of
-aged earth and dust and stone. Hill by hill they lowered, with glaring
-gorges between, solitary hills and winding ranges and clustered domes,
-split by canyons and cleft by brushy ravines--miles and miles of
-foothills, reluctantly surrendering allegiance to the peaks above,
-moving downward as surely as the grains of their slopes, weathering and
-spreading at last in the sands.
-
-Away and away flowed that gray Sahara with its specks of sage, ribbed
-by its ridges of dunes. Immense and unbounded it swept to its center,
-the Salton Sink--bowl of the desert--a great lake of colored silt,
-a ghastly, glaring stain on the earth, over which the storm clouds
-trailed their veils of rain, and shadows like colossal ships sailed
-the sandy main. Away to the southward it flowed, level and shining, at
-last to rise and meet the blue sky in lucent spurs of gold and white.
-This landmark contrasted singularly with the Salton Sink. It was the
-illusive and shifting line of the Superstition Mountains, where the
-wind sheeted the sands, and by night or day, like the changing of
-tides, went on with its mysterious transformation. These giant sand
-hills caught the sunlight through a rift in the broken clouds. And dim
-under the dunes showed the scalloped, dark shadows.
-
-But these foothills and sand plains were only the edge of the desert.
-Beyond marched the mountain ranges. Vast, upheaved, crinkled crust of
-the naked earth, scored by fire, scarred by age, cracked by earthquake,
-and stained in the rusty reds and colored chocolates of the iron rocks!
-Down to the rim of the Salton Sink sheered a ragged range. Over it
-centered the lowering storm clouds, gray and drab and purple, with rays
-of the sun filtering through, lighting the grim, dark hardness, showing
-the smoky gloom. And where the ridge ran down to the desert, to make
-the lines of the sandy lake, it resembled a shore of the river Styx.
-
-Beyond gleamed the Chocolate Mountains, sharp in the sunshine, canyoned
-and blue. And still beyond them, over the valley and far, rose the
-myriad mountains of Arizona, dim, hazed land, mystic land, like a land
-of desert dreams. In the distant south, around the blunt end of the
-Chocolates, came a valley winding palely green, with a line following
-its center, where the Rio Colorado meandered in its course to the blue
-waters of the Gulf. Over the shadowy shapes of mountains in haze, over
-the horizon of Arizona, there seemed a blank, pale wall of sky, strange
-to the eye. Was it the oblivion of sight, the infinitude of heaven?
-Piercing constant gaze at last brought to Adam the ghostly mountains of
-Mexico, the faintest of faint tracery of peaks, doubtful, then lost,
-the lonely Sonorian land.
-
-“And that is my home!” he cried to the winds. Slow tears bathed his
-eyes, and, closing them, he rested his strained sight. A strange peace
-seemed to have stolen over him with his vision and grasp of the desert.
-A low, soft moan of wind in the crevices of rocks lulled his senses
-for the revel that was to come. He heard his burros nipping at the
-brush behind his back. From the heights an eagle shrilled its wild
-whistle of freedom and of solitude. One of the burros brayed, loud and
-bawling, a jarring note in a silence. Discordant sound it was, that yet
-brought a smile and a pang to Adam. For only yesterday--or was it long
-ago--what was it that had happened?
-
-When he opened his eyes the desert under him and the infinity over him
-had been transfigured.
-
-Only the full blaze of the sun! But a glory dwelt in the clouds and
-in the wide blue expanse of heaven. Silver-edged rents, purple ships
-in a golden sky, the long, fan-shaped rays of the sun, white rainbows
-of haze--these extended from the north across the arch to the open--a
-great peacefulness of light, deep and tender and blue.
-
-Beneath lay the mirror of earth, the sun-fired ranges like chased
-and beaten gold, laid with shining jewels all around the resplendent
-desert. Mountains of porphyry marched down to the sands, rocks of
-bronze red burned down to the sands. The white columnar pillars of the
-clouds seemed reflected in the desert, slow-gliding across the lucent
-wastes; and the mosaic of mountain and plain had its mirage in the sky.
-Above and below worked the alchemy of nature, mutable and evanescent,
-the dying of day, the passing of life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
-Going down into the desert, Adam found that his steps were no longer
-wandering and aimless. And the nearer he got to the canyon pass in the
-Chocolates, the stronger grew his strange eagerness.
-
-For years memory of that camp where he had fought starvation had drawn
-him like a magnet. He was weary with delving into the gulf of himself,
-trying to know his nature and heart and soul. Always he was beyond
-himself. No sooner was one mystery solved than another and deeper one
-presented itself; one victory gained than a more desperate trial faced
-him. He only knew the old camp called him resistlessly. Something would
-come to him there.
-
-Travel and tasks of morn and eve were so habitual with him that they
-made little break in his thought. And that thought, like his desert
-steps, had traveled in a circle. He was nearing the places where he
-had begun his fight with physical forces. His every step brought him
-so much closer to the terrible deed that had so bitterly colored and
-directed his desert life.
-
-He crossed the sandy basin from the Sierra Madres to the Chocolates
-in four days, two of his camps being dry. And on the fifth, in
-the afternoon, when the long shadows had begun to creep out from
-the mountains across sand and sage, he climbed the swelling,
-well-remembered slope where Charley Jim had lured the antelope, and
-gazed down into the oasis where he had all but starved to death, and
-where Oella had saved his life.
-
-What struck him with gladness was to find the gray-green, lonely scene
-identical with the picture in his memory. How well he remembered! And
-it was twelve years--thirteen--fourteen years! Yet time had made
-little or no change in the oasis. Nature worked slowly in the desert.
-
-His burros scented the water and trotted down the sage bank, bobbing
-their packs, kicking up little puffs of odorous dust. Adam stood still
-and gazed long. He seemed to be almost ready to draw a deep, full
-breath of melancholy joy. Then he descended to the sandy, rock-studded
-floor of the canyon, and on the wide white stream bed, where, as
-always, a slender stream tinkled over the pearly pebbles. How strange
-that he should fall into the exact course where once he had worn a
-trail! The flat stones upon which he stepped were as familiar as if
-he had trod them yesterday. But inside the palm grove time had made
-changes. The thatched huts were gone and the open places were overgrown
-with brush. No one had inhabited the oasis for many years.
-
-Leisurely he pitched camp, working with a sense of comfort and pleasure
-at the anticipation of a permanent, or at least an indefinite, stay
-there. Of all his lonely camps on the desert, this had been the
-loneliest. He called it Lost Oasis. Here he could spend days and
-weeks, basking like a lizard in the sunshine, feeling his loneliness,
-listening to the silence; and he could climb to the heights and dream,
-and watch, and live again those wonderful, revealing, unthinking
-moments when he went back to savage nature.
-
-After his work and meal were finished, and sunset was coloring the sky,
-Adam wandered around through the willows and along the stream. He stood
-for some time looking down upon the sandy bar where he had stumbled
-in pursuit of the rattlesnake and it had bitten him in the face. And
-then he went from one familiar place to another, sitting at last in the
-twilight, under the palms where Oella had nursed and fed him back to
-life and strength. Where was she now--that tranquil, somber-eyed Indian
-maiden who had refused to wed one of her race and who had died of a
-broken heart? The twilight seemed prophetic, the rustling palms seemed
-whispering. Both sadness and pleasure mingled in Adam’s return.
-
-But the nameless something, the vague assurance of content, the
-end of that restless, strange sense of hurrying onward still to
-seek, to find--these feelings seemed about to come to him, yet held
-tantalizingly aloof. To-morrow surely! He was tired with his long
-travel, and it would take a little time once more to adjust himself to
-loneliness. The perfect peace of loneliness had not yet come back to
-him. His mind was too full to attend to the seeing, listening, feeling
-that constituted harmony with the desert. Yet something was beginning
-to come between remembrances of the immediate past and the insistent
-premonitions of the present. When he lay down in his blankets to hear
-the low rustle of the wind in the palms and to see the haunting stars,
-it was to realize that they were the same as always, but that he
-himself had changed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next day he climbed to the heights where he had learned to hunt
-mountain sheep, where he had learned the watching, listening, primitive
-joy of the Indian. He thrilled in the climb, he breathed deep of the
-keen, cold wind, he gazed afar with piercing eyes. Hours, like those of
-a lonely eagle on a crag, Adam spent there, and he wooed back to him
-the watching, listening power with its reward of sweet, wild elation.
-But as the westering sun sent him down the mountain, he felt a vague
-regret. The indefinable something eluded him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the dusk Adam walked along the rim of the slope above the oasis.
-He had watched the sunset fade over the desert, and the shading of
-twilight, and the gathering of dusk.
-
-He wondered what it would mean to him now to be lost without water or
-food down there in the wasteland. Would panic seize him? He imagined
-it would be only as long as he was not sure of death. When he realized
-that, he would find strength and peace to meet his doom. But what
-agony to look up at the starlit heaven and breathe farewell to
-beautiful life, to the strong, sweet wine of nature, to the memory of
-love!
-
-To die alone down there? Ah! Why did his thoughts turn to death? To
-lie down on the sand and the sage of the desert, in the dead darkness
-of night, would be terrible. Yet, would it really be? Would not
-something come to his soul? A strong man’s farewell to life, out there
-on the lonesome desert, would be elemental and natural. But the hour
-of facing death--how sad, lonely, tragic! Yet it had been bravely met
-by countless men over all the desolate deserts of the dreary world.
-All men did not feel alike. Perhaps the strongest, bravest, calmest,
-would suffer the least. Still, it was Adam’s conviction that to look up
-at the indifferent heavens and to send a hopeless cry out across the
-desert, realizing the end, remembering with anguish the faces of loved
-ones, would indeed be a bursting of the heart.
-
-Life was so short. Hope and love so futile! Home and family--ah! a
-brother--should be treasured, and lived for with all the power of blood
-and mind. Friends should be precious. It was realization that a man
-needed.
-
-A crescent beautiful moon soared up over the dark bulk of the mountain.
-Adam paced to and fro in a sandy glade of the oasis. All the immensity
-of desert and infinity of sky seemed to be at work to overwhelm him.
-The stars--so white, wonderful, watching, eyes of heaven, remorseless
-and wise! Not a sigh of wind stirred under the palms, not a quiver of
-a leaf. Nature seemed so strange, beautiful, waiting. All waited! Was
-it for him? The shadows on the white sand wrote Adam’s story of wild
-youth and crime and flight and agony and passion and love. How sad the
-low chirp of insects! Adam paced there a long time, thinking thoughts
-he never had before, feeling things he never felt before--realizing the
-brevity of life, the soul of sorrow, the truth of nature, the sweetness
-of women, the glory of children, the happiness of work and home.
-
-Something was charging the air around Adam; something was surging deep
-in his soul.
-
-What was the meaning of that which confounded his emotions? Adam’s
-soul seemed trembling on the verge of a great lesson, that had been
-hidden all the years and now began to dawn upon him in the glory of
-the firmament--in the immensity of the earth--in the sense of endless
-space--in the meaning of time--in the nothingness of man.
-
-Suddenly a faint coldness, not of wind nor of chill air, but of
-something intangible, stole over Adam. He shivered. He had felt it
-before, though never so strong. And his sense of loneliness vanished.
-He was not alone! All around he peered, not frightened or aghast, but
-uncertain, vaguely conscious of a sense that seemed unnatural. The
-shadow of his lofty form showed dark on the sand. It walked with him as
-he walked. Was there a spirit in keeping with his steps?
-
-Disturbed in mind, Adam went to bed. When he awoke there had come to
-him in the night, in his sleep or in his dreams, whispered words from
-Genie’s mother, ringing words from Ruth Virey, “I will come to you out
-on the desert.” Mrs. Linwood had meant that to be proof of immortal
-life of the soul--of God. And Ruth had rung at him: “I would be a man.
-I would never run. I would never hide!”
-
-Then the still, small voice of conscience became a clarion. Torment
-seized Adam. The lonely lure of the desert had betrayed him. There
-was no rest--no peace. He was driven. He had dreamed of himself as a
-wanderer driven down the naked shingles of the desert. No dream, but
-reality!
-
-He spent the day upon the heights, feeling that there, if anywhere,
-he might shake this burden of his consciousness. In vain! He was
-a civilized man, and only in rare moments could he go back to the
-forgetfulness of the savage. He had a soul. It was a living flame.
-The heights failed him. A haunting whisper breathed in the wind
-and an invisible spirit kept pace with his steps. And at last, in
-slow-mounting swell of heart, with terror in his soul, he faced the
-south. Ah! How sharp the pang in his breast! Picacho! There, purple
-against the sky, seemingly close, stood up the turreted and castled
-peak under the shadow of which lay the grave of his brother. And Adam
-sent out a lonely and terrible cry down the winds toward the place that
-resistlessly called him. He was called and he must go. He had wandered
-in a circle. All his steps had bent toward the scene of his crime. From
-the first to the last he had been wandering back to his punishment.
-He saw it now. That was the call--that the guide--that the nameless
-something charging the air.
-
-Realization gave him a moment’s savageness--the power of body over
-mind. Heart and blood and pulse and nerve burst red hot to the fight,
-and to passionate love of liberty, of life. He was in the grasp of
-a giant of the ages. He fought as he had fought thirst, starvation,
-loneliness--as he had fought the desert and the wild beasts and wilder
-men of that desert. The deep and powerful instinct which he had
-conquered for Genie’s sake--the noble emotion of love and bliss that
-he had overcome for Ruth’s sake--what were these compared to the hell
-in his heart now? It was love of life that made him a fierce wild cat
-of the desert. Had not the desert taught him its secret to survive, to
-breathe, to see, to listen, to live?
-
-Thus the I of Adam’s soul was arraigned in pitiless strife with the Me
-of his body. Like a wild and hunted creature he roamed the mountain
-top, halting at the old resting places, there to sit like a stone, to
-lie on his face, to writhe and fight and cry in his torment. At sunset
-he staggered down the trail, spent and haggard, to take up useless
-tasks, to find food tasteless and sleep impossible. Thus passed the
-next day and yet another, before there came a break in his passion and
-his strength.
-
-The violence of physical effort wore itself out. He remained in camp,
-still locked in deadly grip with himself, but wearing to that end
-in which his conscience would rise supreme, or he would sink forever
-debased.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A perfect white night came in which Adam felt that the oasis and
-its environment presented a soul-quieting scene. What incredible
-paradox that he must go to nature for the strength to save himself
-from himself! To the nature that made him a savage--that urged in
-him the strife of the wolf! The moon, half full, shone overhead in a
-cloudless blue sky where great white stars twinkled. No wind stirred.
-The palms drooped, sad and graceful, strangely quiet. They were meant
-for wind. The shadows they cast were of nameless shapes. A wavering
-dark line of horizon wandered away to be lost in the wilderness. So
-still, so tranquil, so sweet the night! There were only two sounds--the
-melancholy notes of a night hawk, and the low, faint moan from the
-desert. The desert to Adam seemed a vast river, flowing slowly, down
-the levels of the earth to distant gates. Its moan was one of immutable
-power and motive. By this soft, low, strange moan the world seemed to
-be dominated. A spirit was out there in the gloom--a spirit from the
-illimitable, star-studded infinite above. And it was this spirit that
-came, at rare intervals, and whispered to Adam’s consciousness. Madman
-or knave, he was being conquered.
-
-“I would never hide!” Ruth Virey had said in passionate scorn.
-
-She was like her mother, wonderful as steel in her will. Yet these
-women seemed all heart. They transcended men in love, in sacrifice, in
-that living flame of soul, turbulent and unquenchable as the fire of
-the sun.
-
-“_I’ll hide no more!_” burst from Adam, and the whisper startled him,
-like those soundless whispers in the shadows.
-
-He could live no longer a life in hiding. He must stand, in his own
-consciousness, if only for a moment, free to look any man in the
-face, free to be worthy to love Ruth Virey, free as the eagle of his
-spirit. He would no longer hide from man, from punishment. Love of that
-purple-eyed girl had been a stinging, quickening spur. But it was only
-instrumental in the overthrow of fear. Some other power, not physical,
-not love, but cold, pure, passionless, spiritual, had been drawing him
-like a wavering compass needle to its pole.
-
-Was it the faith Genie’s dying mother had placed in God? Was it a
-godlike something in him which conflicted with nature? Was it the
-strange progress of life, inscrutable and inflexible, that dragged men
-down or lifted them up, made them base or made them great?
-
-The darkness of his mind, the blackness of the abyss of his soul,
-seemed about to be illumined. But the truth held aloof. Yet could
-he not see what constituted greatness in any man? What was it
-to be great? The beasts of the desert and the birds recognized
-it--strength--speed--ferocity--tenacity of life. The Indians worshiped
-greatness so that they looked up and prayed to their gods. They
-worshiped stature, and power and skill of hand, and fleetness of foot,
-and above all--endurance. More, they endowed their great chieftains
-with wisdom. But above all--to endure pain, heat, shock, all of the
-desert hardships, all of the agonies of life--to endure--that was their
-symbol of greatness.
-
-Adam asked no other for himself or for any man. To endure and to
-surmount the ills of life! Any man could be great. He had his choice.
-To realize at last--to face the inevitable fight in any walk of
-life--to work and to endure--to slave and to suffer in silence--to
-stand like a savage the bloody bruises and broken bones--to bite the
-tongue and hold back the gasp--to plod on down the trails or the roads
-or the streets and to be true to an ideal--to endure the stings and
-blows of misfortune--to bear up under loss--to fight the bitterness
-of defeat and the weakness of grief--to be victor over anger--to
-smile when tears were close--to resist disease and evil men and base
-instincts--to hate hate and to love love--to go on when it would seem
-good to die--to seek ever the glory and the dream--to look up with
-unquenchable faith in something evermore about to be--that was what
-any man could do and so be great!
-
- * * * * *
-
-At midnight Adam paced under the palms. All seemed dim, gray, cool,
-spectral, rustling, whispering. The old familiar sounds were there,
-only rendered different by his mood. Midnight was haunting. Somehow the
-desert with its mustering shadows, dark and vast and strange, resembled
-his soul and his destiny and the mystery of himself. How sweet the
-loneliness and solitude of the oasis! There under the palms he could
-walk and be himself, with only the eye of nature and of spirit on him
-in this final hour of his extremity.
-
-Happiness was not imperative; self-indulgence was not essential to
-life. Adam realized he had done wonderful things--perhaps noble things.
-But nothing great! Perhaps all his agony had been preparation for this
-supreme ordeal.
-
-How saving and splendid would it be, if out of his stultified youth,
-with its blinded love of brother and its weakness of will--if out of
-the bitter sting of infidelity and his fatal, tragic deed--if out of
-the long torture of hardship of the desert and its strife and its
-contact with souls as wild as his--how glorious it would be if out of
-this terrible tide of dark, contending years, so full of remorse and
-fear and endless atonement, there should rise a man who, trained now in
-the desert’s ferocity to survive, should use that force to a noble aim,
-and, climbing beyond his nature, sacrifice himself to the old biblical
-law--a life for a life--and with faith in unknown future lend his
-spirit to the progress of the ages!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adam divined that he did not belong to himself. What he wanted for
-himself, selfishly, was not commensurable with the need of others in
-this life. He was concerned here with many ideals, the highest of which
-was sacrifice, that the evil of him should not go on. Since he had
-loved Ruth Virey the whole value of life had shifted. Life was sweet,
-but no longer if he had to hide, no longer under the ban of crime. The
-stain must be washed away. By slow and gradual change, by torments
-innumerable, had he come to this realization. He had deceived himself
-by love of life. But the truth in him was the truth of the immortality
-of his soul, just as it was truth that he inherited instincts of
-the savage. Life was renewal. Every base, selfish man held back its
-spirituality.
-
-“No more! No more!” cried Adam, looking up.
-
-And in that cry he accepted the spirit of life, the mighty being that
-pulsated there in the darkness, the whispering voice of Genie’s mother,
-the love of Ruth that never was to be his, the strange, desperate
-fights with his instincts, the stranger fight of his renunciation--he
-accepted these on faith as his idea of God.
-
-“I will give my life for my brother’s,” he said. “I will offer myself
-in punishment for my crime. I will pay with my body that I may save my
-soul!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-
-Adam lingered in his travel through the beautiful Palo Verde Valley,
-and at last reached the long swell of desert slope that led down to the
-Rio Colorado.
-
-Tranquil and sad was his gaze on the majestic river as it swirled red
-and sullen between its wide green borders toward the upflung wilderness
-of colored peaks he remembered so well.
-
-All day he strode behind his faithful burros, here high on the river
-bank where he could see the somber flood rolling to the south, and
-there low in the willow-shaded trail. And though he had an eye for the
-green, dry coverts and the wide, winding valley, he seemed to see most
-vividly the scenes of boyhood and of home. And the memory revived the
-love he had borne his brother Guerd. High on the grassy hill at the
-old village school--he was there once again, wild and gay, playing the
-games, tagging at the heels of his idol.
-
-The miles slipped by under his tireless stride. Hour by hour he had
-quickened his pace. And when sunset caught him with its call to camp,
-he could see the grand purple bulk of old Picacho looming in the sky.
-Twilight and dusk and night, and the lonely camp fire! He heard the
-sullen gurgle of the river in the weeds and he saw the trains of stars
-reflected along its swirling surface. A killdeer, most mournful of
-birds, pealed his plaintive, lonely cry. Across the blue-black sky
-gleamed a shooting star. The wind stirred in the leaves, gently and
-low, and fanned the glowing embers, and bore the white ashes away into
-the darkness. Shadows played from the flickering blaze, fantastic and
-weird, like dancing specters in the gloom. Adam watched the gleaming
-river rolling on to its grave in the Gulf. Like all things, it died,
-was dispersed, and had rebirth in other climes. Then he watched the
-stars at their grand and blazing task.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the afternoon of the third day he turned under the red bluff into
-the basin of Picacho. Long the trail had been overgrown and dim, and
-cattle tracks were scarce. The wide willow and mesquite flat, with its
-groves of cottonwoods, had grown denser, wilder, no more crisscrossed
-by trails. Adam had slowed down now, and he skirted the edge of the
-thicket till he reached the bank of bronze rock that had flowed down
-from the peaks in ages past. The _ocatillas_, so pearly gray, softly
-green, and vividly scarlet, grew there just the same as long ago when
-he had plucked a flower for the dusky hair of Margarita. He welcomed
-sight of them, for they were of the past.
-
-And here, side by side, stood the crucifixion tree and the _palo verde_
-under which Margarita had told him their legends. The years had made
-no change that Adam could discern. The smoke tree and the green tree
-raised their delicate, exquisite, leafless foliage against the blue of
-sky, beautiful and soft, hiding from the eye the harsh law of their
-desert nature.
-
-Adam tarried here. His wandering steps were nearing their end. And he
-gazed across the river at the wilderness of Arizona peaks. It seemed he
-knew every one. Had he seen them yesterday or long ago?
-
-The sculptured turrets of Picacho were taking on a crown of gold, and
-from the sheer, ragged bluffs of the purple mass shadows and hazes and
-rays were streaming down into the valley. One golden streak slanted
-from the wind-worn hole in the rim. Solemn and noble the castled
-mountain towered in the sky. In its lonely grandeur there was strength.
-
-One moment longer Adam watched and listened, absorbing the color and
-glory and wildness, stung to the depths of his heart by his farewell to
-loneliness. He retrograded one last instant to the savage who sensed
-but did not think. He thrilled to the old, mysterious, fading instinct.
-Then, as in answer to a sonorous call in his ear, he measured slow and
-laboring strides through the aisles to the river.
-
-His burros scratched their packs on the thorny mesquites to get down to
-the arrowweed and willow. Where once had been open bank, now all was
-green, except for a narrow sandy aisle. The dock was gone. A sunken
-barge lay on a bar, and moored to its end were two leaky skiffs.
-Traffic and trade had departed from the river landing. Adam remembered
-a prospector had told him that the mill had been moved from the river
-up to the mine under the peak. So now, he thought, supplies and traffic
-must come and go by way of Yuma.
-
-He drove his burros down the sandy aisle. A glimpse of an old adobe
-wall, gray through the mesquites, stopped his heart. He went on. The
-house of Arallanes was a roofless ruin, the vacant windows and doors
-staring darkly, the walls crumbling to the sands. The shed where Adam
-had slept was now half hidden by mesquites. The _ocatilla_ poles were
-bleached and rotten and the brush was gone from the roof; but the sandy
-floor looked as clean and white as the day Adam had spread his blankets
-there. Fourteen years! Silent he stood, and the low, mournful wind was
-a knell. The past could never be undone.
-
-He went back to the lane and to the open. Old stone walls were all that
-appeared left of houses he expected to see. Over the trees, far up the
-slope, he espied the ruins of the dismantled mill. Unreal it looked
-there, out of place, marring the majestic sweep of the slope.
-
-His keen desert nostrils detected smoke before he saw blue columns
-rising through the green. He passed a plot of sand-mounded graves.
-Had they been there? How fierce a pang pierced his heart! Rude stones
-marked the graves, and on one a single wooden cross, crude and
-weathered, slanted away. Adam peered low at the lettering--M. A. And
-swiftly he swung erect.
-
-There was a cluster of houses farther on, low and squat, a few of them
-new, but most of them Adam remembered. A post-office sign marked this
-village of Picacho. The stone-fronted store looked just the same, and
-the loungers there might never have moved from their tracks in fourteen
-years. But the faces were strange.
-
-A lean old man, gray and peaked, detached himself from the group and
-tottered toward Adam with his cane in the sand.
-
-“Wal, stranger, howdy! You down from upriver?”
-
-His voice twanged a chord of memory. Merryvale! Slowly the tide of
-emotion rose in Adam’s breast. He peered down into the gray old face,
-with its narrow, half-shut eyes and its sunken cheeks. Yes, it was
-Merryvale.
-
-“Howdy, friend!” replied Adam. “Yes, I come from up the river.”
-
-“Strange in these parts, I reckon?”
-
-“Yes. But I--I was here years ago.”
-
-“Was, I knowed you was strange because you come in by the river.
-Travelers nowadays go round the mountain. Prospectors never come any
-more. The glory of Picacho has faded.”
-
-“Aren’t they working the mill?” queried Adam, quickly.
-
-“Haw! Haw! The mill will never grind with ore that is gone! No work
-these last five years. The mill has rusted out--fallen to ruin. And
-the gold of old Picacho is gone. But, stranger, she hummed while she
-lasted. Millions in gold--millions in gold!”
-
-He wagged his lean old head and chuckled.
-
-“I knew a man here once by the name of Arallanes. What has become of
-him?”
-
-“Arallanes? Wal, I do recollect him. I was watchman at the mill an’
-he was boss of the gang. His daughter was knifed by a greaser named
-Felix.... Arallanes left here these ten years ago an’ he’s never been
-back.”
-
-“His--daughter!... Is that her grave back there--the sunken mound of
-sand--with the wooden cross?”
-
-“I reckon that’s Margarita’s grave. She was a pretty wench--mad about
-men--an’ there’s some who said she got her just deserts.”
-
-The broad river gleamed yellow through the breaks in the mesquites.
-Ponderous and swirling, it glided on round the bend. Adam’s gaze then
-sought the peak. The vast, stormy, purple mass, like a mountain of
-cloud, shone with sunset crown of silver.
-
-Somewhere near, hidden by the trees, a Mexican broke the stillness with
-song--wild, sensuous, Spanish love, in its haunting melody.
-
-“I knew another man here,” began Adam, with the words a sonorous knell
-in his ear. “His name was Collishaw.... What’s become of him?”
-
-“Collishaw? Never will forgit _him_!” declared the old man, grimly.
-“Last I heard he was cheatin’ Injuns out of water rights over here at
-Walters--an’ still lookin’ fer somebody to hang.... Haw! Haw! That
-Collishaw was a Texas sheriff.”
-
-Suddenly Adam bent lower, so that his face was on a level with
-Merryvale’s.
-
-“Don’t you recognize me?”
-
-“Wal, I shore don’t, stranger,” declared the other. “I’ve been nigh
-fifty years in the West an’ never seen your like yet. If I had I’d
-never forgot.”
-
-“Merryvale, do you remember a lad who shot off your fishing line one
-day? Do you remember how you took interest in him--told him of Western
-ways--that he must be a man?”
-
-“Shore I remember that lad!” exclaimed Merryvale, bluntly. He was old,
-but he was still keen. “How’d you know about him?”
-
-“I am Adam Larey!”
-
-The old man’s eyes grew piercing. Intensely he gazed, bending closer,
-strong and thrilling now, with the zest of earlier experience sharp in
-his expression.
-
-“I know you now. It’s Adam. I’d knowed them eyes among a thousand, if
-I’d only looked. Eagle’s eyes, Adam, once seen never forgot!... An’
-look at the giant of him! Wai, you make me feel young again.... Adam,
-lad, I ain’t never forgot ye--never! Shake hands with old Merryvale.”
-
-Agitated, with tremulous voice and shaking hands, he grasped Adam,
-almost embracing him, his gray old face alight with gladness.
-
-“It’s good to see you, Merryvale--to learn you’ve not forgotten me--all
-these years.”
-
-“Lad, you was like my own!... But who’d ever know you now? You’ve white
-hair, Adam, an’--ah! I see the desert in your face.”
-
-“Old friend, did you ever hear of Wansfell?”
-
-“Wansfell? You mean thet wanderer the prospectors tell about?... Shore,
-I’ve been hearin’ tales of him these many years.”
-
-“I am Wansfell,” replied Adam.
-
-“_So help me God!_... Wansfell?... You, Adam, the kindly lad!... Didn’t
-I tell you what a hell of a man you’d be when you grew up?”
-
-Adam drew Merryvale aside from the curiously gathering loungers.
-
-“Old friend, you are responsible for Wansfell.... And now, before we
-tell--before I go--I want you to take me to--to--my--my brother’s
-grave?”
-
-Merryvale stared.
-
-“_What?_” he ejaculated, and again his keen old eyes searched Adam’s.
-
-“Yes. The grave--of my brother--Guerd,” whispered Adam.
-
-“Say, man!... You think Guerd Larey’s buried _here_?... Thet’s why you
-come back?”
-
-Astonishment seemed to dominate Merryvale, to hold in check other
-emotions.
-
-“My friend,” replied Adam, “I came to see his grave--to make my peace
-with him and God--and to give myself up to the law.”
-
-“Give yourself--up--to the law!” gasped Merryvale. “Have you gone
-desert mad?”
-
-“No. I’m right in my mind,” returned Adam, patiently. “I owe it to my
-conscience, Merryvale.... Fourteen years of torture! Any punishment I
-may suffer here, compared with those long years, will be as nothing....
-It will be happiness to give myself up.”
-
-Merryvale’s lean jaw quivered as the astonishment and concern left his
-face. A light of divination began to dawn there.
-
-“But what do you want to give yourself up for?” he demanded.
-
-“I told you. My conscience. My need to stand right with myself. To pay!”
-
-“I mean--what’d you do?... _What for?_”
-
-“Old friend, you’ve grown thick of wits,” rejoined Adam. “Because of my
-crime.”
-
-“An’ what was thet, Adam Larey?” queried Merryvale, sharply.
-
-“The crime of Cain,” replied Adam, sadly. “Come, friend--take me to my
-brother’s grave.”
-
-Merryvale seemed galvanized from age to youth.
-
-“Your brother’s grave!... Guerd Larey’s grave? By heaven! I wish I
-could take you to it!... Adam, you’re out of your head. You _are_
-desert mad.... Bless you, lad, you’ve made a terrible mistake!
-You’re not what you think you are. You’ve hid in the desert fourteen
-years--you’ve gone through hell--you’ve become Wansfell--all for
-nothin’!... My God! to think of thet!... Adam, you’re no murderer. Your
-brother is not dead. He wasn’t even bad hurt. No--no--Guerd Larey’s
-alive--alive--alive!”
-
-
-Press of The Hunter-Rose Company, Limited
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
-were not changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; unpaired quotation
-marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
-unpaired.
-
-Table of Contents added by Transcriber.
-
-Redundant book hemi-title pages have been deleted.
-
-Page 87: “you’ll grow like it” was printed that way.
-
-Page 128: “But there were others hours.” was printed that way.
-
-Page 141: “gettin’ oneasy” was printed that way; should be “uneasy”.
-
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Wanderer of the Wasteland, by Zane Grey,
-Illustrated by W. Herbert Dunton</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Wanderer of the Wasteland</p>
-<p>Author: Zane Grey</p>
-<p>Release Date: August 15, 2019 [eBook #60102]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Tim Lindell, Charlie Howard,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/wandererofwastel00grey_0">
- https://archive.org/details/wandererofwastel00grey_0</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="newpage p4 figcenter noepub" style="max-width: 25em;">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="565" height="800" alt="Cover" />
- </div>
-
-<h1 class="vspace wspace">WANDERER OF THE<br />WASTELAND</h1>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 6em;">
- <img src="images/i_000.jpg" width="83" height="51" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="narrow">
-<p class="newpage p4 center bb"><span class="smcap">Books by</span><br />
-ZANE GREY</p>
-
-<p class="in0 in4 bb">
-<span class="smcap">Wanderer of the Wasteland</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Tales of Lonely Trails</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">To the Last Man</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Mysterious Rider</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Man of the Forest</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Tales of Fishes</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Desert of Wheat</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The U. P. Trail</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Wildfire</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Border Legion</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Rainbow Trail</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Lone Star Ranger</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Light of Western Stars</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Desert Gold</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Heritage of the Desert</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Riders of the Purple Sage</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Young Forester</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Young Pitcher</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">The Young Lion Hunter</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Ken Ward in the Jungle</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="p1 center"><span class="smcap">The Musson Book Company, Ltd.</span><br />
-<i>Publishers</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="i_frontis" class="newpage p4 figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
- <img src="images/i_001.jpg" width="465" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE GIRL’S RED LIPS CURLED IN POUTED SCORN</div></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center xxlarge vspace wspace">
-WANDERER<br />
-OF THE WASTELAND</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center xlarge wspace wspace"><span class="small">by</span><br />
-
-Zane Grey</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><i>Author of</i><br />
-
-“The Man of the Forest,” “To the Last Man,”<br />
-“Riders of the Purple Sage,” Etc.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><i>With Illustrations by</i><br />
-W. HERBERT DUNTON</p>
-
-<div id="if_i_002" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 7em;">
- <img src="images/i_002.jpg" width="100" height="99" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="p2 center">TORONTO: THE MUSSON BOOK COMPANY LTD.<br />
-NEW YORK: <span class="in6">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="narrow">
-<p class="newpage p4 center bb">
-WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND</p>
-
-<p class="center vspace bb">Copyright, Canada, 1923<br />
-<span class="smcap">By The Musson Book Company, Ltd.</span><br />
-Printed in Canada</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="narrow">
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace">
-Dedicated to my wife<br />
-
-<span class="larger wspace">LINA ELISE GREY</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Without whose love, faith, spirit<br />
-and help I never could have<br />
-written this novel</p>
-
-<p class="p1 sigright"><span class="smcap">Zane Grey</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
- <tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER I</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER II</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">11</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER III</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">18</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER IV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">27</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER V</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">39</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER VI</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">52</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER VII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">64</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER VIII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">79</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER IX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">92</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER X</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">102</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XI</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">118</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">134</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XIII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">151</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XIV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">156</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">172</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XVI</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">195</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XVII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">212</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XVIII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">231</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XIX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">252</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">262</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXI</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">285</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">295</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXIII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">309</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXIV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">329</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">348</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXVI</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">358</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXVII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">370</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXVIII</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">393</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXIX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">403</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHAPTER XXX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">413</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="loi" summary="Illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Girl’s Red Lips Curled in Pouted Scorn</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Then the Gun Boomed with Muffled Report—and Guerd Larey, Uttering a Cry of Agony, Fell Away from Adam</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_58">58</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">But at Length the Burden of a Heavy Weight, and the Dragging Sand, and the Hot Sun Brought Adam to a Pass Where Rest Was Imperative</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_172">172</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-<h2 id="WANDERER_OF_THE_WASTELAND"><span class="larger">WANDERER OF THE<br />WASTELAND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I" class="p2 nobreak wspace">CHAPTER I</h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam Larey</span> gazed with hard and wondering eyes
-down the silent current of the red river upon which
-he meant to drift away into the desert.</p>
-
-<p>The Rio Colorado was no river to trust. It chafed at
-its banks as if to engulf them; muddy and thick it swirled
-and glided along in flood, sweeping in curves back and
-forth from Arizona to California shore. Majestic and
-gleaming under the hot sky, it swung southward between
-wide green borders of willow and cottonwood toward a
-stark and naked upflung wilderness of mountain peaks,
-the red ramparts of the unknown and trackless desert.</p>
-
-<p>Adam rushed down the bank and threw his pack into
-a boat. There his rapid action seemed checked by the
-same violence that had inspired his haste. He looked back,
-up at the dusty adobe town of Ehrenberg, asleep now under
-the glaring noonday heat. It would not wake out of that
-siesta till the return of the weary gold diggers, or the
-arrival of the stagecoach or the steamer. A tall Indian,
-swarthy and unkempt, stood motionless in the shade of
-a wall, watching stolidly.</p>
-
-<p>Adam broke down then. Sobs made his utterance incoherent.
-“Guerd is no brother—of mine—any more!” he
-burst out. His accent was one of humiliation and cheated
-love. “And as for—for <em>her</em>—I’ll never—never think of
-her—again.”</p>
-
-<p>When once more he turned to the river, a spirit wrestled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-with the emotion that had unnerved him. Adam Larey
-appeared to be a boy of eighteen, with darkly tanned, clear-cut,
-and comely face, and a lofty stature, straight and spare
-and wide. Untying the boat from its mooring, he became
-conscious of a singular thrill. Sight of the silent
-river fascinated him. If it had been drink that had fortified
-his reckless resolve, it was some strange call to the
-wildness in him that had stirred exaltation in the prospect
-of adventure. But there was more. Never again to be
-dominated by that selfish Guerd, his brother who had taken
-all and given nothing! Guerd would be stung by this
-desertion. Perhaps he would be sorry. That thought gave
-Adam a pang. Long habit of being influenced, and
-strength of love fostered in playmate days, these made
-him waver. But the tide of resentment surged up once
-more; and there flowed the red Colorado, rolling away to
-the southwest, a gateway to the illimitable wastes of
-desert land, with its mystery, its adventure, its gold and
-alluring freedom.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go,” he declared, passionately, and with a shove
-he sent the boat adrift and leaped over the bow to the
-rowing seat. The boat floated lazily, half circling, till it
-edged into the current; then, as if grasped by unseen
-power, it glided downstream. Adam seemed to feel the
-resistless current of this mysterious river take hold of his
-heart. There would be no coming back—no breasting that
-mighty flood with puny oars. The moment was sudden
-and poignant in its revelation. How swiftly receded the
-cluster of brown adobe huts, the somber, motionless
-Indian! He had left Ehrenberg behind, and a brother
-who was his only near relative, and a little sum of love
-that had failed him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m done with Guerd forever,” he muttered, looking
-back with hard dry eyes. “It’s his fault. Mother always
-warned me.... Ah! if she had lived I would still be
-home. Home! and not here—in this awful desert of heat
-and wastelands—among men like wolves and women
-like....”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-He did not finish the thought, but from his pack he
-took a bottle that glittered in the sunlight, and, waving it
-defiantly at the backward scene of glare and dust and
-lonely habitation, he drank deeply. Then he flung the
-bottle from him with a violent gesture of repulsion. He
-had no love for strong drink. The bottle fell with hollow
-splash, rode the muddy swirls, and sank. Whereupon
-Adam applied himself to the oars with long and powerful
-sweep.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>In that moment of bitter soliloquy there had flashed
-through Adam Larey’s mind memories and pictures of
-the past—the old homestead back East, vivid and unforgetable—the
-sad face of his mother, who had loved him
-as she had never loved his brother Guerd. There had been
-a mystery about the father who had died in Adam’s childhood.
-Adam thought of these facts now, seeing a vague
-connection between them and his presence there alone upon
-that desert river. When his mother died she had left all
-her money to him. But Adam had shared his small fortune
-with Guerd. That money had been the beginning of evil
-days. If it had not changed Guerd it had awakened slumbering
-jealousy and passion. Guerd squandered his share
-and disgraced himself in the home town. Then had begun
-his ceaseless importunity for Adam to leave college,
-to see life, to seek adventures, to sail round the Horn to
-the California gold fields. Adam had been true to the
-brother spirit within him and the voice of the tempter had
-fallen upon too thrilling ears. Yearning to be with his
-brother, and to see wild life upon his own account, Adam
-yielded to the importunity. He chose, however, to travel
-westward by land. At various points <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en route</i> Guerd had
-fallen in with evil companions, among whom he seemed
-to feel freer. At Tucson he launched himself upon the
-easy and doubtful career of a gambler, which practice did
-not spare even his brother. At Ehrenberg, Guerd had
-found life to his liking—a mining and outfitting post remote
-from civilization, where he made friends compatible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-with his lately developed tastes, where he finally filched
-the favor of dark eyes that had smiled first upon Adam.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>It was a June sun that burned down upon the Colorado
-desert and its red river. Adam Larey had taken to rowing
-the boat with a powerful energy. But the fiery liquor he
-had absorbed and the intense heat beating down upon
-him soon prostrated him, half drunk and wholly helpless,
-upon the bottom of the leaky boat, now at the mercy of
-the current.</p>
-
-<p>Strangest of all rivers was the Rio Colorado. Many
-names it had borne, though none so fitting and lasting as
-that which designated its color. Neither crimson nor
-scarlet was it, nor any namable shade of red, yet somehow
-red was its hue. Like blood with life gone from it!
-With its source at high altitude, fed by snow fields and a
-thousand lakes and streams, the Colorado stormed its great
-canyoned confines with a mighty torrent; and then, spent
-and leveled, but still tremendous and insatiate, it bore
-down across the desert with its burden of silt and sand.
-It was silent, it seemed to glide along, yet it was appalling.</p>
-
-<p>The boat that carried Adam Larey might as well have
-been a rudderless craft in an ocean current. Slowly round
-and round it turned, as if every rod of the river was an
-eddy, sweeping near one shore and then the other. The
-hot hours of the afternoon waned. Sunset was a glaring
-blaze without clouds. Cranes and bitterns swept
-in lumbering flight over the wide green crests of the
-bottom lands, and desert buzzards sailed down from the
-ruddy sky. The boat drifted on. Before darkness fell
-the boat had drifted out of the current into a back eddy,
-where slowly it rode round and round, at last to catch
-hold of the arrowweeds and lodge in a thicket.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>At dawn Adam Larey awoke, sober enough, but sick
-and aching, parched with thirst. The eastern horizon,
-rose-flushed and golden, told him of the advent of another
-day. He thrilled even in his misery. Scooping up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-the muddy and sand-laden water, which was cold and
-held a taste of snow, he quenched his thirst and bathed
-his hot face. Then opening his pack, he took out food he
-had been careful to bring.</p>
-
-<p>Then he endeavored to get his bearings. Adam could
-see by the stain on the arrowweeds that the flood had subsided
-a foot during the night. A reasonable calculation
-was that he had drifted a good many miles. “I’ll row
-till it gets hot, then rest up in a shady place,” he decided.
-Pushing away from the weeds, he set the oars
-and rowed out to meet the current. As soon as that
-caught him the motion became exhilarating. By and by,
-what with the exercise and the cool breeze of morning
-on his face and the sweet, dank smell of river lowlands,
-he began to wear off the effects of the liquor and with it
-the disgust and sense of unfitness with which it had left
-him. Then at length gloom faded from his mind, though
-a pang abided in his breast. It was not an unfamiliar
-sensation. Resolutely he faced that wide traveling river,
-grateful for something nameless that seemed borne on its
-bosom, conscious of a strange expansion of his soul, ready
-to see, to hear, to smell, to feel, to taste the wildness and
-wonder of freedom as he had dreamed it.</p>
-
-<p>The sun rose, and Adam’s face and hands felt as if
-some hot material thing had touched them. He began to
-sweat, which was all that was needed to restore his usual
-healthy feeling of body. From time to time he saw
-herons, and other long-legged waterfowl, and snipe flitting
-over the sand bars, and somber, gray-hued birds that
-he could not name. The spell of river or desert hovered
-over these birds. The fact brought to Adam the strange
-nature of this silence. Like an invisible blanket it covered
-all, water and brush and land.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s desert silence,” he said, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>When he raised the oars and rested them there seemed
-absolutely no sound. And this fact struck him overpoweringly
-with its meaning and with a sudden unfamiliar joy.
-On the gentle wind came a fragrant hot breath that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-mingled with the rank odor of flooded bottom lands. The
-sun, hot as it was, felt good upon his face and back. He
-loved the sun as he hated cold.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe Guerd’s coaxing me West will turn out well
-for me,” soliloquized Adam, with resurging boyish hope.
-“As the Mexicans say, <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Quien sabe?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>At length he espied a sloping bank where it appeared
-safe to risk landing. This was a cove comparatively free
-of brush and the bank sloped gradually to the water.
-The summit of the bank was about forty or fifty feet
-high, and before Adam had wholly ascended it he began
-to see the bronze tips of mountains on all sides.</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove!” exclaimed Adam. “No sign of man! No
-sign of life!”</p>
-
-<p>Some distance from the river bank stood a high knoll.
-Adam climbed to the top of it, and what he saw here made
-him yearn for the mountain peaks. He had never stood
-at any great elevation. Southward the Colorado appeared
-to enter a mountain gateway and to turn and disappear.</p>
-
-<p>When he had refreshed himself with food and drink he
-settled himself into a comfortable position to rest and
-sleep a little while. He had plucked at the roots of love,
-but not yet had he torn it from his heart. Guerd, his
-brother! The old boyhood days flashed up. Adam found
-the pang deep in his heart and ineradicable. The old
-beautiful bond, the something warm and intimate between
-him and Guerd, was gone forever. For its loss there
-could be no recompense. He knew every hour would
-sever him the farther from this brother who had proved
-false. Adam hid his face in the dry grass, and there in
-the loneliness of that desert he began to see into the gulf
-of his soul.</p>
-
-<p>“I can fight—I can forget!” he muttered. Then he set
-his mind to the problem of his immediate future. Where
-would he go? There were two points below on the river—Picacho,
-a mining camp, and Yuma, a frontier town—about
-both of which he had heard strange, exciting tales.
-And at that moment Adam felt a reckless eagerness for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-adventure, and a sadness for the retreating of his old
-dream of successful and useful life. At length he fell
-asleep.</p>
-
-<p>When he awoke he felt hot and wet with sweat. A
-luminous gold light shone through the willows and there
-was vivid color in the west. He had slept hours. When
-he moved to sit up he heard rustlings in the willows.
-These unseen creatures roused interest and caution in
-Adam. In his travels across Arizona he had passed
-through wild places and incidents. And remembering
-tales of bad Indians, bad Mexicans, bad white men, and
-the fierce beasts and reptiles of the desert, Adam fortified
-himself to encounters that must come.</p>
-
-<p>When he stepped out of the shady covert it was to see
-river and valley as if encompassed by an immense loneliness,
-different somehow for the few hours of his thought
-and slumber. The river seemed redder and the mountains
-veiled in ruby haze. Earth and sky were bathed in the
-hue of sunset light.</p>
-
-<p>He descended to the river. Shoving the boat off, he
-applied himself to the oars. His strong strokes, aided by
-the current, sent the boat along swiftly, perhaps ten miles
-an hour. The rose faded out of the sky, the clouds
-turned drab, the blue deepened, and a pale star shone.
-Twilight failed. With the cooling of the air Adam lay
-back more powerfully upon the oars. Night fell, and one
-by one, and then many by many, the stars came out. This
-night ride began to be thrilling. There must have been
-danger ahead. By night the river seemed vast, hurrying,
-shadowy, and silent as the grave. Its silence wore upon
-Adam until it seemed unnatural.</p>
-
-<p>As the stars multiplied and brightened, the deep cut
-where the river wound changed its character, becoming
-dark and clear where it had been gloomily impenetrable.
-The dim, high outlines of the banks showed, and above
-them loomed the black domes of mountains. From time
-to time he turned the boat and, resting upon his oars, he
-drifted with the current, straining his eyes and ears.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-These moments of inaction brought the cold, tingling
-prickle of skin up and down his back. It was impossible
-not to be afraid, yet he thrilled even in his fear. In the
-clear obscurity of the night he could see several rods
-ahead of him over the gleaming river. But the peril that
-haunted Adam seemed more in the distant shadows, round
-the bends. What a soundless, nameless, unintelligible
-river! To be alone on a river like that, so vast, so strange,
-with the grand and solemn arch of heaven blazed and
-clouded white by stars, taught a lesson incalculable in
-its effects.</p>
-
-<p>The hour came when an invisible something, like a
-blight, passed across the heavens, paling the blue, dimming
-the starlight. The intense purity of the sky sustained
-a dull change, then darkened. Adam welcomed the
-first faint gleam of light over the eastern horizon. It
-brightened. The wan stars faded. The mountains
-heightened their clearness of silhouette, and along the bold,
-dark outlines appeared a faint rose color, herald of the
-sun. It deepened, it spread as the gray light turned pink
-and yellow. The shadows lifted from the river valley and
-it was day again.</p>
-
-<p>“Always I have slept away the great hour,” said Adam.
-An exhilaration uplifted him.</p>
-
-<p>He drifted round a bend in the river while once more
-eating sparingly of his food; and suddenly he espied a
-high column of smoke rising to the southwest. Whereupon
-he took the oars again and, having become rested
-and encouraged, he rowed with a stroke that would make
-short work of the few miles to the camp.</p>
-
-<p>“Picacho!” soliloquized Adam, remembering tales he
-had heard. “Now what shall I do?... I’ll work at anything.”
-He carried a considerable sum of money in a belt
-round his waist—the last of the money left him by his
-mother, and he wanted to keep it as long as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was not long in reaching the landing, which appeared
-to be only a muddy bank. A small, dilapidated
-stern-wheel steamer, such as Adam had seen on the Ohio<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-River, lay resting upon the mud. On the bow sat a gaunt
-weather-beaten man with a grizzled beard. He held a long
-crooked fishing pole out over the water, and evidently
-was fishing. The bank sloped up to fine white sand and
-a dense growth of green, in the middle of which there
-appeared to be a narrow lane. Here in a flowing serape
-stood a Mexican girl, slender and small, with a single
-touch of red in all her darkness of dress.</p>
-
-<p>Adam ran the boat ashore. Lifting his pack, he climbed
-a narrow bench of the bank and walked down to a point
-opposite the fisherman. Adam greeted him and inquired
-if this place was Picacho.</p>
-
-<p>“Mornin’, stranger,” came the reply. “Yes, this here’s
-the gold diggin’s, an’ she’s hummin’ these days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Catching any fish?” Adam inquired, with interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Yep; I ketched one day before yestiddy,” replied the
-man, complacently.</p>
-
-<p>“What kind?” went on Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be doggoned if I know, but he was good to eat,”
-answered the angler, with a grin. “Where you hail from,
-stranger?”</p>
-
-<p>“Back East.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I reckoned. No Westerner would tackle the
-Colorado when she was in flood. I opine you hit the
-river at Ehrenberg. Wal, you’re lucky. Goin’ to prospect
-for gold?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’d rather work. Can I get a job here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Son, if you’re as straight as you look you can get a
-good job. But a husky lad like you, if he stayed sober,
-could strike it rich in the diggin’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about a place to eat and sleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thet ain’t so easy to find up at the camp. It’s a
-few miles up the canyon. But say, I’m forgettin’ about
-the feller who stayed here with the Mexicans. They
-jest buried him. You could get his place. It’s the ’dobe
-house—first one. Ask Margarita, there. She’ll show
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus directed, Adam saw the Mexican girl standing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-above him. Climbing the path to the top of the bank, he
-threw down his pack.</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Buenas dias</i>, señor.” The girl’s soft, liquid accents
-fitted a dark, piquant little face, framed by hair as black
-as the wing of a raven, and lighted by big eyes, like night.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s Spanish was not that of the Mexicans, but it
-enabled him to talk fairly well. He replied to the girl’s
-greeting, yet hesitated with the query he had on his lips.
-He felt a slight shrinking as these dark eyes reminded him
-of others of like allurement which he had willed to forget.
-Yet he experienced a warmth and thrill of pleasure in a
-pretty face. Women invariably smiled upon Adam. This
-one, a girl in her teens, smiled with half-lowered eyes,
-the more provocative for that; and she turned partly away
-with a lithe, quick grace. Adam’s hesitation had been a
-sudden chill at the proximity of something feminine and
-attractive—of something that had hurt him. But it passed.
-He had done more than boldly step across the threshold
-of a new and freer life.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">For</span> Adam’s questions Margarita had a shy, “<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Si</i>,
-señor,” and the same subtle smile that had attracted
-him. Whereupon he took up his pack and followed her.</p>
-
-<p>Back from the river the sand was thick and heavy, clean
-and white. The girl led down a path bordered by willows
-and mesquites which opened into a clearing where stood
-several squat adobe houses.</p>
-
-<p>Margarita stopped at the first house. The girl’s mother
-appeared to be an indolent person, rather careless of her
-attire. She greeted Adam in English, but when he exercised
-some of his laborsome Spanish her dark face beamed
-with smiles that made it pleasant to behold. The little
-room indoors, to which she led Adam, was dark, poorly
-ventilated, and altogether unsatisfactory. Adam said so.
-The señora waxed eloquent. Margarita managed to convey
-her great disappointment by one swift look. Then
-they led him outdoors and round under the low-branching
-mesquites, where he had to stoop, to a small structure.
-The walls were made of two rows of long slender
-poles, nailed upon heavier uprights at the corners, and
-between these rows had been poured wet adobe mud.
-The hut contained two rooms, the closed one full of wood
-and rubbish, and the other, which had an open front, like
-a porch, faced the river. It was empty, with a floor of
-white sand. This appeared very much to Adam’s liking,
-and he agreed upon a price for it, to the señora’s satisfaction
-and Margarita’s shy rapture. Adam saw the
-latter with some misgiving, yet he was pleased, and in
-spite of himself he warmed toward this pretty señorita
-who had apparently taken a sudden fancy to him. He
-was a stranger in a strange land, with a sore and yearning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-heart. While Adam untied his pack and spread out its
-contents the women fetched a low bench, a bucket of
-water, and a basin. These simple articles constituted the
-furniture of his new lodgings. He was to get his meals
-at the house, where, it was assured, he would be well
-cared for. In moving away, Margarita, who was looking
-back, caught her hair in a thorny branch of the mesquite.
-Adam was quick to spring to her assistance. Then she
-ran off after her mother.</p>
-
-<p>“What eyes! Well, well!” exclaimed Adam, sensible
-of a warmth along his veins. Suddenly at that moment
-he thought of his brother Guerd. “I’m glad he’s not
-here.” Margarita had prompted that thought. Guerd was
-a handsome devil, irresistible to women. Adam went back
-to his unpacking, conscious of a sobered enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>He hung his few clothes and belongings upon the walls,
-made his bed of blankets on the sand, and then surveyed
-the homely habitation with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>He found the old fisherman in precisely the same posture.
-Adam climbed on board the boat.</p>
-
-<p>“Get any bites?” he queried.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I jest had one,” replied the fisherman.</p>
-
-<p>Adam saw that he was about fifty years old, lean and
-dried, with a wrinkled tanned face and scant beard.</p>
-
-<p>“Have a smoke,” said Adam, proffering one of the last
-of his cigars.</p>
-
-<p>“Lordy!” ejaculated the fisherman, his eyes lighting.
-“When have I seen one of them?... Young man, you’re
-an obligin’ feller. What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam told him, and that he hailed from the East and
-had been a tenderfoot for several memorable weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“My handle’s Merryvale,” replied the other. “I came
-West twenty-eight years ago when I was about your age.
-Reckon you’re about twenty.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Only eighteen. Say, you must have almost seen
-the old days of ’forty-nine.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was in ’fifty. Yes, I was in the gold rush.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you strike any gold?” asked Adam, eagerly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-“Son, I was a prospector for twenty years. I’ve made
-an’ lost more than one fortune. Drink an’ faro an’ bad
-women!... And now I’m a broken-down night watchman
-at Picacho.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,” said Adam, sincerely. “I’ll bet you’ve seen
-some great old times. Won’t you tell me about them? You
-see, I’m foot-loose now and sort of wild.”</p>
-
-<p>Merryvale nodded sympathetically. He studied Adam
-with eyes that were shrewd and penetrating, for all their
-kindliness. Wherefore Adam talked frankly about himself
-and his travels West. Merryvale listened with a
-nod now and then.</p>
-
-<p>“Son, I hate to see the likes of you hittin’ this gold
-diggin’s,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Why? Oh, I can learn to take care of myself. It
-must be a man’s game. I’ll love the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, son, I oughtn’t discourage you,” replied Merryvale.
-“An’ it ain’t fair for me to think because I went
-wrong, an’ because I seen so many boys go wrong, thet
-you’ll do the same.... But this gold diggin’s is a hell of a
-place for a tough old timer, let alone a boy runnin’ wild.”</p>
-
-<p>And then he began to talk like a man whose memory
-was a vast treasure store of history and adventure and
-life. Gold had been discovered at Picacho in 1864. In
-1872 the mill was erected near the river, and the ore was
-mined five miles up the canyon and hauled down on a
-narrow-gauge railroad. The machinery and construction
-for this great enterprise, together with all supplies, were
-brought by San Francisco steamers round into the Gulf
-of California, loaded on smaller steamers, and carried
-up the Colorado River to Picacho. These steamers also
-hauled supplies to Yuma and Ehrenberg, where they were
-freighted by wagon trains into the interior. At the present
-time, 1878, the mine was paying well and there were between
-five and six hundred men employed. The camp
-was always full of adventurers and gamblers, together
-with a few bad women whose capacity for making trouble
-magnified their number.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-“Down here at the boat landin’ an’ the mill it’s always
-sorta quiet,” said Merryvale. “You see, there ain’t many
-men here. An’ the gamblin’ hells are all up at the camp,
-where, in fact, everybody goes of an evenin’. Lord knows
-I’ve bucked the tiger in every gold camp in California.
-There’s a fever grips a man. I never seen the good of
-gold to the man thet dug it.... So, son, if you’re askin’
-me for a hunch, let me tell you, drink little an’ gamble
-light an’ fight shy of the females!”</p>
-
-<p>“Merryvale, I’m more of a tenderfoot than I look, I
-guess,” replied Adam. “You’d hardly believe I never
-drank till I started West a few months ago. I can’t stand
-liquor.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s face lost its brightness and his eyes shadowed,
-though they held frankly to Merryvale’s curious gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Son, you’re a strappin’ youngster an’ you’ve got looks
-no woman will pass by,” said Merryvale. “An’ in this
-country the preference of women brings trouble. Wal,
-for thet matter, all the trouble anywheres is made by
-them. But in the desert, where it’s wild an’ hot an’ there’s
-few females of any species, the fightin’ gets bloody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Women have been the least of my fights or troubles,”
-rejoined Adam. “But lately I had a—a little more serious
-affair—that ended suddenly before I fell in deep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lordy! son, you’ll be a lamb among wolves!” broke
-in Merryvale. “See here, I’m goin’ to start you right.
-This country is no place for a nice clean boy, more’s the
-shame and pity. Every man who gets on in the West, let
-alone in the desert where the West is magnified, has got
-to live up to the standard. He must work, he must endure,
-he must fight men, he must measure up to women. I
-ain’t sayin’ it’s a fine standard, but it’s the one by which
-men have survived in a hard country at a hard time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Survival of the fittest,” muttered Adam, soberly.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve said it, son. Thet law makes the livin’ things
-of this desert, whether man or otherwise. <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Quien sabe?</i>
-You can never tell what’s in a man till he’s tried. Son,
-I’ve known desert men whose lives were beyond all understandin.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-But not one man in a thousand can live on
-the desert. Thet has to do with his mind first; then
-his endurance. But to come back to this here Picacho.
-I’d not be afraid to back you against it if you meet it
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>“How is that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lordy! son, I wish I could say the right word,” returned
-Merryvale, in pathetic earnestness. “You ain’t
-to be turned back?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’m here for better or worse. Back home I had
-my hopes, my dreams. They’re gone—vanished.... I’ve
-no near relatives except a brother who—who is not my
-kind. I didn’t want to come West. But I seem to have
-been freed from a cage. This grand wild desert! It
-will do something wonderful—or terrible with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, wal, you talk like you look,” replied Merryvale,
-with a sigh. “Time was, son, when a hunch of mine might
-be doubtful. But now I’m old, an’ as I go down the years
-I remember more my youth an’ I love it more. You can
-trust me.” Then he paused, taking a deep breath, as if
-his concluding speech involved somehow his faith in himself
-and his good will to a stranger. “Be a man with your
-body! Don’t shirk work or play or fight. Eat an’ drink
-an’ be merry, but don’t live jest for thet. Lend a helpin’
-hand—be generous with your gold. Put aside a third
-of your earnin’s for gamblin’ an’ look to lose it. Don’t
-ever get drunk. You can’t steer clear of women, good
-or bad. An’ the only way is to be game an’ kind an’
-square.”</p>
-
-<p>“Game—kind—square,” mused Adam, thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I need a new fishin’ line,” said Merryvale, as he
-pulled in his rod. “We’ll go up to the store an’ then I’ll
-take you to the mill.”</p>
-
-<p>While passing the adobe house where Adam had engaged
-board and lodging he asked his companion the name
-of the people.</p>
-
-<p>“Arallanes—Juan Arallanes lives there,” replied Merryvale.
-“An’ he’s the whitest greaser I ever seen. He’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-foreman of the Mexicans employed at the mill. His wife
-is nice, too. But thet black-eyed hussy <span class="locked">Margarita——”</span></p>
-
-<p>Merryvale shook his grizzled head, but did not complete
-his dubious beginning. The suggestion piqued Adam’s
-curiosity. Presently Merryvale pointed out a cluster of
-huts and cabins and one rather pretentious stone house,
-low and square, with windows. Both white- and dark-skinned
-children were playing on the sand in the shady
-places. Idle men lounged in front of the stone house,
-which Merryvale said was the store. Upon entering,
-Adam saw a complete general store of groceries, merchandise,
-hardware, and supplies; and he felt amazed until
-he remembered how the river steamers made transportation
-easy as far as the border of the desert. Then Merryvale
-led on to the huge structure of stone and iron and
-wood that Adam had espied from far up the river. As
-Adam drew near he heard the escape of steam, the roar
-of heavy machinery, and a sound that must have been a
-movement and crushing of ore, with a rush of flowing
-water.</p>
-
-<p>Merryvale evidently found the manager, who was a man
-of medium height, powerfully built, with an unshaven
-broad face, strong and ruddy. He wore a red-flannel shirt,
-wet with sweat, a gun at his belt, overalls thrust into
-cowhide boots; and altogether he looked a rough and
-practical miner.</p>
-
-<p>“Mac, shake hands with my young friend here,” said
-Merryvale. “He wants a job.”</p>
-
-<p>“Howdy!” replied the other, proffering a big hand that
-Adam certainly felt belonged to a man. Also he was aware
-of one quick all-embracing glance. “Are you good at
-figures?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes,” answered Adam, “but I want to work.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right. You can help me in the office where I’m
-stuck. An’ I’ll give you outside work, besides. To-morrow.”
-And with this brusque promise the manager strode
-away in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>“Mac don’t get time to eat,” explained Merryvale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-Adam had to laugh at the incident. Here he had been
-recommended by a stranger, engaged to work for a man
-whose name he had not heard and who had not asked his,
-and no mention made of wages. Adam liked this simplicity.
-A man must pass in this country for what he was.</p>
-
-<p>Merryvale went his way then, leaving Adam alone. It
-seemed to Adam, as he pondered there, that his impressions
-of that gold mill did not augur well for a satisfaction
-with his job. He had no distaste for hard labor, though
-to bend over a desk did not appeal to him. Then he
-turned his gaze to the river and valley. What a splendid
-scene! The green borderland offered soft and relieving
-contrast to the bare and grisly ridges upon which he stood.
-At that distance the river shone red gold, sweeping through
-its rugged iron gateway and winding majestically down
-the valley to lose itself round a bold bluff.</p>
-
-<p>Adam drew a long breath. A scene like this world of
-mountain wilderness, of untrodden ways, was going to
-take hold of him. And then, singularly, there flashed into
-memory an image of the girl, Margarita. Just then Adam
-resented thought of her. It was not because she had
-made eyes at him—for he had to confess this was pleasing—but
-because he did not like the idea of a deep and
-vague emotion running parallel in his mind with thought
-of a roguish and coquettish little girl, of doubtful yet
-engaging possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>“I think too much,” declared Adam. It was action he
-needed. Work, play, hunting, exploring, even gold digging—anything
-with change of scene and movement of
-muscle—these things that he had instinctively felt to be
-the need of his body, now seemed equally the need of his
-soul.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Arallanes,</span> the foreman, did not strike Adam as
-being typical of the Mexicans among whom he
-lived. He was not a little runt of a swarthy-skinned
-man, but well built, of a clean olive complexion and regular
-features.</p>
-
-<p>After supper Arallanes invited Adam to ride up to the
-camp. Whereupon Margarita asked to be taken. Arallanes
-laughed, and then talked so fast that Adam could
-not understand. He gathered, however, that the empty
-ore train traveled up the canyon to the camp, there to
-remain until morning. Also Adam perceived that Margarita
-did not get along well with this man, who was her
-stepfather. They appeared on the verge of a quarrel.
-But the señora spoke a few soft words that worked magic
-upon Arallanes, though they did not change the passion of
-the girl. How swiftly she had paled! Her black eyes
-burned with a dusky fire. When she turned them upon
-Adam it was certain that he had a new sensation.</p>
-
-<p>“Will not the gracious señor take Margarita to the
-dance?”</p>
-
-<p>That was how Adam translated her swift, eloquent
-words. Embarrassed and hesitating, he felt that he cut a
-rather sorry figure before her. Then he realized the
-singular beauty of her big eyes, sloe black and brilliant,
-neither half veiled nor shy now, but bold and wide and
-burning, as if the issue at stake was not trivial.</p>
-
-<p>Arallanes put a hand on Adam. “No, señor,” he said.
-“Some other time you may take Margarita.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I shall be pleased,” stammered Adam.</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s red lips curled in pouting scorn, and with a
-wonderful dusky flash of eyes she whirled away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-Outside, Arallanes led Adam across the sands, still with
-that familiar hand upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy,” he said, in English, “that girl—she no blood of
-mine. She damn leetle wild cat—mucha Indian—on fire
-all time.”</p>
-
-<p>If ever Adam had felt the certainty of his youthful
-years, it had been during those last few moments. His
-collar was hot and tight. A sense of shock remained with
-him. He had not fortified himself at all, nor had he
-surrendered himself to recklessness. But to think of
-going to a dance this very night, in a mining camp, with
-a dusky-eyed little Spanish girl who appeared exactly what
-Arallanes had called her—the very idea took Adam’s breath
-with the surprise of it, the wildness of it, the strange
-appeal to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Señor veree beeg, but young—like colt,” said Arallanes,
-with good nature. “Tenderfeet, the gamblers say....
-He mos’ dam’ sure have tough feet soon on Picacho!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Arallanes, that can’t come too soon for me,”
-declared Adam, and the statement seemed to give relief.</p>
-
-<p>They climbed to the track where the ore train stood,
-already with laborers in almost every car. After a little
-wait that seemed long to the impatient Adam the train
-started. The track was built a few feet above the sand,
-but showed signs of having been submerged, and in fact
-washed out in places. The canyon was tortuous, and
-grew more so as it narrowed. Adam descried tunnels dug
-in the red walls and holes dug in gravel benches, which
-place Arallanes explained had been made by prospectors
-hunting for gold. It developed, however, that there
-was a considerable upgrade. That seemed a long five
-miles to Adam. The train halted and the laborers yelled
-merrily.</p>
-
-<p>Arallanes led Adam up a long winding path, quite steep,
-and the other men followed in single file. When Adam
-reached a level once more, Arallanes called out, “Picacho!”</p>
-
-<p>But he certainly could not have meant the wide gravelly
-plateau with its squalid huts, its adobe shacks, its rambling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-square of low flat buildings, like a stockade fort roofed
-with poles and dirt. Arallanes meant the mountain that
-dominated the place—Picacho, the Peak.</p>
-
-<p>Adam faced the west as the sun was setting. The
-mountain, standing magnificently above the bold knobs
-and ridges around it, was a dark purple mass framed in
-sunset gold; and from its frowning summit, notched and
-edged, streamed a long ruddy golden ray of sunlight that
-shone down through a wind-worn hole. With the sun
-blocked and hidden except for that small aperture there
-was yet a wonderful effect of sunset. A ruddy haze, shading
-the blue, filled the canyons and the spaces. Picacho
-seemed grand there, towering to the sky, crowned in gold,
-aloof, unscalable, a massive rock sculptured by the ages.</p>
-
-<p>Arallanes laughed at Adam, then sauntered on. Mexicans
-jabbered as they passed, and some of the white men
-made jocular comment at the boy standing there so wide
-eyed and still. A little Irishman gaped at Adam and said
-to a comrade:</p>
-
-<p>“Begorra, he’s after seein’ a peanut atop ole Picacho....
-What-th’-hell now, me young fri’nd? Come hev a
-drink.”</p>
-
-<p>The crowd passed on, and Arallanes lingered, making
-himself a cigarette the while.</p>
-
-<p>Adam had not been prepared for such a spectacle of
-grandeur and desolation. He seemed to feel himself a
-mite flung there, encompassed by colossal and immeasurable
-fragments of upheaved rock, jagged and jutted, with
-never a softening curve, and all steeped in vivid and
-intense light. The plateau was a ridged and scarred waste,
-lying under the half circle of range behind, and sloping
-down toward where the river lay hidden. The range to
-the left bore a crimson crest, and it lost itself in a region
-of a thousand peaks. The range to the right was cold
-pure purple and it ended in a dim infinity. Between these
-ranges, far flung across the Colorado, loomed now with
-exquisite clearness in Adam’s sight the mountain world
-he had gotten a glimpse of from below. But now he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-perceived its marvelous all-embracing immensity, magnified
-by the transparent light, its limitless horizon line an
-illusion, its thin purple distances unbelievable. The lilac-veiled
-canyons lay clear in his sight; the naked bones of
-the mountains showed hungrily the nature of the desert
-earth; and over all the vast area revealed by the setting
-sun lay the awful barrenness of a dead world, beautiful
-and terrible, with its changing rose and topaz hues only
-mockeries to the lover of life.</p>
-
-<p>A hand fell upon Adam’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, let us look at games of gold and women,” said
-Arallanes.</p>
-
-<p>Then he led Adam into a big, poorly lighted, low-ceiled
-place, as crudely constructed as a shed, and full of noise
-and smoke. The attraction seemed to be a rude bar,
-various gambling games, and some hawk-faced, ghastly
-spectacles of women drinking with men at the tables. From
-an adjoining apartment came discordant music. This scene
-was intensely interesting to Adam, yet disappointing. His
-first sight of a wild frontier gambling hell did not thrill
-him.</p>
-
-<p>It developed that Arallanes liked to drink and talk loud
-and laugh, and to take a bold chance at a gambling game.
-But Adam refused, and meant to avoid drinking as long
-as he could. He wandered around by himself, to find
-that everybody was merry and friendly. Adam tried not
-to look at any of the women while they looked at him.
-The apartment from which came the music was merely
-a bare canvas-covered room with a board floor. Dancing
-was going on.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s aimless steps finally led him back to the sand-floored
-hall, where he became absorbed in watching a
-game of poker that a bystander said had no limit. Then
-Adam sauntered on, and presently was attracted by a
-quarrel among some Mexicans. To his surprise, it
-apparently concerned Arallanes. All of them showed the
-effects of liquor, and, after the manner of their kind, they
-were gesticulating and talking excitedly. Suddenly one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-of them drew a knife and lunged toward Arallanes. Adam
-saw the movement, and then the long shining blade, before
-he saw what the man looked like. That action silenced
-the little group.</p>
-
-<p>The outstretched hand, quivering with the skewerlike
-dagger, paused in its sweep as it reached a point opposite
-Adam. Instinctively he leaped, and quick as a flash he
-caught the wrist in a grip so hard that the fellow yelled.
-Adam, now that he possessed the menacing hand, did
-not know what to do with it. With a powerful jerk he
-pulled the Mexican off his feet, and then, exerting his
-strength to his utmost, he swung him round, knocking
-over men and tables, until his hold loosened. The knife
-flew one way and the Mexican the other. He lay where
-he fell. Arallanes and his comrades made much of Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“We are friends. You will drink with me,” said Arallanes,
-grandly.</p>
-
-<p>Though no one would have suspected it, Adam was
-really in need of something bracing.</p>
-
-<p>“Señor is only a boy, but he has an arm,” said Arallanes,
-as he clutched Adam’s shoulder and biceps with a nervous
-hand.... “When señor becomes a man he will be a giant.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s next change of emotion was from fright to a
-sense of foolishness at his standing there. Then he had
-another drink, and after his feelings changed again, and
-for that matter the whole complexion of everything
-changed.</p>
-
-<p>He never could have found the narrow path leading
-down into the canyon. Arallanes was his guide. Walking
-on the sandy floor was hard work and made him sweat.
-The loose sand and gravel dragged at his feet. Not long
-was it before he had walked off the effects of the strong
-liquor. He became curious as to why the Mexican had
-threatened Arallanes, and was told that during the day
-the foreman had discharged this fellow.</p>
-
-<p>“He ran after Margarita,” added Arallanes, “and I
-kicked him out of the house. The women, señor—ah!
-they do not mind what a man is!... Have a care of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-Margarita. She has as many loves and lives as a spotted
-cat.”</p>
-
-<p>For the most part, however, the two men were silent
-on this laborious walk. By and by the canyon widened
-out so that Adam could view the great expanse of sky,
-fretted with fire, and the mountain spurs, rising on all
-sides, cold and dark against the blue. At last Arallanes
-announced that they were home. Adam had not seen a
-single house in the gray shadows. A few more steps, however,
-brought tangible substance of walls to Adam’s touch.
-Then he drew a long deep breath and realized how tired
-he was. The darkness gradually changed from pitch
-black to a pale obscurity. He could see dim, spectral
-outlines of mesquites, and a star shining through. At
-first the night appeared to be absolutely silent, but after
-a while, by straining his ears, he heard a rustling of mice
-or ground squirrels in the adobe walls. The sound comforted
-him, however, and when one of them, or at least
-some little animal, ran softly over his bed the feeling of
-utter loneliness was broken.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve begun it,” he whispered, and meant the lonely life
-that was to be his. The silence, the darkness, the loneliness
-seemed to give him deeper thought. The thing that
-puzzled him and alarmed him was what seemed to be
-swift changes going on in him. If he changed his mind
-every hour, now cast down because of memories he could
-not wholly shake, or lifted to strange exaltation by the
-beauty of a desert sunset, or again swayed by the appeal
-of a girl’s dusky eyes, and then instinctively leaping into
-a fight with a Mexican—if he were going to be as vacillating
-and wild as these impulses led him to suppose he
-might be, it was certain that he faced a hopeless future.</p>
-
-<p>But could he help himself? Then it seemed his fine
-instincts, his fine principles, and the hopes and dreams
-that would not die, began to contend with a new uprising
-force in him, a wilder something he had never known, a
-strange stirring and live emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m glad,” he burst out, as if telling his secret to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-the darkness. “Glad to be rid of Guerd—damn him and
-his meanness!... Glad to be alone!... Glad to come
-into this wild desert!... Glad that girl made eyes at
-me! I’ll not lie to myself. I wanted to hug her—to kiss
-her—and I’ll do it if she’ll let me.... That gambling
-hell disgusted me, and sight of the greaser’s knife scared
-me cold. Yet when I got hold of him—felt my strength—how
-helpless he was—that I could have cracked his
-bones—why, scared as I was, I felt a strange wild something
-that is not gone yet.... I’m changing. It’s a
-different life. And I’ve got to meet things as they come,
-and be game.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Next morning Adam went to work and it developed
-that this was to copy MacKay’s lead-pencil scrawls, and
-after that was done to keep accurate account of ore
-mined and operated.</p>
-
-<p>Several days passed before Adam caught up with his
-work to the hour. Then MacKay, true to his word, said
-he would set him on a man’s job part of the time. The
-job upon which MacKay put Adam was no less than
-keeping up the fire under the huge boilers. As wood had
-to be used for fuel and as it was consumed rapidly, the
-task of stoking was not easy. Besides, hot as the furnace
-was, it seemed the sun was hotter. Adam sweat till he
-could wring water out of his shirt.</p>
-
-<p>That night he made certain MacKay was playing a joke
-on him. Arallanes confided this intelligence, and even
-Margarita had been let into the secret. MacKay had
-many laborers for the hard work, and he wanted to cure
-the tenderfoot of his desire for a man’s job, such as he
-had asked for. It was all good-natured, and amused
-Adam. He imagined he knew what he needed, and while
-he was trying to find it he could have just as much fun
-as MacKay.</p>
-
-<p>Much to MacKay’s surprise, Adam presented himself
-next afternoon, in boots, overalls, and undershirt, to go
-on with his job of firing the engine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-“Wasn’t yesterday enough?” queried the boss.</p>
-
-<p>“I can stand it.”</p>
-
-<p>Then it pleased Adam to see a considerable evidence
-of respect in the rough mill operator’s expression. For
-a week Adam kept up with his office work and labored
-each afternoon at the stoking job. No one suspected that
-he suffered, though it was plain enough that he lost flesh
-and was exceedingly fatigued. Then Margarita’s reception
-of him, when he trudged home in the waning sunset
-hour, was sweet despite the fact that he tried to repudiate
-its sweetness. Once she put a little brown hand on his
-blistered arm, and her touch held the tenderness of woman.
-All women must be akin. They liked a man who could
-do things, and the greater his feats of labor or fight the
-better they liked him.</p>
-
-<p>The following week MacKay took a Herculean laborer
-off a strenuous job with the ore and put Adam in his
-place. MacKay maintained his good humor, but he had
-acquired a little grimness. This long-limbed tenderfoot
-was a hard nut to crack. Adam’s father had been a man
-of huge stature and tremendous strength; and many a
-time had Adam heard it said that he might grow to be
-like his father. Far indeed was he from that now; but
-he took the brawny and seasoned laborer’s place and
-kept it. If the other job had been toil for Adam, this
-new one was pain. He learned there what labor meant.
-Also he learned how there was only one thing that common
-men understood and respected in a co-laborer, and
-it was the grit and muscle to stand the grind. Adam was
-eighteen years old and far from having reached his growth.
-This fact might have been manifest to his fellow workers,
-but it was not that which counted. He realized that those
-long hours of toil at which he stubbornly stuck had set
-his spirit in some immeasurable and unquenchable relation
-to the strange life that he divined was to be his.</p>
-
-<p>Two weeks and more went by. MacKay, in proportion
-to the growth of his admiration and friendship for Adam,
-gradually weakened on his joke. And one day, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-banteringly he dared Adam to tip a car of ore that two
-Mexicans were laboring at, and Adam in a single heave
-sent the tons of ore roaring into the shaft, then MacKay
-gave up and in true Western fashion swore his defeat
-and shook hands with the boy.</p>
-
-<p>So in those few days Adam made friends who changed
-the color and direction of his life. From Merryvale he
-learned the legend and history of the frontier. MacKay
-opened his eyes to the great health for mind and body
-in sheer toil. Arallanes represented a warmth of friendship
-that came unsought, showing what might be hidden
-in any man. Margarita was still an unknown quantity
-in Adam’s development. Their acquaintance had gone
-on mostly under the eyes of the señora or Arallanes.
-Sometimes at sunset Adam had sat with her on the sand
-of the river bank. Her charm grew. Then the unexpected
-happened. A break occurred in the machinery and a
-small but invaluable part could not be repaired. It had
-to come from San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>Adam seemed to be thrown back upon his own resources.
-He did not know what to do with himself.
-Arallanes advised him not to go panning for gold, and to
-be cautious if he went up to Picacho, for the Mexican
-Adam had so roughly handled was the ringleader in a
-bad gang that it would be well to avoid. All things conspired,
-it seemed, to throw Adam into the company of
-Margarita, who always waited around the corner of every
-hour, watching with her dusky eyes.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">So</span> as the slow, solemn days drifted onward, like the
-wonderful river which dominated the desert valley,
-it came to pass that the dreaming, pondering Adam
-suddenly awakened to the danger in this dusky-eyed
-maiden.</p>
-
-<p>The realization came to Adam at the still sunset hour
-when he and Margarita were watching the river slide
-like a gleam of gold out of the west. They were walking
-among the scattered mesquites along the sandy bank, a
-place lonesome and hidden from the village behind, yet
-open to the wide space of river and valley beyond. The
-air seemed full of marvelous tints of gold and rose and
-purple. The majestic scene, beautiful and sad, needed
-life to make it perfect. Adam, more than usually drawn
-by Margarita’s sympathy, was trying to tell her something
-of the burden on his mind, that he was alone in
-the world, with only a hard gray future before him, with
-no one to care whether he lived or died.</p>
-
-<p>Then had come his awakening. It did not speak well
-for Margarita’s conceptions of behavior, but it proved her
-a creature of heart and blood. To be suddenly enveloped
-by a wind of flame, in the slender twining form of this
-girl of Spanish nature, was for Adam at once a revelation
-and a catastrophe. But if he was staggered, he was also
-responsive, as in a former moment of poignancy he had
-vowed he would be. A strong and shuddering power took
-hold of his heart and he felt the leap, the beat, the burn
-of his blood. When he lifted Margarita and gathered her
-in a close embrace it was more than a hot upflashing of
-boyish passion that flushed his face and started tears
-from under his tight-shut eyelids. It was a sore hunger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-for he knew not what, a gratefulness that he could express
-only by violence, a yielding to something deeper
-and more far-reaching than was true of the moment.</p>
-
-<p>Adam loosened Margarita’s hold upon his neck and
-held her back from him so he could see her face. It was
-sweet, rosy. Her eyes were shining, black and fathomless
-as night, soft with a light that had never shone upon
-Adam from any other woman’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Girl, do you—love me?” he demanded, and if his voice
-broke with the strange eagerness of a boy, his look had
-all the sternness of a man.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah...!” whispered Margarita.</p>
-
-<p>“You—you big-hearted girl!” he exclaimed, with a
-laugh that was glad, yet had a tremor in it. “Margarita,
-I—I must love you, too—since I feel so queer.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he bent to her lips, and from these first real kisses
-that had ever been spent upon him by a woman he realized
-in one flash his danger. He released Margarita in a consideration
-she did not comprehend; and in her pouting
-reproach, her soft-eyed appeal, her little brown hands
-that would not let go of him, there was further menace to
-his principles.</p>
-
-<p>Adam, gay and teasing, yet kindly and tactfully, tried
-to find a way to resist her.</p>
-
-<p>“Señorita, some one will see us,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Who cares?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, child, we—we must think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Señor, no woman ever thinks when love is in her heart
-and on her lips.”</p>
-
-<p>Her reply seemed to rebuke Adam, for he sensed in it
-what might be true of life, rather than just of this one
-little girl, swayed by unknown and uncontrollable forces.
-She appeared to him then subtly and strongly, as if there
-was infinitely more than willful love in her. But it did
-not seem to be the peril of her proffered love that restrained
-Adam so much as the strange consciousness of
-the willingness of his spirit to meet hers halfway.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Margarita’s mood changed. She became like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-a cat that had been purring under a soft, agreeable hand
-and then had been stroked the wrong way.</p>
-
-<p>“Señor think he love me?” she flashed, growing white.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—I said so—Margarita. Of course I do,” he
-hastened to assure her.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you—a gringo liar!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam might have resented this insulting hint but for
-his uncertainty of himself, his consequent embarrassment,
-and his thrilling sense of the nearness of her blazing
-eyes. What a little devil she looked! This did not antagonize
-Adam, but it gave him proof of his impudence, of
-his dreaming carelessness. Margarita might not be a
-girl to whom he should have made love, but it was too
-late. Besides, he did not regret that. Only he was upset;
-he wanted to think.</p>
-
-<p>“If the <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">grande</i> señor trifle—Margarita will cut out his
-heart!”</p>
-
-<p>This swift speech, inflexible and wonderful with a
-passion that revealed to Adam the half-savage nature of
-a woman whose race was alien to his, astounded and horrified
-him, and yet made his blood tingle wildly.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita, I do not trifle,” replied Adam, earnestly.
-“God knows I’m glad you—you care for me. How have
-I offended you? What is it you want?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let señor swear he love me,” she demanded, imperiously.</p>
-
-<p>Adam answered to that with the wildness that truly
-seemed flashing more and more from him; and the
-laughter and boldness on his lips hid the gravity that had
-settled there. He was no clod. Under the softness of
-him hid a flint that struck fire.</p>
-
-<p>As Margarita had been alluring and provocative, then
-as furious as a barbarian queen, so she now changed again
-to another personality in which it pleased her to be proud,
-cold, aloof, an outraged woman to be wooed back to
-tenderness. If, at the last moment of the walk home,
-Margarita evinced signs of another sudden transformation,
-Adam appeared not to note them. Leaving her in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-the dusk at the door where the señora sat, he strode away
-to the bank of the river. When he felt himself free and
-safe once more, he let out a great breath of relief.</p>
-
-<p>“Whew! Now I’ve done it!... So she’d cut my
-heart out? And I had to swear I loved her! The little
-savage!... But she’s amazing—and she’s adorable, with
-all her cat claws. Wouldn’t Guerd rave over a girl like
-Margarita?... And here I am, standing on my two
-feet, in possession of all my faculties, Adam Larey, a
-boy who thought he had principles—yet now I’m a ranting
-lover of a dark-skinned, black-eyed slip of a greaser
-girl! It can’t be true!”</p>
-
-<p>With that outburst came sobering thought. Adam’s
-resolve not to ponder and brood about himself was as
-if it had never been. He knew he would never make
-such a resolve again. For hours he strolled up and down
-the sandy bank, deep in thought, yet aware of the night
-and the stars, the encompassing mountains, and the silent,
-gleaming river winding away in the gloom. As he had
-become used to being alone out in the solitude and darkness,
-there had come to him a vague awakening sense of
-their affinity with his nature. Success and people might
-fail and betray him, but the silent, lonely starlit nights
-were going to be teachers, even as they had been to the
-Wise Men of the Arabian waste.</p>
-
-<p>Adam at length gave up in despair and went to bed,
-hoping in slumber to forget a complexity of circumstance
-and emotion that seemed to him an epitome of his callow
-helplessness. The desert began to loom to Adam as a
-region inimical to comfort and culture. He had almost
-decided that the physical nature of the desert was going
-to be good for him. But what of its spirit, mood, passion
-as typified by Margarita Arallanes?</p>
-
-<p>Adam could ask himself that far-reaching query, and
-yet, all the answer he got was a rush of hot blood at
-memory of the sweet fire of her kisses. He saw her to
-be a simple child of the desert, like an Indian, answering
-to savage impulses, wholly unconscious of what had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-a breach of womanly reserve and restraint. Was she
-good or bad? How could she be bad if she did not know
-any better? Thus Adam pondered and conjectured, and
-cursed his ignorance, and lamented his failings, all the
-time honest to acknowledge that he was fond of Margarita
-and drawn to her. About the only conclusion he formed
-from his perplexity was the one that he owed it to Margarita
-to live up to his principles.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture he recollected Merryvale’s significant
-remarks about the qualities needed by men who were to
-survive in the desert, and his nobler sentiments suffered
-a rout. The suddenness, harshness, fierceness of the desert
-grafted different and combating qualities upon a man or else
-it snuffed him out, like a candle blown by a gusty wind.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Next morning, as every morning, the awakening was
-sweet, fresh, new, hopeful. Another day! And the wonderful
-dry keenness of the air, the colors that made the
-earth seem a land of enchantment, were enough in themselves
-to make life worth living. In the morning he
-always felt like a boy.</p>
-
-<p>Margarita’s repentance for her moods of yesterday took
-a material turn in the preparation of an unusually good
-breakfast for Adam. He was always hungry and good
-meals were rare. Adam liked her attentions, and he
-encouraged them; though not before the señora or Arallanes,
-for the former approved too obviously and the
-latter disapproved too mysteriously.</p>
-
-<p>When, some time later, a boat arrived, Adam was
-among the first to meet it at the dock.</p>
-
-<p>He encountered MacKay coming ashore in the company
-of a man and two women, one of whom was young. The
-manager showed a beaming face for the first time in many
-days. Repairs for the mill engine had come. MacKay
-at once introduced Adam to the party; and it so turned
-out that presently the manager, who was extremely busy,
-left his friends for Adam to entertain. They were people
-whom Adam liked immediately, and as the girl was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-pretty, of a blond type seldom seen in the Southwest, it
-seemed to Adam that his task was more than agreeable.
-He showed them around the little village and then explained
-how interesting it would be for them to see the
-gold mill. How long a time it seemed since he had been
-in the company of a girl like those he had known at home!
-She was merry, intelligent, a little shy.</p>
-
-<p>He was invited aboard the boat to have lunch with the
-mother and daughter. Everything tended to make this a
-red-letter day for Adam. The hours passed all too swiftly
-and time came for the boat to depart. When the boat
-swung free from the shore Adam read in the girl’s eyes
-the thought keen in his own mind—that they would never
-meet again. The round of circumstances might never
-again bring a girl like that into Adam’s life, if it were
-to be lived in these untrodden ways. He waved his hand
-with all the eloquence which it would express. Then the
-obtruding foliage on the bank hid the boat and the girl
-was gone. His last thought was a selfish one—that his
-brother Guerd would not see her at Ehrenberg.</p>
-
-<p>Some of MacKay’s laborers were working with unloaded
-freight on the dock. One of these was Regan, the little
-Irishman who had been keen to mark Adam on several
-occasions. He winked at MacKay and pointed at Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Mac, shure thot boy’s a divil with the wimmen!”</p>
-
-<p>MacKay roared with laughter and looked significantly
-past Adam as if this mirth was not wholly due to his
-presence alone. Some one else seemed implicated. Suddenly
-Adam turned. Margarita stood there, with face
-and mien of a tragedy queen, and it seemed to Adam
-that her burning black eyes did not see anything in the
-world but him. Then, with one of her swift actions,
-graceful and lithe, yet violent, she wheeled and fled.</p>
-
-<p>“O Lord!” murmured Adam, aghast at the sudden-dawning
-significance of the case. He had absolutely forgotten
-Margarita’s existence. Most assuredly she had seen
-every move of his with her big eyes, and read his mind,
-too. He could not see the humor of his situation at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-moment, but as he took a short cut through the shady
-mesquites toward his hut, and presently espied Margarita
-in ambush. What fiendish glee this predicament of his
-would have aroused in his brother Guerd! Adam, the
-lofty, the supercilious, had come a cropper at last—such
-would have been Guerd’s scorn and rapture!</p>
-
-<p>Margarita came rushing from the side, right upon him
-even as he turned. So swiftly she came that he could
-not get a good look at her, but she appeared a writhing,
-supple little thing, instinct with fury. Hissing Spanish
-maledictions, she flung herself upward, and before he
-could ward her off she had slapped and scratched his
-face and beat wildly at him with flying brown fists. He
-thrust her away, but she sprang back. Then, suddenly
-hot with anger, he grasped her and, jerking her off her
-feet, he shook her with far from gentle force, and did
-not desist till he saw that he was hurting her. Letting
-her down and holding her at arm’s length, he gazed hard
-at the white face framed by disheveled black hair and
-lighted by eyes so magnificently expressive of supreme
-passion that his anger was shocked into wonder and
-admiration. Desert eyes! Right there a conception
-dawned in his mind—he was seeing a spirit through eyes
-developed by the desert.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita!” he exclaimed, “are you a cat—that
-<span class="locked">you——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“I hate you,” she hissed, interrupting him. The expulsion
-of her breath, the bursting swell of her breast, the
-quiver of her whole lissom body, all were exceedingly
-potent of an intensity that utterly amazed Adam. Such a
-little girl, such a frail strength, such a deficient brain to
-hold all that passion! What would she do if she had
-real cause for wrath?</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Margarita, you don’t mean that. I didn’t do anything.
-Let me tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>She repeated her passionate utterance, and Adam saw
-that he could no more change her then than he could hope
-to move the mountain. Resentment stirred in him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-“Well,” he burst out, boyishly, “if you’re so darned
-fickle as that I’m glad you do hate me.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he released his hold on her arms and, turning
-away without another glance in her direction, he strode
-from the glade. He took the gun he had repaired and
-set off down the river trail. When he got into the bottom
-lands of willow and cottonwood he glided noiselessly
-along, watching and listening for game of some kind.</p>
-
-<p>In the wide mouth of a wash not more than a mile
-from the village Adam halted to admire some exceedingly
-beautiful trees. The first was one of a species he had
-often noted there, and it was a particularly fine specimen,
-perhaps five times as high as his head and full and round
-in proportion. The trunk was large at the ground, soon
-separating into innumerable branches that in turn spread
-and drooped and separated into a million twigs and stems
-and points. Trunk and branch and twig, every inch
-of this wonderful tree was a bright, soft green color,
-as smooth as if polished, and it did not have a single leaf.
-As Adam gazed at this strange, unknown tree, grasping
-the nature of it and its exquisite color and grace and
-life, he wondered anew at the marvel of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>As he walked around to the side toward the river he
-heard a cry. Wheeling quickly, he espied Margarita
-running toward him. Margarita’s hair was flying. Blood
-showed on her white face. She had torn her dress.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita!” cried Adam, as he reached her. “What’s
-the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>She was so out of breath she could scarcely speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Felix—he hide back there—in trail,” she panted. “Margarita
-watch—she know—she go round.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl labored under extreme agitation, which, however,
-did not seem to be fright.</p>
-
-<p>“Felix? You mean the Mexican who drew a knife on
-your father? The fellow I threw around—up at Picacho?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Si</i>—señor,” replied Margarita.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it? Why does Felix hide up in the
-trail?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-“Felix swore revenge. He kill you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh-ho!... So that’s it,” ejaculated Adam, and he
-whistled his surprise. A hot, tight sensation struck deeply
-inside him. “Then you came to find me—warn me?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded vehemently and clung to him, evidently
-wearied and weakening.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita, that was good of you,” said Adam, earnestly,
-and he led her out of the sun into the shade of the
-tree. With his handkerchief he wiped the blood from
-thorn scratches on her cheek. The dusky eyes shone with
-a vastly different light from the lurid hate of a few hours
-back. “I thank you, girl, and I’ll not forget it.... But
-why did you run out in the sun and through the thorns
-to warn me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Señor know now—he kill Felix before Felix kill him,”
-replied Margarita, in speech that might have been naïve
-had its simplicity not been so deadly.</p>
-
-<p>Adam laughed again, a little grimly. This was not
-the first time there had been forced upon him a hint of
-the inevitableness of life in the desert. But it was not
-his duty to ambush the Mexican who would ambush him.
-The little coldness thrilled out of Adam to the close, throbbing
-presence of Margarita. The fragrance, the very
-breath of her, went to his head like wine.</p>
-
-<p>“But girl—only a little while ago—you slapped me—scratched
-me—hated me,” he said, in wonder and reproach.</p>
-
-<p>“No—no—no! Margarita love señor!” she cried, and
-seemed to twine around him and climb into his arms at
-once. The same fire, the same intensity as of that unforgetable
-moment of hate and passion, dominated her now,
-only it was love.</p>
-
-<p>And this time it was Adam who sought her red lips
-and returned her kisses. Again that shuddering wild gust
-in his blood! It was as strange and imperious to him
-then as in a sober reflection it had been bold, gripping,
-physical, a drawing of him not sanctioned by his will.
-In this instance he was weaker in its grip, but still he
-conquered. Releasing Margarita, he led her to a shady<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-place in the sand under the green tree, and found a seat
-where he could lean against a low branch. Margarita
-fell against his shoulder, and there clung to him and wept.
-Her dusky hair rippled over him, soft and silky to the
-touch of his fingers. The poor, faded dress, of a fabric
-unknown to Adam, ragged and dusty and torn, and the
-little shoes, worn and cracked, showing the soles of her
-stockingless feet, spoke eloquently of poverty. Adam
-noted the slender grace of her slight form, the arch of
-the bare instep, and the shapeliness of her ankles, brown
-almost as an Indian’s. And all at once there charged
-over him an overwhelming sense of the pitifulness and the
-wonderfulness of her—a ragged, half-dressed little Mexican
-girl, whose care of her hair and face, and the few
-knots of ribbon, betrayed the worshipful vanity that was
-the jewel of her soul, and whose physical perfection was in
-such strange contrast to the cramped, undeveloped mind.</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” whispered Adam, under his breath. Something
-big and undefined was born in him then. He saw
-her, he pitied her, he loved her, he wanted her; but these
-feelings were not so much what constituted the bigness
-and vagueness that waved through his soul. He could
-not grasp it. But it had to do with the life, the beauty,
-the passion, the soul of this Mexican girl; and it was
-akin to a reverence he felt for the things in her that she
-could not understand.</p>
-
-<p>Margarita soon recovered, and assumed a demeanor so
-shy and modest and wistful that Adam could not believe
-she was the same girl. Nevertheless, he took good care
-not to awaken her other characteristics.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita, what is the name of this beautiful tree?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Palo verde.</i> It means green tree.”</p>
-
-<p>It interested him then to instruct himself further in
-regard to the desert growths that had been strange to him;
-and to this end he led Margarita from one point to
-another, pleased to learn how familiar she was with every
-growing thing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-Presently Margarita brought to Adam’s gaze a tree that
-resembled smoke, so blue-gray was it, so soft and hazy
-against the sky, so columnar and mushrooming. What a
-strange, graceful tree and what deep-blue blossoms it
-bore! Upon examination Adam was amazed to discover
-that every branch and twig of this tree was a thorn. A
-hard, cruel, beautiful tree of thorns that at a little distance
-resembled smoke!</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Palo Christi</i>,” murmured Margarita, making the sign
-of the cross. And she told Adam that this was the
-Crucifixion tree, which was the species that furnished the
-crown of thorns for the head of Christ.</p>
-
-<p>Sunset ended several happy and profitable hours for
-Adam. He had not forgotten about the Mexican, Felix,
-and had thought it just as well to let time pass and to keep
-out of trouble as long as he could. He and Margarita
-reached home without seeing any sign of Felix. Arallanes,
-however, had espied the Mexican sneaking around, and
-he warned Adam in no uncertain terms. Merryvale, too,
-had a word for Adam’s ear; and it was significant that
-he did not advise a waiting course. In spite of all Adam’s
-reflections he did not need a great deal of urging. After
-supper he started off for Picacho with Arallanes and a
-teamster who was freighting supplies up to the camp.</p>
-
-<p>Picacho was in full blast when they arrived. The dim
-lights, the discordant yells, the raw smell of spirits, the
-violence of the crude gambling hall worked upon Adam’s
-already excited mind; and by the time he had imbibed
-a few drinks he was ready for anything. But they did
-not find Felix.</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam, if not half drunk, at least somewhat under
-the influence of rum, started to walk back to his lodgings.
-The walk was long and, by reason of the heavy, dragging
-sand, one of considerable labor. Adam was in full possession
-of his faculties when he reached the village. But
-his blood was hot from the exercise, and the excitement
-of the prospective battle of the early evening had given
-way to an excitement of the senses, in the youthful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-romance felt in the dark, the starlight, the wildness of the
-place. So when in the pale gloom of the mesquites Margarita
-glided to him like a lissom spectre, to enfold him
-and cling and whisper, Adam had neither the will, nor
-the heart, nor the desire to resist her.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam’s</span> dull eyelids opened on a dim, gray desert dawn.
-The coming of the dawn was in his mind, and it
-showed pale through his shut lids. He could not hold
-back the hours. Something had happened in the night
-and he would never be the same again. With a sharp
-pang, a sense of incomprehensible loss, Adam felt die in
-him the old unreasoning, instinctive boy. And there was
-more, too deep and too subtle for him to divine. It had
-to do with a feminine strain in him, a sweetness and
-purity inherited from his mother and developed by her
-teachings. It had separated him from his brother Guerd
-and kept him aloof from a baseness common to their
-comrades. Nevertheless, the wildness of this raw, uncouth,
-primitive West had been his undoing.</p>
-
-<p>It was with bitterness that Adam again faced the growing
-light. All he could do was to resign himself to fate.
-The joy of life, the enchantments—all that had made him
-feel different from other boys and hide his dreams—failed
-now in this cool dark morning of reality. He could not
-understand the severity of the judgment he meted out
-to himself. His spirit suffered an ineffaceable blunting.
-And the tight-drawing knot in his breast, the gnawing of
-remorse, the strange, dark oppression—these grew and
-reached a climax, until something gave way within him
-and there was a sinking of the heart, a weary and inscrutable
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p>Then he remembered Margarita, and the very life
-and current of his blood seemed to change. Like a hot
-wave the memory of Margarita surged over Adam, her
-strange new sweetness, the cunning of her when she waylaid
-him in the dead of the night, the clinging lissomness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-of her and the whispered incoherence that needed no
-translation, the inevitableness of the silent, imperious demand
-of her presence, unashamed and insistent.</p>
-
-<p>Adam leaped out of his blankets, breaking up this
-mood and thought by violent action. For Adam then
-the sunrise was glorious, the valley was beautiful, the
-desert was wild and free, the earth was an immense
-region to explore, and nature, however insatiable and
-inexorable, was prodigal of compensations. He drank
-a sweet cup that held one drop of poison bitterness. Life
-swelled in his breast. He wished he were an Indian. As
-he walked along there flashed into mind words spoken
-long ago by his mother: “My son, you take things too
-seriously, you feel too intensely the ordinary moments of
-life.” He understood her now, but he could not distinguish
-ordinary things from great things. How could
-anything be little?</p>
-
-<p>Margarita’s greeting was at once a delight and a surprise.
-Her smile, the light of her dusky eyes, would
-have made any man happier. But there was a subtle air
-about her this morning that gave Adam a slight shock, an
-undefined impression that he represented less to Margarita
-than he had on yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the shrill whistle of the downriver boat.
-Idle men flocked toward the dock. When Adam reached
-the open space on the bank before the dock he found it
-crowded with an unusual number of men, all manifestly
-more than ordinarily interested in something concerning
-the boat. By slipping through the mesquites Adam got
-around to the edge of the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>A tall, gaunt man, clad in black, strode off the gangplank.
-His height, his form, his gait were familiar to
-Adam. He had seen that embroidered flowery vest with
-its silver star conspicuously in sight, and the brown beardless
-face with its square jaw and seamy lines.</p>
-
-<p>“Collishaw!” ejaculated Adam, in dismay. He recognized
-in this man one whom he had known at Ehrenberg,
-a gambling, gun-fighting sheriff to whom Guerd had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-become attached. As his glance swept back of Collishaw
-his pulse beat quicker. The next passenger to stride off
-the gangplank was a very tall, superbly built young man.
-Adam would have known that form in a crowd of a
-thousand men. His heart leaped with a great throb.
-Guerd, his brother!</p>
-
-<p>Guerd looked up. His handsome, heated face, bold and
-keen and reckless, flashed in the sunlight. His piercing
-gaze swept over the crowd upon the bank.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Adam!” he yelled, with gay, hard laugh. Then
-he prodded Collishaw and pointed up at Adam. “There
-he is! We’ve found him.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam plunged away into the thickest of mesquites,
-and, indifferent to the clawing thorns, he did not halt
-until he was far down the bank.</p>
-
-<p>It died hard, that regurgitation of brother love. It
-represented most of his life, and all of his home associations,
-and the memories of youth. The strength of it
-proved his loyalty to himself. How warm and fine that
-suddenly revived emotion! How deep seated, beyond his
-control! He could have sobbed out over the pity of it,
-the loss of it, the fallacy of it. Plucked out by the roots,
-it yet lived hidden in the depths of him. Adam in his
-flight to be alone had yielded to the amaze and shame and
-fury stirred in him by a realization of joy in the mere
-sight of this brother who hated him. For years his love
-had fought against the gradual truth of Guerd’s hate.
-He had not been able to prove it, but he felt it. Adam
-had no fear of Guerd, nor any reason why he could
-not face him, except this tenderness of which he was
-ashamed. When he had fought down the mawkish
-sentiment he would show Guerd and Collishaw what he
-was made of. Money! That was Guerd’s motive, with
-an added possibility of further desire to dominate and
-hound.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fool him,” said Adam, resolutely, as he got up to
-return.</p>
-
-<p>Adam did not know exactly what he would do, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-he was certain that he had reached the end of his tether.
-He went back to the village by a roundabout way. Turning
-a sharp curve in the canyon, he came suddenly upon a
-number of workmen, mostly Mexicans. They were standing
-under a wooden trestle that had been built across the
-canyon at this narrow point. All of them appeared to
-be gazing upward, and naturally Adam directed his gaze
-likewise.</p>
-
-<p>Thus without warning he saw the distorted and ghastly
-face of a man hanging by the neck on a rope tied to the
-trestle. The spectacle gave Adam a terrible shock.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Collishaw’s work,” muttered Adam, darkly, and
-he remembered stories told of the sheriff’s grim hand in
-more than one act of border justice. What a hard
-country!</p>
-
-<p>In front of the village store Adam encountered Merryvale,
-and he asked him for particulars about the execution.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I don’t know much,” replied the old watchman,
-scratching his head. “There’s been some placer miners
-shot an’ robbed up the river. This Collishaw is a regular
-sure-enough sheriff, takin’ the law to himself. Reckon
-there ain’t any law. Wal, he an’ his deputies say they
-tracked thet murderin’ gang to Picacho, an’ swore they
-identified one of them. Arallanes stuck up for thet greaser.
-There was a hot argument, an’, by gosh! I jest swore
-Collishaw was goin’ to draw on Arallanes. But Arallanes
-backed down, as any man not crazy would have done.
-The greaser swore by all his Virgins thet he wasn’t the
-man, an’ was swearin’ he could prove it when the rope
-choked him off.... I don’t know, Adam. I don’t know.
-I was fer waitin’ a little to give the feller a chance. But
-Collishaw came down here to hang some one an’ you bet
-he was goin’ to do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know him, Merryvale, and you’re betting right,”
-replied Adam, forcefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Adam, one of his men is a fine-lookin’ young chap
-thet sure must be your brother. Now, ain’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you’re right about that, too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-“Wal, wal! You don’t seem powerful glad.... Son,
-jest be careful what you say to Collishaw. He’s hard an’
-I reckon he’s square as he sees justice, but he doesn’t
-ring right to an old timer like me. He courts the crowd.
-An’ he’s been askin’ fer you. There he comes now.”</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff appeared, approaching with several companions,
-and halted before the store. His was a striking
-figure, picturesque, commanding, but his face was repellent.
-His massive head was set on a bull neck of swarthy
-and weathered skin like wrinkled leather; his broad face,
-of similar hue, appeared a mass of crisscrossed lines,
-deep at the eyes, and long on each side of the cruel, thin-lipped,
-tight-shut mouth; his chin stuck out like a square
-rock; and his eyes, dark and glittering, roved incessantly
-in all directions, had been trained to see men before they
-saw him.</p>
-
-<p>Adam knew that Collishaw had seen him first, and,
-acting upon the resolution that he had made down in the
-thicket, he strode over to the sheriff.</p>
-
-<p>“Collishaw, I’ve been told you wanted me,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Larey! Yes, I was inquirin’ aboot you,” replied
-Collishaw, with the accent of a Texan.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want of me?” asked Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Collishaw drew Adam aside out of earshot of the other
-men.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a matter of thet little gamblin’ debt you owe
-Guerd,” he replied, in low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Collishaw, are you threatening me with some such
-job as you put up on that poor greaser?” inquired Adam,
-sarcastically, as he waved his hand up the canyon.</p>
-
-<p>Probably nothing could have surprised this hardened
-sheriff, but he straightened up with a jerk and shed his
-confidential and admonishing air.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I can’t arrest you on a gamblin’ debt,” he replied,
-bluntly, “but I’m shore goin’ to make you pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are, like hell!” retorted Adam. “What had you
-to do with it? If Guerd owed you money in that game,
-I’m not responsible. And I didn’t pay because I caught<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-Guerd cheating. I’m not much of a gambler, Collishaw,
-but I’ll bet you a stack of gold twenties against your fancy
-vest that Guerd never collects a dollar of his crooked
-deal.”</p>
-
-<p>With that Adam turned on his heel and strode off
-toward the river. His hard-earned independence added
-something to the wrong done him by these men. He
-saw himself in different light. The rankling of the injustice
-he had suffered at Ehrenberg had softened only
-in regard to the girl in the case. Remembering her again,
-it seemed her part in his alienation from Guerd did not
-loom so darkly and closely. Margarita had come between
-that affair and the present hour. This other girl had
-really been nothing to him, but Margarita had become
-everything. A gratefulness, a big, generous warmth,
-stirred in Adam’s heart for the dark-eyed Mexican girl.
-What did it matter who she was? In this desert he must
-learn to adjust differences of class and race and habit
-in relation to the wildness of time and place.</p>
-
-<p>In the open sandy space leading to the houses near the
-river Adam met Arallanes. The usually genial foreman
-appeared pale, somber, sick. To Adam’s surprise, Arallanes
-would not talk about the hanging. Adam had another
-significant estimate of the character of Collishaw.
-Arallanes, however, was not so close lipped concerning
-Guerd Larey.</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Quien sabe, señor?</i>” he concluded. “Maybe it’s best
-for you. Margarita is a she-cat. You are my friend. I
-should tell you.... But, well, señor, if you would keep
-Margarita, look out for your brother.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam gaped his astonishment and had not a word for
-Arallanes as he turned away. It took him some time to
-realize the content of Arallanes warning and advice. But
-what fixed itself in Adam’s mind was the fact that Guerd
-had run across Margarita and had been attracted by her.
-How perfectly natural! How absolutely inevitable!
-Adam could not remember any girl he had ever admired
-or liked in all his life that Guerd had not taken away<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-from him. Among the boys at home it used to be a huge
-joke, in which Adam had good-naturedly shared. All
-for Guerd! Adam could recall the time when he had been
-happy to give up anything or anyone to his brother. But
-out here in the desert, where he was beginning to assimilate
-the meaning of a man’s fight for his life and his
-possessions, he felt vastly different. Moreover, he had
-gone too far with Margarita, regretable as the fact was.
-She belonged to him, and his principles were such that
-he believed he owed her a like return of affection, and
-besides that, loyalty and guardianship. Margarita was
-only seventeen years old. No doubt Guerd would fascinate
-her if she was not kept out of his way.</p>
-
-<p>“But—suppose she likes Guerd—and wants him—as
-she wanted me?” muttered Adam, answering a divining
-flash of the inevitable order of things to be. Still, he
-repudiated that. His intellect told him what to expect,
-but his feeling was too strong to harbor doubt of Margarita.
-Only last night she had changed the world for
-him—opened his eyes to life not as it was dreamed, but
-lived!</p>
-
-<p>Adam found the wife of Arallanes home alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Señora, where is Margarita?”</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita is there,” she replied, with dark, eloquent
-glance upon Adam and a slow gesture toward the river
-bank.</p>
-
-<p>Adam soon espied Guerd and Margarita on the river
-bank some few rods below the landing place. Here was
-a pretty sandy nook, shaded by a large mesquite, and
-somewhat out of sight of passers-by going to and fro
-from village to dock. Two enormous wheels connected
-by an iron bar, a piece of discarded mill machinery, stood
-in the shade of the tree. Margarita sat on the cross-bar
-and Guerd stood beside her. They were close together,
-facing a broad sweep of the river and the wonderland
-of colored peaks beyond. They did not hear Adam’s
-approach on the soft sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Señorita, one look from your midnight eyes and I fell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-in love with you,” Guerd was declaring, with gay passion,
-and his hand upon her was as bold as his speech. “You
-little Spanish princess!... Beautiful as the moon and
-stars!... Hidden in this mining camp, a desert flower
-born to blush unseen! I <span class="locked">shall——”</span></p>
-
-<p>It was here that Adam walked around the high wheels
-to confront them. For him the moment was exceedingly
-poignant. But despite the tumult within him he preserved
-a cool and quiet exterior. Margarita’s radiance vanished
-in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if it ain’t Adam!” ejaculated her companion.
-“You son-of-a-gun!... Why, you’ve changed!”</p>
-
-<p>“Guerd,” began Adam, and then his voice halted. To
-meet his brother this way was a tremendous ordeal. And
-Guerd’s presence seemed to charge the very air. Worship
-of this magnificent brother had been the strongest thing
-in Adam’s life, next to love of mother. To see him
-again! Guerd Larey’s face was beautiful, yet virile and
-strong. The beauty was mere perfection of feature. The
-big curved mouth, the square chin, the straight nose, the
-large hazel-green eyes full of laughter and love of life,
-the broad forehead and clustering fair hair—all these
-were features that made him singularly handsome. His
-skin was clear brown tan with a tinge of red. Adam saw
-no change in Guerd, except perhaps an intensifying of an
-expression of wildness which made him all the more
-fascinating to look at. For Adam the mocking thing
-about Guerd’s godlike beauty was the fact that it deceived.
-At heart, at soul, Guerd was as false as hell!</p>
-
-<p>“Adam, are you goin’ to shake hands?” queried Guerd,
-lazily extending his arm. “You sure strike me queer,
-boy!”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Adam, and his quick-revolving thoughts
-grasped at Guerd’s slipshod speech. Guerd had absorbed
-even the provincial words and idioms of the uncouth West.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Suit yourself,” said Guerd. “I reckon you
-see I’m rather pleasantly engaged.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I see,” returned Adam, bitterly, with a fleeting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-glance at Margarita. She had recovered from her surprise
-and now showed cunning feminine curiosity. “Guerd,
-I met Collishaw, and he had the gall to brace me for that
-gambling debt. And I’ve hunted you up to tell you that
-you cheated me. I’ll not pay it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, you will,” replied Guerd, smilingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I will not,” said Adam, forcefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, you’ll pay it or I’ll take it out of your hide,”
-declared Guerd, slowly frowning, as if a curious hint of
-some change in Adam had dawned upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t take it that way—or any other way,” retorted
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“But, say—I didn’t cheat,” remonstrated Guerd, evidently
-making a last stand of argument to gain his end.</p>
-
-<p>“You lie!” flashed Adam. “You know it. I know
-it.... Guerd, let’s waste no words. I told you at
-Ehrenberg—after you played that shabby trick on me—over
-the girl there—I told you I was through with you
-for good.”</p>
-
-<p>Guerd seemed to realize with wonder and chagrin that
-he had now to deal with a man. How the change in his
-expression thrilled Adam! What relief came to him in
-the consciousness that he was now stronger than Guerd!
-He had never been certain of that.</p>
-
-<p>“Through and be damned!” exclaimed Guerd, and he
-took his arm from around Margarita and rose from his
-leaning posture to his lofty height. “I’m sick of your
-milksop ideas. All I want of you is that money. If you
-don’t pony up with it I’ll tear your clothes off gettin’ it.
-Savvy that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha-ha!” laughed Adam, tauntingly. “I say to you
-what I said to Collishaw—you will, like hell!”</p>
-
-<p>Guerd Larey’s lips framed curses that were inaudible.
-He was astounded. The red flamed his neck and face.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll meet you after I get through talking to this girl,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Any time you want,” rejoined Adam, bitingly, “but
-I’ll have my say now, once and for all.... The worm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-has turned, Guerd Larey. Your goose has stopped laying
-golden eggs. I will take no more burdens of yours on
-my shoulders. You’ve bullied me all my life. You’ve
-hated me. I know now. Oh, I remember so well! You
-robbed me of toys, clothes, playmates. Then girl friends!
-Then money!... Then—a worthless woman!...
-You’re a fraud—a cheat—a liar.... You’ve fallen in
-with your kind out here and you’re going straight to
-hell.”</p>
-
-<p>The whiteness of Guerd’s face attested to his roused
-passion. But he had more restraint than Adam. He was
-older, and the difference of age between them showed
-markedly.</p>
-
-<p>“So you followed me out here to say all that?” he
-queried.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not altogether,” replied Adam. “I came after
-Margarita.”</p>
-
-<p>“Came after Margarita?” echoed Guerd, blankly. “Is
-that her name? Say, Adam, is this one of your goody-goody
-tricks? Rescuing a damsel in distress sort of
-thing!... You and I have fallen out more than once
-over that. I <span class="locked">kick—I——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Guerd, we’ve fallen out forever,” interrupted Adam,
-and then he turned to the girl. “Margarita, I want
-<span class="locked">you——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“But it’s none of your damned business,” burst out
-Guerd, hotly, interrupting in turn. “What do you care
-about a Mexican girl? I won’t stand your interference.
-You clear out and let me alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Guerd—it is my business,” returned Adam, haltingly.
-Some inward force dragged at his tongue. “She’s—my
-girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” ejaculated Guerd, incredulously. Then he bent
-down to peer into Margarita’s face, and from that he
-swept a flashing, keen glance at Adam. His eyes were
-wonderful then, intensely bright, quickened and sharpened
-with swift turns of thought. “Boy, you don’t mean you’re
-on friendly terms with this greaser girl?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-“Yes,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve made love to her!” cried Guerd, and the radiance
-of his face then was beyond Adam’s understanding.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Guerd violently controlled what must have been a spasm
-of fiendish glee. His amaze, deep as it was, seemed not
-to be his predominant feeling, but that very amaze was
-something to force exquisitely upon Adam how far he
-had fallen. The moment was dark, hateful, far-reaching
-in effect, impossible to realize. Guerd’s glance flashed
-back and forth from Adam to Margarita. But he had
-not yet grasped what was the tragic thing for Adam—the
-truth of how fatefully far this love affair had fallen.
-Adam’s heart sank like lead in his breast. What humiliation
-he must suffer if he betrayed himself! Hard he
-fought for composure and dignity to hide his secret.</p>
-
-<p>“Adam, in matters of the heart, where two gentlemen
-admire the lady in question, the choice is always left to
-her,” began Guerd, with something of mockery in his rich
-voice. A devil gleamed from him then, and the look of
-him, the stature, the gallant action of him as he bowed
-before Margarita, fascinated Adam even in his miserable
-struggle to appear a man.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Guerd, you—you’ve known Margarita only a few
-moments,” he expostulated, and the sound of his voice
-made him weak. “How can you put such a choice to—to
-her? It’s—it’s an insult.”</p>
-
-<p>“Adam, that is for Margarita to decide,” responded
-Guerd. “Women change. It is something you have not
-learned.” Then as he turned to Margarita he seemed to
-blaze with magnetism. The grace of him and the beauty
-of him in that moment made of him a perfect physical
-embodiment of the emotions of which he was master.
-He knew his power over women. “Margarita, Adam and
-I are brothers. We are always falling in love with the
-same girl. You must choose between us. Adam would
-tie you down—keep you from the eyes of other men.
-I would leave you free as a bird.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-And he bent over to whisper in her ear, with his strong
-brown hand on her arm, at once gallant yet masterful.</p>
-
-<p>The scene was a nightmare to Adam. How could this
-be something that was happening? But he had sight!
-Margarita seemed a transformed creature, shy, coy, alluring,
-with the half-veiled dusky eyes, heavy-lidded, lighted
-with the same fire that had shone in them for Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita, will you come?” cried Adam, goaded to end
-this situation.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she replied, softly.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg of you—come!” implored Adam.</p>
-
-<p>The girl shook her black head. A haunting mockery
-hung around her, in her slight smile, in the light of her
-face. She radiated a strange glow like the warm shade
-of an opal. Older she seemed to Adam and surer of
-herself and somewhat deeper in that mystic obsession of
-passion he had often sensed in her. No spiritual conception
-of what Adam regarded as his obligation to her
-could ever dawn in that little brain. She loved her pretty
-face and beautiful body. She gloried in her power over
-men. And the new man she felt to be still unwon—who
-was stronger of instinct and harder to hold, under whose
-brutal hand she would cringe and thrill and pant and
-fight—him she would choose. So Adam read Margarita
-in that moment. If he had felt love for her, which he
-doubted, it was dead. A great pity flooded over him. It
-seemed that of the three there, he was the only one who
-was true and who understood.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita, have you forgotten last night?” asked
-Adam, huskily.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, señor—so long ago and far away!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Adam whirled abruptly and, plunging into the thicket
-of mesquites, he tore a way through, unmindful of the
-thorns. When he reached his quarters there was blood
-on his hands and face, but the sting of the thorns was as
-nothing to the hurt in his heart. He lay down.</p>
-
-<p>“Again!” he whispered. “Guerd has come—and it’s
-the same old story. Only worse!... But, it’s better so!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-I—I didn’t know—her!... Arallanes knew—he told me....
-And I—I dreamed so many—many fool things. Yes—it’s
-better—better. I didn’t love her right. It—it was
-something she roused. I never loved her—but if I did
-love her—it’s gone. It’s not loss that—that stabs me
-now. It’s Guerd—Guerd! Again—and I ran off from
-him.... ‘So long ago and far away,’ she said! Are all
-women like that? I can’t believe it. I never will. I
-remember my mother.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">That</span> night in the dead late hours Adam suddenly
-awoke. The night seemed the same as all the desert
-nights—dark and cool under the mesquites—the same
-dead, unbroken silence. Adam’s keen intentness could
-not detect a slightest sound of wind or brush or beast.
-Something had pierced his slumbers, and as he pondered
-deeply there seemed to come out of the vagueness beyond
-that impenetrable wall of sleep a voice, a cry, a whisper.
-Had Margarita, sleeping or waking, called to him?
-Such queer visitations of mind, often repeated, had
-convinced Adam that he possessed a mystic power or
-sense.</p>
-
-<p>When Adam awoke late, in the light of the sunny morning,
-unrealities of the night dispersed like the gray shadows
-and vanished. He arose eager, vigorous, breathing hard,
-instinctively seeking for action. The day was Sunday.
-Another idle wait, fruitful of brooding moods! But he
-vowed he would not go to the willow brakes, there to
-hide from Guerd and Collishaw. Let them have their
-say—do their worst! We would go up to Picacho and
-gamble and drink with the rest of the drifters. Merryvale’s
-words of desert-learned wisdom rang through
-Adam’s head. As for Margarita, all Adam wanted was
-one more look at her face, into her dusky eyes, and that
-would forever end his relation to her.</p>
-
-<p>At breakfast Arallanes presented a thoughtful and forbidding
-appearance, although this demeanor was somewhat
-softened by the few times he broke silence. The señora’s
-impassive serenity lacked its usual kindliness, and her
-lowered eyes kept their secrets. Margarita had not yet
-arisen. Adam could not be sure there was really a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-shadow hovering over the home, or in his own mind,
-coloring, darkening his every prospect.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast he went out to stroll along the river
-bank and then around the village. He ascertained from
-Merryvale that Collishaw, Guerd, and their associates had
-found lodgings at different houses for the night, and
-after breakfast had left for the mining camp. As usual,
-Merryvale spoke pointedly: “You’re brother said they
-were goin’ to clear out the camp. An’ I reckon he didn’t
-mean greasers, but whisky an’ gold. Son, you stay
-away from Picacho to-day.” For once, however, the kind
-old man’s advice fell upon deaf ears. Adam had to fight
-his impatience to be off up the canyon; and only a driving
-need to see Margarita held him there. He walked to
-and fro, from village to river and back again. By and
-by he espied Arallanes and his wife, with their friends,
-dressed in their best, parading toward the little adobe
-church. Margarita was not with them.</p>
-
-<p>Adam waited a little while, hoping to see her appear.
-He did not analyze his strong hope that she would go
-to church this Sunday as usual. But as no sign of her
-was forthcoming he strode down to the little brown
-house and entered at the open door.</p>
-
-<p>“Margarita!” he called. No answer broke the quiet.
-His second call, however, brought her from her room,
-a dragging figure with a pale face that Adam had never
-before seen pale.</p>
-
-<p>“Señor Ad-dam,” she faltered.</p>
-
-<p>The look of her, and that voice, stung Adam out of the
-gentleness habitual with him. Leaping at her, he dragged
-her into the light of the door. She cried out in a fear
-that shocked him. When he let go of her, abrupt and
-sharp in his motions, she threw up her arms as if to
-ward off attack.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think I would hurt you?” he cried, harshly.
-“No, Margarita! I only wanted to see you—just once
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>She dropped her arms and raised her face. Then Adam,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-keen in that poignant moment, saw in her the passing of
-an actual fear of death. It struck him mute. It betrayed
-her. What had been the dalliance of yesterday, playful
-and passionate in its wild youth, through the night had
-become dishonor. Yesterday she had been a cat that
-loved to be stroked; to-day she was a maimed creature,
-a broken woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Lift your face—higher,” said Adam, hoarsely, as he
-put out a shaking hand to touch her. But he could not
-touch her. She did lift it and looked at him, denying
-nothing, still unashamed. But now there was soul in
-that face. Adam felt it limned on his memory forever—the
-stark truth of her frailty, the courage of a primitive
-nature fearing only death, yearning for brutal blows as
-proof of the survival of jealous love, a dawning consciousness
-of his honesty and truth. Terrible was it for Adam
-to realize that if she had been given that choice again
-she would have decided differently. But it was too late.</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Adios</i>, señorita,” he said, bowing, and backed out of
-the door. He stopped, and the small pale face with its
-tragic eyes, straining, unutterably eloquent of wrong to
-him and to herself, passed slowly out of his sight.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Swiftly Adam strode up the canyon, his fierce energy
-in keeping with his thoughts. He overtook the Irishman,
-Regan, who accosted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Wansfell, ould fri’nd!” he called. “Don’t yez
-walk so dom’ fast.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell! Why do you call me that?” asked Adam.
-How curiously the name struck his ear!</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t thot your noime?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, all right. Will yez hev a dhrink?” Regan produced
-a brown bottle and handed it to Adam.</p>
-
-<p>They walked on up the canyon, Regan with his short,
-stunted legs being hard put to it to keep up with Adam’s
-long strides. The Irishman would attach himself to Adam,
-that was evident; and he was a most talkative and friendly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-fellow. Whenever he got out of breath he halted to
-draw out the bottle. The liquor in an ordinary hour
-would have befuddled Adam’s wits, but now it only
-heated his blood.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, if yez ain’t the dom’dest foinest young feller
-in these diggin’s!” ejaculated Regan.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, friend. But don’t call me that queer
-name. Mine’s Adam.”</p>
-
-<p>“A-dom?” echoed Regan. “Phwat a hell of a noime!
-Adom an’ Eve, huh? I seen yez with thot black-eyed
-wench. She’s purty.”</p>
-
-<p>They finished the contents of the bottle and proceeded
-on their way. Regan waxed warmer in his regard for
-Adam and launched forth a strong argument in favor
-of their going on a prospecting trip.</p>
-
-<p>“Yez would make a foine prospector an’ pard,” he said.
-“Out on the desert yez are free an’ happy, b’gorra! No
-place loike the desert, pard, whin yez come to know it!
-Thar’s air to breathe an’ long days wid the sun on yer
-back an’ noights whin a mon knows shlape. Mebbe we’ll
-hev the luck to foind Pegleg Smith’s lost gold mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who was Pegleg Smith and what gold mine did he
-lose?” queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Then as they plodded on up the canyon, trying to keep
-to the shady strips and out of the hot sun, Adam heard
-for a second time the story of the famous lost gold mine.
-Regan told it differently, perhaps exaggerating after the
-manner of prospectors. But the story was impelling to
-any man with a drop of adventurous blood in his veins.
-The lure of gold had not yet obsessed Adam, but he had
-begun to feel the lure of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>Adam concluded that under happier circumstances this
-Regan would be a man well worth cultivating in spite
-of his love for the bottle. They reached the camp about
-noon, had a lunch at the stand of a Chinaman, and then,
-entering the saloon, they mingled with the crowd, where
-Adam soon became separated from Regan. Liquor flowed
-like water, and gold thudded in sacks and clinked musically<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-in coins upon the tables. Adam had one drink, and
-that incited him to take another. Again the throb and
-burn of his blood warmed out the coldness and bitterness
-of his mood. Deliberately he drank and deliberately he
-stifled the voice of conscience until he was in a reckless
-and dangerous frame of mind. There seemed to be a
-fire consuming him now, to which liquor was only fuel.</p>
-
-<p>He swaggered through the crowded hall, and for once
-the drunken miners, the painted hags, the cold-faced
-gamblers, did not disgust him. The smell of rum and
-smoke, the feel of the thick sand under his feet, the sight
-of the motley crowd of shirt-sleeved and booted men, the
-discordant din of music, glasses, gold, and voices—all
-these sensations struck him full and intimately with their
-proof that he was a part of this wild assembly of free
-adventurers. He remembered again Merryvale’s idea of
-a man equipped to cope with this lawless gang and hold
-his own. Suddenly when he espied his brother Guerd he
-shook with the driving passion that had led him there.</p>
-
-<p>Guerd sat at table, gambling with Collishaw and
-MacKay and other men of Picacho well known to Adam.
-Guerd looked the worse for liquor and bad luck. When
-he glanced up to see Adam, a light gleamed across his
-hot face. He dropped his cards, and as Adam stepped
-near he rose from the table and in two strides confronted
-him, arrogant, menacing, with the manner of a man
-dangerous to cross.</p>
-
-<p>“I want money,” demanded Guerd.</p>
-
-<p>Adam laughed in his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Go to work. You’re not slick enough with the cards
-to hide your tricks,” replied Adam, in deliberate scorn.</p>
-
-<p>Temper, and not forethought, actuated Guerd then.
-He slapped Adam, with the moderate force of an older
-brother punishing an impertinence. Swift and hard Adam
-returned that blow, staggering Guerd, who fell against
-the table, but was upheld by Collishaw. He uttered a loud
-and piercing cry.</p>
-
-<p>Sharply the din ceased. The crowd slid back over the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-sand, leaving Adam in the center of a wide space, confronting
-Guerd, who still leaned against Collishaw. Guerd
-panted for breath. His hot face turned white except for
-the red place where Adam’s fist had struck. MacKay
-righted the table, then hurriedly drew back. Guerd’s fury
-of astonishment passed to stronger controlled passion. He
-rose from Collishaw’s hold and seemed to tower magnificently.
-He had the terrible look of a man who had waited
-years for a moment of revenge, at last to recognize it.</p>
-
-<p>“You hit me! I’ll beat you for that—I’ll smash your
-face,” he said, stridently.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” cried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>At this instant the Irishman, Regan, staggered out of
-the crowd into the open circle. He was drunk.</p>
-
-<p>“Sic ’em, Wansfell, sic ’em,” he bawled. “I’m wid yez.
-We’ll lick thot—loidy face—an’ ivery <span class="locked">dom’——”</span></p>
-
-<p>Some miner reached out a long arm and dragged Regan
-back.</p>
-
-<p>Guerd Larey leaned over to pound with his fist on the
-table. A leaping glow radiated from his face, as if a
-genius of hate had inspired some word or speech that
-Adam must find insupportable. His look let loose a
-bursting gush of blood through Adam’s throbbing veins.
-This was no situation built on a quarrel or a jealous
-rivalry. It was backed by years, and by some secret not
-easily to be divined, though its source was the very soul
-of Cain.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s your game,” declared Guerd, with ringing
-passion. “You want to fight and you make this debt of
-yours a pretense. But I’m on to you. It’s because of the
-girl I took from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up! Have you no sense of decency? Can’t you
-be half a man?” burst out Adam, beginning to shake.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! Ha! Ha! Listen to Goody-Goody!... Mother’s
-nice <span class="locked">boy——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“By Heaven, Guerd Larey, if you speak of my—my
-mother—here—I’ll tear out your tongue!”</p>
-
-<p>They were close together now, with only the table between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-them—Cain and Abel—the old bitter story plain
-in the hate of one flashing face and the agony of the
-other. Guerd Larey had divined the means to torture and
-to crucify this brother whose heart and soul were raw.</p>
-
-<p>“Talk about the fall of Saint Anthony!” cried Guerd,
-with a voice magical in its steely joy. “Never was there
-a fall like Adam Larey’s—the Sunday-school boy—too
-sweet—too innocent—too pure to touch the hand of a
-girl!... Ha-ha! Oh, we can fight, Adam. I’ll fight
-you. But let me talk—let me tell my friends what a
-damned hypocrite you are.... Gentlemen, behold the immaculate
-Saint Adam whose Eve was a little greaser girl!”</p>
-
-<p>There was no shout of mirth. The hall held a low-breathing
-silence. It was a new scene, a diversion for
-the gamblers and miners and their painted consorts, a
-clash of a different kind and spirit. Guerd paused to
-catch his breath and evidently to gather supreme passion
-for the delivery of what seemed more to him than life
-itself. His face was marble white, quivering and straining,
-and his eyes blazed with a piercing flame.</p>
-
-<p>Adam saw the living, visible proof of a hate he had
-long divined. The magnificence of Guerd’s passion, the
-terrible reality of his hate, the imminence of a mortal
-blow, locked Adam’s lips and jaws as in a vise, while a
-gathering fury, as terrible as Guerd’s hate, flooded and
-dammed at the gates of his energy, ready to break out
-in destroying violence.</p>
-
-<p>“She told me!” Guerd flung the words like bullets.
-“You needn’t bluff it out with your damned lying white
-face. She told me!... You—you, Adam Larey, with
-your pure thoughts and lofty ideals ... the <em>rot</em> of
-them! <em>You</em>—damn your milksop soul!—you were the
-slave of a dirty little greaser girl who fooled you, laughed
-in your face, left you for me—for me at the snap of my
-fingers.... And, by God! my cup would be full—if
-your mother could only <span class="locked">know——”</span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_58" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29em;">
- <img src="images/i_058.jpg" width="462" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THEN THE GUN BOOMED WITH MUFFLED REPORT—AND GUERD LAREY,
- UTTERING A CRY OF AGONY, FELL AWAY FROM ADAM</div></div>
-
-<p>It was Collishaw’s swift hand that knocked up Adam’s
-flinging arm and the gun which spouted red and boomed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-heavily. Collishaw grappled with him—was flung off—and
-then Guerd lunged in close to save himself. A writhing,
-wrestling struggle—quick, terrible; then the gun
-boomed with muffled report—and Guerd Larey, uttering
-a cry of agony, fell away from Adam, backward over the
-table. His gaze, conscious, appalling, was fixed on Adam.
-A dark crimson spot stained his white shirt. Then he
-lay there with fading eyes—the beauty and radiance and
-hate of his face slowly shading.</p>
-
-<p>Collishaw leaned over him. Then with hard, grim gesture
-he shouted, hoarsely: “Dead, by God!... You’ll
-hang for this!”</p>
-
-<p>A creeping horror was slowly paralyzing Adam. But
-at that harsh speech he leaped wildly, flinging his gun
-with terrific force into the sheriff’s face. Like an upright
-stone dislodged Collishaw fell. Then Adam, bounding
-forward, flung aside the men obstructing his passage and
-fled out of the door.</p>
-
-<p>Terror lent wings to his feet. In a few moments he
-was beyond the outskirts of the camp. Even here, fierce
-in his energy, he bounded upward, from rock to rock,
-until he reached the steep jumble of talus where swift
-progress was impossible. Then with hands and feet working
-in unison, as if he had been an ape, he climbed
-steadily.</p>
-
-<p>From the top of the first rocky slope he gazed back
-fearfully. Yes, men were pursuing him, strung out along
-the road of the mining camp; and among the last was a
-tall, black-coated, bareheaded man that Adam took to be
-Collishaw. This pursuer was staggering along, flinging
-his arms.</p>
-
-<p>Adam headed straight up the ascent. Picacho loomed
-to the right, a colossal buttress of red rock, wild and ragged
-and rugged. But the ascent that had looked so short
-and easy—how long and steep! Every shadow was a lie,
-every space of slope in the sunlight hid the truth of its
-width. Sweat poured from his hot body. He burned.
-His breath came in labored bursts. A painful stab in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-side spread and swelled to the whole region of his breast.
-He could hear the mighty throb of his heart, and he could
-hear it in another way—a deep muffled throb through his
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>At last he reached the height of the slope where it
-ended under a wall of rock, the backbone of that ridge,
-bare and jagged, with no loose shale on its almost perpendicular
-side. Here it took hard labor of hand and
-foot to climb and zigzag and pull himself up. Here he
-fell exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>But the convulsion was short lived. His will power
-was supreme and his endurance had not been permanently
-disabled. He crawled before he could walk, and when he
-recovered enough to stagger erect he plodded on, invincible
-in his spirit to escape.</p>
-
-<p>From this height, which was a foothill to the great
-peak, he got his bearings and started down.</p>
-
-<p>“They can’t—trail me—here,” he whispered, hoarsely,
-as he looked back with the eyes of a fugitive. “And—down
-there—I’ll keep off the road.”</p>
-
-<p>After that brief moment of reasoning he became once
-more victim to fear and desperate passion to hurry. He
-had escaped, his pursuers could not see him now, he could
-hide, the descent was tortuous; yet these apparent facts,
-favorable as they were, could not save him. Adam pushed
-on, gaining strength as he recovered breath. As his direction
-led him downhill, he went swiftly, sometimes at a
-rapid walk, again sliding down here and rushing there,
-and at other places he stepped from rock to rock, like a
-balancing rope walker.</p>
-
-<p>The descent here appeared to be a long, even slant of
-broken rocks, close together like cobblestones in a street,
-and of a dark-bronze hue. They shone as if they had
-been varnished. And a closer glance showed Adam the
-many reddish tints of <i>bisnagi</i> cactus growing in the cracks
-between the stones.</p>
-
-<p>His misgivings were soon verified. He had to descend
-here, for the afternoon was far gone, and whatever the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-labor and pain, he must reach the road before dark. The
-rocks were sharp, uneven, and as slippery as if they had
-been wet. At the very outset Adam slipped, and, falling
-with both hands forward, he thrust them into a cactus.
-The pain stung, and when he had to pull hard to free
-himself from the thorns, it was as if his hands had been
-nailed. He could not repress moans as he tried to pull
-out the thorns with his teeth. They stuck tight. The
-blood ran in little streams. But he limped on, down the
-black slope.</p>
-
-<p>The white road below grew closer and closer. It was
-a goal. This slope of treacherous rocks and torturing
-cacti was a physical ordeal that precluded memory of the
-past or consideration of the present. When Adam at last
-reached the road, there to fall exhausted and wet and
-burning upon a flat rock, it seemed that he had been
-delivered from an inferno.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he sat up to look around him. A wonderful
-light showed upon the world—the afterglow of sunset.
-Picacho bore a crown of gold. All the lower tips of
-ranges were purpling in shadow. To the southward a
-wide gray barren led to an endless bleak plateau, flat and
-dark, with dim spurs of mountains in the distance. Desolate,
-lifeless, silent—the gateway to the desert! Adam
-felt steal over him a sense of awe. The vastness of seen
-and suggested desert seemed flung at him, as if nature
-meant to reveal to him the mystery and might of space.
-The marvelous light magnified the cacti and the rocks,
-and the winding ranges and the bold peaks, and the distances,
-until all were unreal. Adam felt that he had
-overcome a great hardship, accomplished a remarkable
-feat, had climbed and descended a range as sharp toothed
-as jagged lava. But to what end! Something in the
-bewildering light of the west, in the purple shadows growing
-cold in the east, in the tremendous oppression of
-illimitable space and silence and solitude and desolation—something
-inexplicable repudiated and mocked his physical
-sense of great achievement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-All at once, in a flash, he remembered his passion, his
-crime, his terror, his flight. Not until that instant had
-intelligence operated in harmony with his feelings. He
-lifted his face in the cool, darkening twilight. The frowning
-mountains held aloof, and all about him seemed detached,
-rendering his loneliness absolute and immutable.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Oh!” he moaned. “What will become of me?...
-No family—no friends—no hope!... Oh, Guerd—my
-brother! His blood on my hands!... He ruined
-my life! He’s killed my soul!... Oh, damn him, damn
-him! he’s made me a murderer!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam fell face down on the rock with breaking heart.
-His exceeding bitter cries seemed faint and lost in the
-midst of the vastness of desert and sky. The deepening
-of twilight to darkness, the cold black grandeur of the
-great peak, the mournful wail of a desert wolf, the pure
-pale evening star that pierced the purple sky, the stupendous
-loneliness and silence of that solitude—all these
-facts seemed Nature’s pitiless proof of her indifference
-to man and his despair. His hope, his prayer, his frailty,
-his fall, his burden and agony and life—these were nothing
-to the desert that worked inscrutably through its
-millions of years, nor to the illimitable expanse of heaven,
-deepening its blue and opening its cold, starry eyes. But
-a spirit as illimitable and as inscrutable breathed out of
-the universe and over the immensity of desert space—a
-spirit that breathed to the soul of the ruined man and
-bade him rise and take up his burden and go on down the
-naked shingles of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Despair and pride and fear of death, and this strange
-breath of life, dragged Adam up and drove him down
-the desert road. For a mile he staggered and plodded
-along, bent and bowed like an old man, half blinded by
-tears and choked by sobs, abject in his misery; yet even
-so, the something in him that was strongest of all—the
-instinct to survive—made him keep to the hard, gravelly
-side of the road, that his tracks might not show in the
-dust.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-And that action of blood and muscle, because it came
-first in the order of energy, gradually assumed dominance
-of him, until again he was an escaping fugitive, mostly
-concerned with direction and objective things. The direction
-took care of itself, being merely a matter of keeping
-along the edge of the road that gleamed pale in front
-of him. Objects near at hand, however, had to be carefully
-avoided. Rocks were indistinct in the gloom; <i>ocatilla</i>
-cacti thrust out long spectral arms; like the tentacles of
-an octopus; and shadows along the road took the alarming
-shape of men and horses and wagons. All around
-him, except to the west, was profound obscurity, and in
-that direction an endless horizon, wild and black and
-sharp, with sweeping bold lines between the spurs, stood
-silhouetted against a pale-blue, star-fired sky. Miles and
-miles he walked, and with a strength that had renewed.
-He never looked up at the heavens above. Often he
-halted to turn and listen. These moments were dreaded
-ones. But he heard only a faint breeze.</p>
-
-<p>Morning broke swiftly and relentlessly, a gray, desert
-dawning. Dim columns of smoke scarce a mile away
-showed him that Yuma was close. Fields and cattle
-along the road, and then an Indian hut, warned him that
-he was approaching the habitations of men and sooner
-or later he would be seen. He must hide by day and travel
-by night. Bordering the road to his left was a dense
-thicket of arrowweed, indicating that he had reached the
-bottom lands of the river. Into this Adam crawled like
-a wounded and stealthy deer. Hunger and thirst were
-slight, but his whole body seemed a throbbing ache. Both
-mind and body longed for the oblivion that came at once
-in sleep.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam’s</span> heavy slumbers were punctuated by periods
-when he half awakened, drowsily aware of extreme
-heat, of discomfort and sluggish pain, and of vague
-sounds.</p>
-
-<p>Twilight had fallen when he fully awakened, stiff and
-sore, with a gnawing at his stomach and a parching of
-mouth and throat from thirst. He crawled out of the
-copse of arrowweed, to the opening by which he had
-entered it, and, stealthily proceeding on to the road, he
-peered out and listened. No man in sight—no sound to
-alarm! Consciousness of immense relief brought bitterly
-home to him the fact that he was a fugitive. Taking to
-the road, he walked rapidly in the direction of the lights.
-He passed low, dark huts somewhat back from the road,
-and he heard strange voices, probably of Indians.</p>
-
-<p>In about a quarter of an hour he came to the river
-basin, where the road dropped down somewhat into the
-outskirts of Yuma. Most of the lights were across the
-river on the Arizona side. He met both Mexicans and
-Indians who took no apparent notice of him, and this
-encouraged Adam to go on with them down to a ferry-boat.</p>
-
-<p>The boat was shoved off. Adam saw that it was fastened
-to the cable overhead by ropes and pulleys. The current
-worked it across the river. Adam got out with the rest
-of the passengers, and, leaving them, he walked down
-the bank a few rods. He found a little dock with a skiff
-moored to it, and here he lay flat and drank his fill. The
-water was full of sand, but cool and palatable. Then he
-washed his face and hands. The latter were swollen and
-stiff from the cactus thorns, rendering them clumsy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-Next in order for him was to find a place to eat, and
-soon he came at once upon an eating house where several
-rough-looking white men and some Mexicans were being
-served by a Chinaman.</p>
-
-<p>When he ended this meal he had determined upon a
-course to take. He needed a gun, ammunition, canteen,
-burro, and outfit; and he hardly expected to be able to
-purchase them after dark, without exciting suspicion. All
-the same, he set out to look.</p>
-
-<p>A short walk brought Adam to a wide street, dimly
-lighted by the flare of lamps from open doors of saloons
-and stores. He halted in a shadow on the corner.
-A stream of men was passing—rugged, unshaven,
-dusty-booted white men, and Mexicans with their peaked
-sombreros and embroidered jackets and tight braided
-trousers.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Adam ventured forth and walked up the
-street. The town resembled Picacho in its noisiest hours,
-magnified many times. He felt a wildness he could not see
-or hear. It dragged at him. It somehow made him a
-part of the frontier life. He longed to escape from
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>A glimpse of a tall man in black frock coat startled
-Adam. That coat reminded him of Collishaw. He sheered
-down a side street into the gloom. He saw wagons and
-heard the munch of horses in stalls. Evidently this place
-was a barnyard and might afford him a safe retreat for
-the night. The first wagon he examined contained straw.
-Climbing into it, he lay down. For a long time he lay
-there, worrying over the risk he must run next day, until
-at length he fell asleep.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>When day dawned, however, Adam had not such overpowering
-dread. The sun was rising in red splendor and
-the day promised to be hot. As it was early, but few
-people were to be encountered, and this fact lent Adam
-more courage. He had no difficulty in finding the place
-where he had eaten the night before. Adam ate as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-heartily as he could, not because he was hungry, but for
-the reason that he had an idea he might have to travel
-far on this meal.</p>
-
-<p>That done, he sallied forth to find a store where he
-could purchase the outfit he needed; and he approached
-the business section by a street that climbed to what was
-apparently the highest point in Yuma.</p>
-
-<p>Adam entered a store, and almost forgot himself in
-the interest of the purchases he wanted to make. He
-needed a small mule, or burro, to pack his outfit, and
-while the storekeeper went out to get it for Adam several
-Mexicans entered. One of them recognized Adam. He
-cried out, “Santa Maria!” and ran out, followed by his
-amazed but less hurried comrades. It took Adam a
-moment to place the man in mind. Felix! the Mexican
-that had drawn a knife on Arallanes.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore Adam pondered. He must take risks to get
-away with this necessary outfit. The storekeeper, who
-had gone out through the back of the store, returned to
-say he could furnish a good burro ready to be packed at
-once. Adam made a deal with him for the whole outfit
-and began to count out the money. The storekeeper did
-not wait, and, gathering up an armful of Adam’s purchases,
-he carried them out through the back door. This
-gave Adam opportunity to have a look from the front
-door into the street. There strode Felix, gesticulating
-wildly to the white man Adam had seen before, the black-coated
-tall Collishaw, significant and grim, with a white
-bandage over his face.</p>
-
-<p>A shock pierced Adam’s heart, and it was followed by
-a terrible icy compression, and then a bursting gush of
-blood, a flood of fire over all his body. Leaping like a
-deer, he bounded back through the store, out of the door,
-and across an open space full of implements, wagons,
-and obstacles he had to run around or jump over. He
-did not see the storekeeper. One vault took him over a
-high board fence into an alley, and through this he ran
-into a street. He headed for the river, running fleetly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-blind to all around him but the ground flying under his
-feet and the end of the street. He gained that. The
-river, broad and swirling, lay beneath him. Plunging
-down the bank, he flew toward the dock. Upon reaching
-the dock, Adam espied a skiff, with oars in place, with
-bow pulled up on the sand. One powerful shove sent
-it, with him aboard, out into the stream. He bent the
-oars in his long, strong sweeps, and it took him only a
-few moments to cross. Not yet had any men appeared
-in pursuit or even to take notice of him. As he jumped
-out on the California shore of the river and began to run
-north, he found that he faced the lone black mountain
-peak which dominated the rise of the desert. The dust
-was ankle deep. It stifled him, choked him, and caked
-on his sweaty face and hands. He strode swiftly, oppressed
-by the dust and intolerant of the confining borders
-of yellow brush. The frequent bends in the road were
-at once a relief and a dread. They hid him, yet obstructed
-his own view. He seemed obsessed by a great, passionate
-energy to escape. When he looked back he thought of
-Collishaw, of sure pursuit; when he looked ahead he
-thought of the road, the dust, the brush into which he
-wanted to hide, the physical things to be overcome.</p>
-
-<p>By and by he climbed and passed out of the zone of
-brush. He was on the open gravel ridges, like the ridges
-of a washboard, up and down, and just as bare. Yet,
-as a whole, there was a distinct slope upward. He could
-not see the level of the desert, but the lone mountain peak,
-close at hand now, red and black and shining, towered
-bleakly over him.</p>
-
-<p>Adam derived satisfaction from the fact that the hard
-gravel ridges did not take imprint of his boots. Assured
-now that escape was in his grasp, he began to put his
-mind upon other considerations of his flight. He was not
-such a fool as to underrate the danger of his venturing out
-upon the desert without food, and especially without
-water. Already he was thirsty. These thoughts, and
-counter ones, pressed hard upon him until he surmounted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-the long slope to the top of the desert mesa. Here he
-looked back.</p>
-
-<p>First he saw clouds of dust puffing up from the brush-covered
-lowlands, and then, in an open space where the
-road crossed, he espied horsemen coming at a gallop.
-Again, and just as fiercely, did his veins seem to freeze,
-his blood to halt, and then to burst into flame.</p>
-
-<p>“Collishaw—and his men!” gasped Adam, his jaw
-dropping. “They’ve trailed me!... They’re after me—on
-horses!”</p>
-
-<p>The apparent fact was terrific in its stunning force.
-Adam reeled; his sight blurred. It was a full moment
-before he could rally his forces. Then, gazing keenly,
-he saw that his pursuers were still miles away.</p>
-
-<p>At first he ran fleetly, with endurance apparently unimpaired,
-but he meant to slow down and husband his
-strength as soon as he dared. Before him stretched a
-desert floor of fine, shining gravel, like marbles, absolutely
-bare of any vegetation for what seemed hundreds
-of yards; and then began to appear short bunches of low
-meager brush called greasewood, and here and there isolated
-patches of <i>ocatilla</i>. These multiplied and enlarged
-in the distance until they looked as if they would afford
-cover enough to hide Adam from his pursuers. Hot, wet
-with sweat, strong, and panting, he ran another mile, to
-find the character of the desert changing.</p>
-
-<p>Reaching the zone of plant life, he soon placed a thin
-but effective barrier of greasewood and <i>ocatilla</i> behind
-him. Then he slowed down to catch his breath. Before
-him extended a vast hazy expanse, growing darker with
-accumulated growths in the distance. To the right rose
-the chocolate mountain range, and it ran on to fade in the
-dim horizon. Behind him now stood the lone black peak,
-and to the left rose a low, faint wavering line of white,
-like billows of a sea. This puzzled him until at length
-he realized it was sand. Sand—and it, like the range,
-faded in the distant horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Adam also made the discovery that as he looked back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-over his shoulder he was really looking down a long,
-gradual slope. Plainly he could see the edge of the desert
-where he had come up, and often, as he traveled along
-at a jog trot, he gazed around with fearful expectancy.
-He had imagined that his running had given rise to the
-breeze blowing in his face. But this was not so. A rather
-stiff wind was blowing straight at him. It retarded his
-progress, and little puffs of fine, invisible sand or dust
-irritated his eyes. Then the tears would flow and wash
-them clear again. With all his senses and feelings there
-mingled a growing preponderance of thought or realization
-of the tremendous openness of the desert. He felt
-as though a door of the universe had opened to him, and
-all before him was boundless. He had no fear of it;
-indeed, there seemed a comfort in the sense of being lost
-in such a vastness; but there was something intangible
-working on his mind. The wind weighed upon him, the
-coppery sky weighed upon him, the white sun weighed
-upon him, and his feet began to take hold of the ground.
-How hot the top of his head and his face! All at once
-the sweat appeared less copious and his skin drier. With
-this came a strong thirst. The saliva of his mouth was
-pasty and scant. He swallowed hard and his throat
-tightened. A couple of pebbles that he put into his
-mouth mitigated these last sensations.</p>
-
-<p>Intelligence gave him pause then, and he halted in his
-tracks. If death was relentlessly pursuing him, it was
-no less confronting him there to the fore, if he passed on
-out of reach of the river. Death from thirst was preferable
-to capture, but Adam was not ready to die. He
-who had loved life clung to it all the more fiercely now
-that the sin of Cain branded his soul. He still felt unlimited
-strength and believed that he could go far. But
-the sun was hotter than he had ever experienced it; the
-heat appeared to strike up from the earth as well as burn
-down from above; and it was having a strange effect upon
-him. He had sensed a difficulty in keeping to a straight
-line of travel, and at first had put it down to his instinct<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-for zigzagging to his greasewood bush and that <i>ocatilla</i>
-plant to place them behind him. Moving on again, he
-turned toward the chocolate mountain and the river.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed close. He saw the bare gray desert with
-its green growths slope gradually to the rugged base of
-the range. Somewhere between him and there ran the
-river. He strained his eyesight. How strangely and
-clearly the lines of one ridge merged into the lines of
-another! There must be distance between them. But it
-could not be seen. The range looked larger and farther
-away the more he studied it—the air more full of transparent
-haze, the red and russet and chocolate hues more
-quiveringly suggestive of illusion.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” panted Adam, as he halted once more.
-“I’ve been told about the desert. But I didn’t pay particular
-attention and now I can’t remember.... I only
-know it’s hot—and this won’t do.”</p>
-
-<p>It was just then that Adam, gazing back down the gray
-desert, saw puffs of dust and horses.</p>
-
-<p>Panic seized him. He ran directly away from his
-pursuers, bending low, looking neither to right nor to left,
-violent, furious, heedless, like an animal in flight. And
-with no sense of direction, with no use of reason, he ran on
-till he dropped.</p>
-
-<p>Then his breast seemed to split and his heart to lift with
-terrific pressure, agonizing and suffocating. He lay on
-the ground and gasped, with his mouth in the dust.
-Gradually the paroxysm subsided.</p>
-
-<p>He arose to go on, hot, dry, aching, dizzy, but still
-strong in his stride.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve—got—away,” he said, “and now—the river—the
-river.”</p>
-
-<p>Fear of Collishaw had been dulled. Adam could think
-of little besides the heat and his growing thirst, and this
-thing—the desert—that was so strange, so big, so menacing.
-It did not alarm him that his skin was no longer
-wet with sweat, but the fact struck him singularly.</p>
-
-<p>The wind was blowing sand in his face, obstructing his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-sight. Suddenly his feet dragged in sand. Dimly then
-he made out low sand dunes with hollows between, and
-farther on larger dunes waving and billowing on to rise
-to what seemed mountains of sand. He saw them as
-through a veil of dust. Turning away, he plodded on,
-half blinded, fighting the blast of wind that was growing
-stronger. The air cleared somewhat. Sand dunes were all
-around him, and to his right, in the direction he thought
-was wrong, loomed the chocolate range. He went that
-way, and again the flying sand hid a clear view. A low,
-seeping, silken rustle filled the air, sometimes rising to a
-soft roar. He thought of what he had heard about sandstorms,
-but he knew this was not one. Unwittingly he
-had wandered into the region of the dunes, and the strong
-gusty wind swept up the fine sand in sheets and clouds.
-He must get out. It could not be far to the level desert
-again. He plodded on, and the way he chose, with its
-intermittent views of the mountains, at last appeared to
-be the wrong one. So he turned again. And as he turned,
-a stronger wind, now at his back, whipped up the sand
-till all was pale yellow around him, thick and opaque and
-moaning, through which the sun shone with strange
-magenta hue. He did not dare rest or wait. He had to
-plod on. And the way led through soft, uneven sand,
-always dragging at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>After a while Adam discovered that when he trudged
-down into the hollows between dunes he became enveloped
-in flying sand that forced him to cover mouth and eyes
-with his scarf and go choking on, but when he climbed
-up over a dune the air became clearer and he could breath
-easier. Thus instinctively he favored the ascents, and
-thus he lost himself in a world of curved and sculptured
-sand dunes, gray and yellow through the flying mists, or
-steely silver under the gleaming sunlight. The wind lulled,
-letting the sand settle, and then he saw he was lost as
-upon a trackless ocean, with no landmarks in sight. On
-all sides heaved beautiful white mounds of sand, ribbed
-and waved and laced with exquisitely delicate knife-edged<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-curves. And these crests changed like the crests of waves,
-only, instead of flying spray, these were curled and
-shadowed veils of sand blowing from the scalloped
-crowns. Then again the wind, swooping down, whipped
-and swept the sand in low thick sheets on and on over
-the dunes, until thin rising clouds obscured the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Adam climbed on, growing weaker. As the heat had
-wrought strangely upon his blood, so the sand had dragged
-strength from his legs. His situation was grave, but,
-though he felt the dread and pity of it, a certain violence
-of opposition had left him. That was in his will. He
-feared more the instinctive reaction—the physical resistance
-that was growing in him. Merryvale had told him
-how men lost on the desert could die of thirst in one day.
-But Adam had scarcely credited that; certainly he did
-not believe it applicable to himself. He realized, however,
-that unless he somehow changed the present condition
-sun and sand would overwhelm him. So when from
-a high knoll of sand he saw down into a large depression,
-miles across, where clumps of mesquites showed black
-against the silver, he descended toward them and eventually
-reached them, ready indeed to drop into the shade.</p>
-
-<p>Here under a thick-foliaged mesquite he covered his
-face with a handkerchief, his head with his coat, and
-settled himself to rest and wait. It was a wise move.
-At once he felt by contrast what the fierce sun had been.
-Gradually the splitting headache subsided to a sensation
-that seemed to Adam like a gentle boiling of blood in his
-brain. He could hear it. His dry skin became a little
-moist; the intolerable burn left it; his heart and pulse
-ceased such labored throbbing; and after a time his condition
-was limited to less pain, a difficulty in breathing,
-and thirst. These were bearable.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time Adam removed the coverings to
-look about him. The sun was westering. When it sank
-the wind would cease to blow and then he could find a
-way out of this wilderness of sand dunes. Leaning back
-against a low branch of the tree, he stretched out, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-such was his exhaustion and the restfulness of the posture
-that he fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>When he awoke he felt better, though half smothered.
-He had rested. His body was full of dull aches, but no
-more pain. His mouth did not appear so dry or his
-tongue so swollen; nevertheless, the thirst remained, giving
-his throat a sensation of puckering, such as he remembered
-he used to have after eating green persimmons.</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam, suddenly realizing what covered his head,
-threw off the coat and handkerchief. And his eyes were
-startled by such a sight as they had never beheld—a
-marvelous unreality of silver sheen and black shadow, a
-starry tracery of labyrinthine streams on a medium as
-weird and beautiful and intangible as a dream.</p>
-
-<p>“O God! am I alive or dead?” he whispered in awe.
-And his voice proved to him that he and his burden had
-not slipped into the oblivion of the beyond.</p>
-
-<p>Night had fallen. The moon had arisen. The stars
-shone lustrously. The sky burned a deep rich blue. And
-all this unreal beauty that had mocked him was only the
-sculptured world of sand translating the magnificence and
-splendor of the heavens.</p>
-
-<p>More than all else, Adam grew sensitive to the oppressiveness
-of the silence. His first steps were painful, a
-staggering, halting gait, that exercise at length worked
-into some semblance of his old stride. The cold desert
-air invigorated him, and if it had not been for the discomfort
-of thirst he would have been doing well under
-the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>A sense of direction that had nothing to do with his
-intelligence prompted him to face east. He obeyed it.
-And he walked for what seemed hours over a moon-blanched
-sea of sand, to climb at last a high dune from
-which he saw the dark, level floor of the desert, and far
-across the shadowy space a black range of mountains.
-He thought he recognized the rugged contour, and when,
-sweeping his gaze southward, he saw the lone mountain
-looming like a dark sentinel over the desert gateway, then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-he was sure of his direction. Over there to the east lay the
-river. And he had long hours of the cool night to travel.</p>
-
-<p>From this vantage point Adam looked back over the
-silver sea of sand dunes; and such was the sight of it
-that even in his precarious condition he was stirred to his
-depths. The huge oblong silver moon hung low over that
-vast heaving stretch of desert. It was a wasteland,
-shimmering with its belts and plains of moonlit sand,
-blank and mysterious in its shadows, an abode of loneliness.
-An inexplicable sadness pervaded Adam’s soul.
-This wasteland and he seemed identical. How strange
-to feel that he did not want to leave it! Life could not
-be sustained in this sepulcher of the desert. But it was
-not life that his soul yearned for then—only peace. And
-peace dwelt there in that solitude of the sands.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Gray dawn found Adam many miles closer to the mountain
-range. Yet it was still far and his former dread
-returned. On every side what interminable distances!</p>
-
-<p>A deepening rose color over the eastern horizon appeared
-to be reflected upon the mountain peaks, and this
-glow crept down the dark slopes. Gray dawn changed
-to radiant morning with an ethereal softness of color.
-When the blazing disk of the sun shone over the ramparts
-of the east all that desert world underwent a wondrous
-transfiguration. The lord of day had arisen and
-this was his empire. Red was the hue of his authority,
-emblazoned in long vivid rays over the ranges and the
-wastelands. Then the great orb of fire cleared the horizon
-and the desert seemed aflame.</p>
-
-<p>One moment Adam gave to the marvel and glory of
-the sunrise, and then he looked no more. That brief
-moment ended in a consciousness of the gravity of his
-flight. For the first touch of sun on face and hands
-burned hot, as if it suddenly aggravated a former burn
-that the night had soothed.</p>
-
-<p>“Got to reach—river soon,” he muttered, thickly, “or
-never will.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-He walked on while the sun climbed.</p>
-
-<p>Desert vegetation increased. Adam toiled on, breathing
-hard, careless now of the reaching thorns and heedless
-of the rougher ground.</p>
-
-<p>He was perfectly conscious of a subtle changing of his
-spirit, but because it seemed a drifting farther and farther
-from thought he could not comprehend it. Courage diminished
-as fear augmented. More and more his will and
-intelligence gave way to sensorial perceptions. More
-and more he felt the urge to hurry, and, though reason
-warned against the folly of this, it was not strong enough
-to compel him to resist. He did hurry more and stumbled
-along. Like breath of a furnace the heat rose from the
-rocky, sandy soil; and from above there seemed to bear
-down the weight of the leaden fire.</p>
-
-<p>His skin became as dry as dust and began to shrivel.
-It did not blister. The pain now came from burn of the
-flesh underneath. He felt that his blood was drying up.
-A stinging sensation as of puncture by a thousand thorns
-throbbed in his face and neck. The heat burned through
-his clothes, and the soles of his boots were coals of fire.
-Doggedly he strove forward. A whistle accompanied his
-panting breaths. Most intolerable of all was thirst—the
-bitter, astringent taste in the scant saliva that became pasty
-and dry, the pain in his swelling tongue, the parched
-constriction in his throat.</p>
-
-<p>At last he reached the base of a low rocky ridge which
-for long had beckoned to him and mocked him. It obstructed
-sight of the slope to the mountain range. Surely
-between that ridge and the slope ran the river. The hope
-spurred him upward.</p>
-
-<p>As he climbed he gazed up into the coppery sky, but
-his hot and tired eyes could not endure the great white
-blaze that was the sun. Halfway up he halted to rest,
-and from here he had measureless view of the desert.
-Then his dull brain revived to a final shock. For he
-seemed to see a thousand miles of green-gray barrenness,
-of lifting heat veils like transparent smoke, of wastes of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-waved sand, and of ranges of upheaved rock. How terribly
-it confronted him! Pitiless mockery of false distances
-on all sides! A sun-blasted world not meant for
-man!</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam ascended to the summit of the ridge. A
-glaring void seemed flung at him. His chocolate-hued
-mountain range was not far away. From this height he
-could see all the gray-green level of desert between him
-and the range. He stared. Again there seemed flung in
-his face a hot glare of space. There was no river.</p>
-
-<p>“Where, where’s—the river?” gasped Adam, mistrusting
-his eyesight.</p>
-
-<p>But the wonderful Rio Colorado, the strange red river
-beloved by desert wanderers, did not flow before him—or
-to either side—or behind. It must have turned to flow
-on the other slope of this insurmountable range.</p>
-
-<p>“God has—forsaken me!” cried Adam, in despair, and
-he fell upon the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>But these rocks, hot as red-hot plates of iron, permitted
-of no contact, even in a moment of horror. Adam
-was burned to stagger up, to plunge and run and fall
-down the slope, out upon the level, to the madness that
-awaited him.</p>
-
-<p>He must rush on to the river—to drink and drink—to
-bathe in the cool water that flowed down from the snow-fed
-lakes of the north. Thoughts about water possessed
-his mind—pleasant, comforting, hurrying him onward.
-Memory of the great river made pictures in his mind, and
-there flowed the broad red waters, sullen and eddying and
-silent. All the streams and rivers and lakes Adam had
-known crowded their images across his inward eye, and
-this recall of the past was sweet. He remembered the
-brook near his old home—the clear green water full of
-bright minnows and gold-sided sunfish; how it used to
-flow swiftly under the willow banks where violets hid
-by mossy stones, and how it tarried in deep dark pools
-under shelving banks, green and verdant and sweet smelling;
-how the ferns used to bend over in graceful tribute<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-and the lilies float white and gold, with great green-backed
-frogs asleep upon the broad leaves. The watering trough
-on the way to school, many and many a time, in the happy
-days gone by, had he drunk there and splashed his brother
-Guerd. Guerd, who hated water and had to be made to
-wash, when they were little boys! The old well on Madden’s
-farm with its round cobblestoned walls where the
-moss and lichen grew, and where the oaken bucket, wet
-and dark and green, used to come up bumping and spilling,
-brimful of clear cold water—how vividly he remembered
-that! His father had called it granite water, and
-the best, because it flowed through the cold subterranean
-caverns of granite rock. Then there was the spring in
-the orchard, sweet, soft water that his mother used to
-send him after, and as he trudged home, burdened by the
-huge bucket, he would spill some upon his bare feet.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, as Adam staggered on, aimlessly now, he was
-haunted more and more by memories of water. That dear,
-unforgetable time of boyhood when he used to love the
-water, to swim like a duck and bask like a turtle—it
-seemed far back in the past, across some terrible interval
-of pain, vague now, yet hateful. Where was he—and
-where was Guerd? Something like a blade pierced his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Adam was startled out of this pleasant reminiscence
-by something blue and bright that danced low
-down along the desert floor. A lake! He halted with an
-inarticulate cry. There was a lake of blue water, glistening,
-exquisitely clear, with borders of green. He could
-not help but rush forward. The lake shimmered, thinned,
-shadowed, and vanished. Adam halted and, rubbing his
-eyes, peered hard ahead and all around. Behind him
-shone a strip of blue, streaked up and down by desert
-plants, and it seemed to be another lake, larger, bluer,
-clearer, with a delicate vibrating quiver, as if exquisitely
-rippled by a gentle breeze. Green shores were marvelously
-reflected in the blue. Adam gaped at this. Had
-he waded through a lake? He had crossed that barren<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-flat of greasewood to reach the spot upon which he now
-stood. Almost he was forced to run back. But this must
-be a deceit of the desert or a madness of his sight. He
-bent low, and the lake of blue seemed to lift and quiver
-upon a thin darkling line of vapor or transparent shadow.
-Adam took two strides back—and the thing vanished!
-Desert magic! A deception of nature! A horrible illusion
-to a lost man growing crazed by thirst!</p>
-
-<p>“Mirage!” whispered Adam, hoarsely. “Blue water!
-Ha-ha!... Damned lie—it sha’n’t fool me!”</p>
-
-<p>But as clear perception failed these mirages of the
-desert did deceive him. All objects took on a hazy hue,
-tinged by the red of blood in his eyes, and they danced in
-the heat-veiled air. Shadows, glares, cactus, and brush
-stood as immovable as the rocks of ages. Only the illusive
-and ethereal mirages gleamed as if by magic and shimmered
-and moved in that midday trance of the sun-blasted
-desert.</p>
-
-<p>The time came when Adam plunged toward every
-mirage that floated so blue and serene and mystical in the
-deceiving atmosphere, until hope and despair and magnified
-sight finally brought on a mental state bordering
-on the madness sure to come.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he staggered toward this green-bordered pond
-and that crystal-blue lake, already drinking and laving in
-his mind, he began to hear the beautiful sounds of falling
-rain, of gurgling brooks, of lapping waves, of roaring
-rapids, of gentle river currents, of water—water—water
-sweetly tinkling and babbling, of wind-laden murmur of
-a mountain stream. And he began to wander in a circle.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Consciousness</span> returned to Adam. He was lying
-under an ironwood tree, over branches of which a
-canvas had been stretched, evidently to shade him from
-the sun. The day appeared to be far spent.</p>
-
-<p>His head seemed to have been relieved of a hot metal
-band; his tongue was no longer bursting in his mouth;
-the boil of his blood had subsided. His skin felt moist.</p>
-
-<p>Then he heard the rough voice of a man talking to
-animals, apparently burros. Movement of body was difficult
-and somewhat painful; however, he managed to sit
-up and look around. Hide-covered boxes and packsaddles,
-with duffle and utensils of a prospector, were littered
-about, and conspicuous among the articles near him were
-three large canvas-covered canteens, still wet. Upon the
-smoldering embers of a camp fire steamed a black iron
-pot. A little beyond the first stood a very short, broad
-man, back turned; and he was evidently feeding choice
-morsels of some kind to five eager and jealous burros.</p>
-
-<p>“Spoiled—every darn one of you!” he was saying, and
-the kindness of his voice belied its roughness. “Why, I
-used to have burros that could lick labels off tin cans an’
-call it a square meal!”</p>
-
-<p>Then he turned and espied Adam watching him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo! You’ve come to,” he said, with interest.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s gaze encountered an extraordinary-looking man.
-He could not have been taller than five and a half feet,
-and the enormous breadth of him made him appear as
-wide as he was long. He was not fat. His immense bulk
-was sheer brawn, betokening remarkable strength. His
-dusty, ragged clothes were patched like a crazy-quilt. He
-had an immense head, a shock of shaggy hair beginning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-to show streaks of gray, and a broad face tanned dark
-as an Indian’s, the lower half of which was covered with
-a scant grizzled beard. His eyes, big, dark, rolling, resembled
-those of an ox. His expression seemed to be one
-of set tranquillity—the impassiveness of bronze.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s voice was a husky whisper: “Where am—I?
-Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Young man, my name’s Dismukes,” came the reply,
-“an’ you’re ninety miles from anywhere—an’ alive, which’s
-more than I’d bet on yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>The words brought Adam a shock of memory. Out
-there the desert smoked, sweltering in the spent heat of
-the setting sun. Slowly Adam lay back upon the blanket
-and bundle that had been placed under him for a bed.
-The man sat down on one of the hide-covered boxes,
-fastening his great eyes upon Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I—all right?” whispered Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but it was a close shave,” replied the other.</p>
-
-<p>“You said—something about yesterday. Tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes fumbled in his patched vest and, fetching
-forth a stumpy pipe, he proceeded to fill it. It was
-noticeable that he had to use his little finger to press
-down the tobacco into the bowl, as the other fingers of
-his enormous hands were too large. Adam had never
-before seen such scarred, calloused hands.</p>
-
-<p>“It was day before yesterday I run across you,” began
-Dismukes, after a comfortable pull at his pipe. “My
-burro Jinny has the best eyes of the pack outfit. When I
-seen her ears go up I got to lookin’ hard, an’ presently
-spied you staggerin’ in a circle. I’d seen men do that
-before. Sometimes you’d run, an’ again you’d wag along,
-an’ then you’d fall an’ crawl. I caught you an’ had to tie
-you with my rope. You were out of your head. An’
-you looked hard—all dried up—tongue black an’ hangin’
-out. I thought you were done for. I poured a canteen
-of water over your head an’ then packed you over here
-where there’s wood an’ water. You couldn’t make a sound,
-but all the same I knew you were ravin’ for water. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-fed you water a spoonful at a time, an’ every little while
-I emptied a canteen over you. Was up all night with
-you that night. You recovered awful slow. Yesterday
-I’d not have gambled much on your chances. But to-day
-you came round. I got you to swallow some soft grub,
-an’ I guess you’ll soon be pretty good. You’ll be weak,
-though. You’re awful thin. I’m curious about how much
-you weighed. You look as if you might have been a
-husky lad.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was,” whispered Adam. “Hundred and eighty-five—or
-ninety.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I thought. You’ll not go over one hundred an’
-twenty now. You’ve lost about seventy pounds....
-Oh, it’s a fact! You see, the body is ’most all water, an’ on
-this desert in summer a man just dries up an’ blows away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seventy—pounds!” exclaimed Adam, incredulously.
-But when he glanced at his shrunken hands he believed
-the incomprehensible fact. “I must be skin—and bones.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mostly bones. But they’re long, heavy bones, an’ if
-you ever get any flesh on them you’ll be a darned big man.
-I’m glad they’re not goin’ to bleach white on the desert,
-where I’ve seen so many these last ten years.”</p>
-
-<p>“You saved my life?” suddenly queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, there’s no doubt of that,” returned the other.
-“Another hour would have finished you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I thank you.... But—so help me God—I wish
-you hadn’t,” whispered Adam, poignantly.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes spent a strange gaze upon Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your name?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Adam halted over the conviction that he could never
-reveal his identity; and there leaped to his lips the name
-the loquacious Regan had given him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes averted his gaze. Manifestly he divined
-that Adam had lied. “Well, it’s no matter what a man
-calls himself in this country,” he said. “Only everybody
-an’ everythin’ has to have a name.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a prospector?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-“Yes. But I’m more a miner. I hunt for gold. I
-don’t waste time tryin’ to sell claims. Years ago I set
-out to find a fortune in gold. My limit was five hundred
-thousand dollars. I’ve already got a third of it—in banks
-an’ hid away safe.”</p>
-
-<p>“When you get it—your fortune—what then?” inquired
-Adam, with thrilling curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll enjoy life. I have no ties—no people. Then I’ll
-see the world,” replied the prospector, in deep and sonorous
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>A wonderful passion radiated from him. Adam saw
-a quiver run over the huge frame. This Dismukes evidently
-was as extraordinary in character as in appearance.
-Adam felt the man’s strangeness, his intelligence, and the
-inflexible will and fiery spirit. Yet all at once Adam felt
-steal over him an emotion of pity that he could not
-understand. How strange men were!</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture the prospector was compelled to drive
-the burros out of camp. Then he attended to his cooking
-over the fire, and presently brought a bowl of steaming
-food to Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Eat this slow—with a spoon,” he said, gruffly. “Never
-forget that a man starved for grub or water can kill himself
-quick.”</p>
-
-<p>During Adam’s long-drawn-out meal the sun set and
-the mantle of heat seemed to move away for the coming
-of shadows. Adam found that his weakness was greater
-than he had supposed, rendering the effort of sitting up
-one he was glad to end. He lay back on the blankets,
-wanting to think over his situation rather than fall asleep,
-but he found himself very drowsy, and his mind vaguely
-wandered until it was a blank. Upon awakening he saw
-the first gray of dawn arch the sky. He felt better,
-almost like his old self, except for that queer sensation
-of thinness and lightness, most noticeable when he lifted
-his hand. Dismukes was already astir, and there, a few
-rods from camp, stood the ludicrous burros, as if they
-had not moved all night. Adam got up and stretched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-his limbs, pleased to find that he appeared to be all right
-again, except for a little dizziness.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes evinced gladness at the fact of Adam’s improvement.
-“Good!” he exclaimed. “You’d be strong
-enough to ride a burro to-day. But it’s goin’ to be hot,
-like yesterday. We’d better not risk travelin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know it’s going to be as hot as yesterday?”
-inquired Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell by the feel an’ smell of the air, an’ mostly
-that dull lead-colored haze you see over the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam thought the air seemed cool and fresh, but he
-did see a dull pall over the mountains. Farther toward
-the east, where the sunrise lifted an immense and wondrous
-glow, this haze was not visible.</p>
-
-<p>The remark of Dismukes anent the riding of a burro
-disturbed Adam. This kindly prospector meant to take
-him on to his destination. Impossible! Adam had fled
-to the desert to hide, and the desert must hide him, alive
-or dead. The old, thick, clamoring emotions knocked at
-his heart. Adam felt gratitude toward Dismukes for not
-questioning him, and that forbearance made him want to
-tell something of his story. Yet how reluctant he was to
-open his lips on that score! He helped Dismukes with
-the simple morning meal, and afterward with odds and
-ends of tasks, all the time cheerful and questioning, putting
-off what he knew was inevitable. The day did come
-on hot—so hot that life was just bearable for men and
-beasts in the shade of the big ironwood tree. Adam
-slept some of the hours away. He awoke stronger, with
-more active mind. Of the next meal Dismukes permitted
-Adam to eat heartily. And later, while Dismukes smoked
-and Adam sat before the camp fire, the moment of revelation
-came, quite unexpectedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, you’ll not be goin’ to Yuma with me to-morrow,”
-asserted Dismukes quietly.</p>
-
-<p>The words startled Adam. He dropped his head. “No—no!
-Thank you—I won’t—I can’t go,” he replied,
-trembling. The sound of his voice agitated him further.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-“Boy, tell me or not, just as you please. But I’m a
-man you can trust.”</p>
-
-<p>The kindness and a nameless power invested in this
-speech broke down what little restraint remained with
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I can’t go.... I’m an outcast.... I must hide—hide
-in the—desert,” burst out Adam, covering his face
-with his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Was that why you came to the desert?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, boy, you came without a canteen or grub or
-burro or gun—or anythin’. In all my years on the desert
-I never saw the like of that before. An’ only a miracle
-saved your life. That miracle was Jinny’s eyes. You
-owe your life to a long-eared, white-faced burro. Jinny
-has eyes like a mountain sheep. She saw you—miles off.
-An’ such luck won’t be yours twice. You can’t last on
-this desert without the things to sustain life.... How
-did it happen that I found you here alone—without
-anythin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“No time. I—I had to run!” panted Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“What’d you do? Don’t be afraid to tell me. The
-desert is a place for secrets, and it’s a lonely place where
-a man learns to read the souls of men—when he meets
-them. You’re not vicious. You’re no—— But never
-mind—tell me without wastin’ more words. Maybe I can
-help you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No one can—help me,” cried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not so,” quickly spoke up Dismukes, his voice
-deep and rolling. “Some one can help you—an’ maybe
-it’s me.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Adam completely broke down. “I—I did—something—awful!”</p>
-
-<p>“No crime, boy—say it was no crime,” earnestly returned
-the prospector.</p>
-
-<p>“O my God! Yes—yes! It was—a crime!” sobbed
-Adam, shuddering. “But, man—I swear, horrible as it
-was—I’m innocent! I swear that. Believe me.... I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-was driven—driven by wrongs, by hate, by taunts. If I’d
-stood them longer I’d have been a white-livered coward.
-But I was driven and half drunk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—well!” ejaculated Dismukes, shaking his shaggy
-head. “It’s bad. But I believe you an’ you needn’t tell
-me any more. Life is hell! I was young once.... An’
-now you’ve got to hide away from men—to live on the
-desert—to be one of us wanderers of the wastelands?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I must hide. And I want—I need to live—to
-suffer—to atone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, do you believe in God?” asked the prospector.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I think so,” replied Adam, lifting his
-head and striving for composure. “My mother was religious.
-But my father was not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—well, if you believed in God your case would
-not be hopeless. But some men—a few out of the many
-wanderers—find God out here in these wilds. Maybe
-you will.... Can you tell me what you think you want
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—to go alone—into the loneliest place—to live
-there for years—forever,” replied Adam, with passion.</p>
-
-<p>“Alone. That is my way. An’ I understand how you
-feel—what you need. Are you goin’ to hunt gold?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—no.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you any money?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. More than I’ll ever need. I’d like to throw it
-all away—or give it to you. But it—it was my mother’s....
-And I promised her I’d not squander it—that I’d
-try to save.”</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, never mind—an’ I don’t want your money,”
-interrupted Dismukes. “An’ don’t do any fool trick with
-it. You’ll need it to buy outfits. You can always trust
-Indians to go to the freightin’ posts for you. But never
-let any white men in this desert know you got money.
-That’s a hard comparison, an’ it’s justified.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m already sick with the love men have for money,”
-said Adam, bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ now to figure out an’ make good all that brag of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-mine,” went on Dismukes, reflectively. “I’ll need only
-two days’ grub to get to Yuma. There’s one sure water
-hole. I can give you one of my canteens, an’ Jinny, the
-burro that saved your life. She’s tricky, but a blamed
-good burro. An’ by makin’ up enough bread I can spare
-my oven. So, all told, I guess I can outfit you good
-enough for you to reach a canyon up here to the west
-where Indians live. I know them. They’re good. You
-can stay with them until the hot weather passes. No
-danger of any white men runnin’ across you there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you mustn’t let me have all your outfit,” protested
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not. It’s only the grub an’ one burro.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you run a risk—with only two days’ rations?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, every move you can make on this desert
-is a risk,” replied Dismukes, seriously. “Learn that right
-off. But I’m sure. Only accidents or unforeseen circumstances
-ever make risks for me now. I’m what they
-call a desert rat.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re most kind,” said Adam, choking up again,
-“to help a stranger—this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, I don’t call that help,” declared Dismukes.
-“That’s just doin’ for a man as I’d want to be done by.
-When I talked about help I meant somethin’ else.”</p>
-
-<p>“What? God knows I need it. I’ll be grateful. I’ll
-do as you tell me,” replied Adam, with a strange thrill
-stirring in him.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a boy—no matter if you’re bigger than most
-men. You’ve got the mind of a boy. What a damn pity
-you’ve got to do this hidin’ game!” Under strong feeling
-the prospector got up, and, emptying his pipe, he began
-to take short strides to and fro in the limited shade cast
-by the ironwood tree. The indomitable force of the man
-showed in his step, in the way he carried himself. Presently
-he turned to Adam and the great ox eyes burned
-intensely. “Wansfell, if you were a man I’d never feel
-the way I do. But you’re only a youngster—you’re not
-bad—you’ve had bad luck—an’ for you I can break my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-rule—an’ I’ll do it if you’re in earnest. I’ve never talked
-about the desert—about its secrets—what it’s taught me.
-But I’ll tell you what the desert is—how it’ll be your
-salvation—how to be a wanderer of the wasteland is to
-be strong, free, happy—if you are honest, if you’re big
-enough for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, I swear I’m honest—and I’ll be big, by
-God! or I’ll die trying,” declared Adam, passionately.</p>
-
-<p>The prospector gave Adam a long, steady stare, a
-strange gaze such as must have read his soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, if you can live on the desert you’ll grow
-like it,” he said, solemnly, as if he were pronouncing a
-benediction.</p>
-
-<p>Adam gathered from this speech that Dismukes meant
-to unbosom himself of many secrets of this wonderful
-wasteland. Evidently, however, the prospector was not
-then ready to talk further. With thoughtful mien and
-plodding gait he resumed his short walk to and fro. It
-struck Adam then that his appearance was almost as ludicrous
-as that of his burros, yet at the same time his presence
-somehow conveyed a singular sadness. Years of
-loneliness burdened the wide bowed shoulders of this
-desert man. Adam divined then, in a gust of gratitude,
-that this plodding image of Dismukes would always remain
-in his mind as a picture, a symbol of the actual good
-in human nature.</p>
-
-<p>The hot day closed without Adam ever venturing out
-of the shade of the tree. Once or twice he had put his
-hand in a sunny spot to feel the heat, and it had burned.
-The night mantled down with its intense silence, all-embracing,
-and the stars began to glow white. As Dismukes
-sat down near Adam in the glow of the camp fire
-it was manifest, from the absence of his pipe and the
-penetrating, possession-taking power of his eyes, that he
-was under the dominance of a singular passion.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell,” he began, in low, deep voice, “it took me
-many years to learn how to live on the desert. I had the
-strength an’ the vitality of ten ordinary men. Many times<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-in those desperate years was I close to death from thirst—from
-starvation—from poison water—from sickness—from
-bad men—and last, though not least—from loneliness.
-If I had met a man like myself, as I am now, I
-might have been spared a hell of sufferin’. I did meet
-desert men who could have helped me. But they passed
-me by. The desert locks men’s lips. Let every man save
-his own life—find his own soul. That’s the unwritten law
-of the wastelands of the world. I’ve broken it for you
-because I want to do by you as I’d have liked to be done
-by. An’ because I see somethin’ in you.”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes paused here to draw a long breath. In the
-flickering firelight he seemed a squatting giant immovable
-by physical force, and of a will unquenchable while life
-lasted.</p>
-
-<p>“Men crawl over the desert like ants whose nests have
-been destroyed an’ who have become separated from one
-another,” went on Dismukes. “They all know the lure
-of the desert. Each man has his own idea of why the
-desert claims him. Mine was gold—is gold—so that some
-day I can travel over the world, rich an’ free, an’ see life.
-Another man’s will be the need to hide—or the longin’
-to forget—or the call of adventure—or hate of the world—or
-love of a woman. Another class is that of bad men.
-Robbers, murderers. They are many. There are also
-many men, an’ a few women, who just drift or wander
-or get lost in the desert. An’ out of all these, if they
-stay in the desert, but few survive. They die or they are
-killed. The Great American Desert is a vast place an’
-it is covered by unmarked graves an’ bleached bones.
-I’ve seen so many—so many.”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes paused again while his broad breast heaved
-with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“I was talkin’ about what men think the desert means
-to them. In my case I say gold, an’ I say that as the
-other man will claim he loves the silence or the color or
-the loneliness. But I’m wrong, an’ so is he. The great
-reason why the desert holds men lies deeper. I feel that.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-But I’ve never had the brains to solve it. I do know,
-however, that life on this wasteland is fierce an’ terrible.
-Plants, reptiles, beasts, birds, an’ men all have to fight for
-life far out of proportion to what’s necessary in fertile
-parts of the earth. You will learn that early, an’ if you
-are a watcher an’ a thinker you will understand it.</p>
-
-<p>“The desert is no place for white men. An oasis is
-fit for Indians. They survive there. But they don’t
-thrive. I respect the Indians. It will be well for you
-to live awhile with Indians.... Now what I most want
-you to know is this.”</p>
-
-<p>The speaker’s pause this time was impressive, and he
-raised one of his huge hands, like a monstrous claw, making
-a gesture at once eloquent and strong.</p>
-
-<p>“When the desert claims men it makes most of them
-beasts. They sink to that fierce level in order to live.
-They are trained by the eternal strife that surrounds them.
-A man of evil nature survivin’ in the desert becomes more
-terrible than a beast. He is a vulture.... On the other
-hand, there are men whom the desert makes like it. Yes—fierce
-an’ elemental an’ terrible, like the heat an’ the
-storm an’ the avalanche, but greater in another sense—greater
-through that eternal strife to live—beyond any
-words of mine to tell. What such men have lived—the
-patience, the endurance, the toil—the fights with men an’
-all that makes the desert—the wanderin’s an’ perils an’
-tortures—the horrible loneliness that must be fought
-hardest, by mind as well as action—all these struggles
-are beyond ordinary comprehension an’ belief. But I
-know. I’ve met a few such men, an’ if it’s possible for
-the divinity of God to walk abroad on earth in the shape
-of mankind, it was invested in them. The reason must
-be that in the development by the desert, in case of these
-few men who did not retrograde, the spiritual kept pace
-with the physical. It means these men never forgot, never
-reverted to mere unthinking instinct, never let the hard,
-fierce, brutal action of survival on the desert kill their
-souls. Spirit was stronger than body. I’ve learned this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-of these men, though I never had the power to attain it.
-It takes brains. I was only fairly educated. An’ though
-I’ve studied all my years on the desert, an’ never gave up,
-I wasn’t big enough to climb as high as I can see. I tell
-you all this, Wansfell, because it may be your salvation.
-Never give up to the desert or to any of its minions!
-Never cease to fight! You must fight to live—an’ so
-make that fight equally for your mind an’ your soul!
-Thus you will repent for your crime, whatever that was.
-Remember—the secret is never to forget your hold on the
-past—your memories—an’ through thinkin’ of them to
-save your mind an’ apply it to all that faces you out
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>Rising from his seat, Dismukes made a wide, sweeping
-gesture, symbolical of a limitless expanse. “An’ the gist
-of all this talk of mine—this hope of mine to do for you
-as I’d have been done by—is that if you fight an’ think
-together like a man meanin’ to repent of his sin—somewhere
-out there in the loneliness an’ silence you will find
-God!”</p>
-
-<p>With that he abruptly left the camp fire to stride off
-into the darkness; and the sonorous roll of his last words
-seemed to linger on the quiet air.</p>
-
-<p>Every one of his intense words had been burned into
-Adam’s sensitive mind in characters and meanings never
-to be forgotten. Dismukes had found eager and fertile
-soil for the planting of the seeds of his toil-earned philosophy.
-The effect upon Adam was profound, and so
-wrought upon his emotions that the black and hateful consciousness
-which had returned to haunt him was as but a
-shadow of his thought. Adam stared out into the night
-where Dismukes had vanished. Something great had
-happened. Was the man Dismukes a fanatic, a religious
-wanderer of the wasteland, who imagined he had found
-in Adam an apt pupil, or who had preached a sermon because
-the opportunity presented? No! The prospector
-had the faith to give out of his lesson of life on the desert.
-His motive was the same as when he had risked much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-to follow Adam, staggering blindly across the hot sands
-to his death. And as Adam felt the mounting passion of
-conviction, of gratitude, his stirred mind seemed suddenly
-to burst into a radiant and scintillating inspiration of resolve
-to be the man Dismukes had described, to fight and
-to think and to remember as had no one ever before done
-on the desert. It was all that seemed left for him. Repentance!
-Expiation! True to himself at the last in
-spite of a horrible and fatal blunder!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Guerd! Guerd, my brother!” he cried, shuddering
-at the whisper of that name. “Wherever you are in
-spirit—hear me!... I’ll rise above wrongs and hate and
-revenge! I’ll remember our boyhood—how I loved you!
-I’ll atone for my crime! I’ll never forget.... I’ll fight
-and think to save my soul—and pray for yours!...
-Hear me and forgive—you who drove me out into the
-wastelands!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam</span> lay awake for some length of time, waiting for
-Dismukes to return, but he did not come. Adam at
-length succumbed to drowsiness. It was Dismukes’s call
-that awakened him. The sun already tipped the eastern
-range, rosy red, and all the open land lay fresh and colorful
-in the morning light. Adam felt no severe effects from
-his hard experience, except an inordinate hunger, which
-Dismukes was more disposed to appease. Still he cautioned
-Adam not to eat too much.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Wansfell, you must learn all about burros,” began
-Dismukes. “The burro is the most important part of
-your outfit. This desert would still be a blank waste, unknown
-to white man, if it had not been for those shaggy,
-lazy, lop-eared little donkeys. Whenever you get sore at
-one an’ feel inclined to kill him for some trick or other,
-just remember that you could not get along without him.</p>
-
-<p>“Most burros are alike. They hang near camp, as you
-see mine, hopin’ they can steal a bite of somethin’ if you
-don’t give it to them. They’ll eat paper, or ‘most anythin’
-except greasewood. They love paper off bacon. I had
-one once that ate my overalls. They never get homesick an’
-seem contented in the most desolate places. I had a burro
-that was happy in Death Valley, which’s the hell hole of
-this wasteland. Burros are seldom responsive to affection.
-They’ll stand great abuse. Never expect any thanks.
-Always patient. They are usually easy to catch. But
-they must know you. Only way to catch them is to head
-them off. Then they stop. Young burros are easily broke
-an’ will follow others. They must be driven. Never knew
-but one that I could lead. Don’t forget this. They have
-the most wonderful endurance—never stumble or fall—an’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-can exist on practically nothin’. When you turn them
-loose they’ll nibble around awhile, then stop an’ stand
-like rocks, never movin’ for hours an’ hours, as if they
-were wrapped in prehistoric thought. In the mornin’ when
-you start off on your day’s travel the burros are fresh an’
-they drive fine. But in the afternoon, when they get tired,
-they think of tricks. They’ll lie down—roll over on a
-pack—knock against a rock or tree. They’ll get together
-in a bunch to tangle the packs. When a burro intends
-to lie down he humps his back an’ wriggles his tail. It’s
-hard to get burros across streams. Scared of water!
-Strange, isn’t that? I’ve had to carry my burros many a
-time. But they’ll climb or go down the steepest, roughest
-mountain trail without fear. They can slide down a steep
-slope that a man will not stick on. Burros have more
-patience and good qualities, an’ also cussedness, than any
-other beasts. They pick out pardners an’ stick together
-all the time. A big bunch of burros will pair off regardless
-of sex. Never give each other up! They bray at
-night—an awful sound till you get used to it. Remember
-this quick some night when you’re lifted out of a sleep
-by a terrible unearthly roar.... Well, I guess that’s
-an introduction to desert burros. It’s all serious fact,
-Wansfell, as you’ll learn, an’ to your cost, unless you
-remember.”</p>
-
-<p>How singular for Adam to have the closing words of
-Dismukes reveal the absorbing interest of this simple and
-practical talk about burros! It amazed Adam to find that
-he had even been amused, ready to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll remember,” he asserted, with conviction.</p>
-
-<p>“Dare say you will,” replied Dismukes, “but the idea
-is you must remember before you get in trouble, not after.
-I can’t tell you when to know a burro is goin’ to trick you.
-I’m just givin’ you facts as to the nature of burros in
-general. You must study an’ learn them yourself. A
-man could spend his life studyin’ burros an’ then have lots
-to learn. Most prospectors lose half their time trackin’
-their burros. It’s tryin’ to find burros that has cost many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-a desert man his life. An’ this is why, if you’ve chosen
-the desert to live in, you must learn the habits of the burro.
-He’s the camel of this Sahara.”</p>
-
-<p>With that the prospector appeared to have talked himself
-out for the present, and he devoted his efforts to a
-selection of parts of his outfit that manifestly he meant
-to turn over to Adam. At length having made the selection
-to his satisfaction, he went out to wake up the burro
-Jinny. As he led Jinny into camp all the other burros
-trooped along.</p>
-
-<p>“Watch me pack an’ then you try your hand on Jinny,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was all eyes while the prospector placed in position
-the old ragged pads of skins and blankets, and the packsaddles
-over them, to be buckled carefully. It was all
-comparatively easy until it came to tying the pack on with
-a rope in what Dismukes called a hitch. However, after
-Dismukes had accomplished it on three of the other
-burros, Adam believed he could make a respectable showing.
-To this end he began to pack Jinny, and did very
-well indeed till he got to the hitch, which was harder to
-tie than it looked. After several attempts he succeeded.
-During this procedure Jinny stood with one long ear
-up and the other down, as if nothing on earth mattered
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Carry the canteen of water yourself,” said Dismukes,
-as he led Adam out from under the tree and pointed west.
-“See where that long, low, sharp ridge comes down to
-the desert?... Well, that’s fifty miles. Around that
-point lies a wide canyon. Indians live up that canyon.
-They are good people. Stay with them—work for them
-till you learn the desert.... Now as to gettin’ there.
-Go slow. Rest often in the shade of ironwoods like this
-one. Take a good rest durin’ the middle of the day. As
-long as you sweat you’re in no danger. But if your skin
-gets dry you need to get out of the sun an’ to drink.
-There are several springs along the base of this range.
-Chocolate Mountains, they’re called. By keepin’ a sharp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-eye for patches of bright-green brush you’ll see where
-the water is. An’ don’t ever forget that water is the same
-as life blood.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam nodded solemnly as he realized how the mere
-thought of thirst constricted his throat and revived there
-a semblance of the pain he had endured.</p>
-
-<p>“Go slow. Maybe you’ll take two or three days to
-reach the Indians. By keepin’ that ridge in sight you
-can’t miss them.”</p>
-
-<p>The next move of the prospector was to take Adam
-around on the other side of the tree and wave his hand
-at the expanse of desert.</p>
-
-<p>“Now follow me an’ get these landmarks in your mind.
-Behind us lies the Chocolate range. You see it runs down
-almost southeast. That shiny black mountain standin’ by
-itself is Pilot Knob. It’s near Yuma, as of course you
-remember. Now straight across from us a few miles
-lies a line of sand dunes. They run same way as the
-Chocolates. But they’re low—can’t be seen far. Do you
-make out a dim, gray, strange-lookin’ range just over the
-top of them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I see that clearly. Looks like clouds,” replied
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the Superstition Mountains. You will hear
-queer stories about them. Most prospectors are afraid
-to go there, though it’s said Pegleg Smith’s lost gold mine
-is somewhere in there. The Indians think the range is
-haunted. An’ everyone who knows this desert will tell
-you how the Superstition range changes somehow from
-time to time. It does change. Those mountains are giant
-sand dunes an’ they change their shape with the shiftin’
-of the winds. That’s the fact, but I’m not gainsayin’ how
-strange an’ weird they are. An’ I, for one, believe Pegleg
-Smith did find gold there. But there’s no water. An’
-how can a man live without water?... Well, to go on,
-that dim, purple, high range beyond the Superstitions lies
-across the line in Mexico.... Now, lookin’ round to
-the right of the Superstitions, to the northwest, an’ you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-see how the desert slopes down an’ down on all sides to a
-pale, hazy valley that looks like a lake. It’s the Salton
-Sink—below sea level—an’ it’s death for a man to try to
-cross there at this season. It looks obscured an’ small,
-but it’s really a whole desert in itself. In times gone by
-the Colorado River has broken its banks while in flood
-an’ run back in there to fill that sink. Miles an’ miles of
-fresh water which soon evaporated! Well, it’s a queer old
-earth an’ this desert teaches much.... Now look straight
-up the valley. The ragged high peak is San Jacinto an’
-the other high one farther north is San Gorgonio—two
-hundred miles from here. Prospectors call this one Grayback
-because it has the shape of a louse. These mountains
-are white with snow in the winter. Beyond them lies
-the Mohave Desert, an immense waste, which hides Death
-Valley in its iron-walled mountains.... Now comin’
-back down the valley on this side you see the Cottonwood
-range an’ it runs down to meet the Chocolates. There’s
-a break in the range. An’ still farther down there’s a
-break in the Chocolate range an’ there’s where your canyon
-comes out. You’ll climb the pass some day, to get on top
-of the Chuckwalla Mountains, an’ from there you will
-see north to the Mohave an’ east to the Colorado—all stark
-naked desert that seems to hit a man in the face....
-An’, well, I guess I’ve done my best for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam could not for the moment safely trust himself
-to speak. The expanse of desert shown him, thus magnified
-into its true perspective, now stretched out with the
-nature of its distance and nudity strikingly clear. It did
-seem to glare a menace into Adam’s face. It made him
-tremble. Yet there was fascination in the luring, deceitful
-Superstition range, and a sublimity in the measureless
-sweep of haze and purple slope leading north to the great
-peaks, and a compelling beckoning urge in the mystery and
-unknown that seemed to abide beyond the bronze ridge
-which marked Adam’s objective point.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never forget your—your kindness,” said Adam,
-finally turning to Dismukes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-The prospector shook hands with him, and his grip was
-something to endure.</p>
-
-<p>“Kindness is nothin’. I owed you what a man owes to
-himself. But don’t forget anythin’ I told you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never will,” replied Adam. “Will you let me pay
-you for the—the burro and outfit?” Adam made this
-request hesitatingly, because he did not know the law of
-the desert, and he did not want to offer what might be an
-offense.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure you got plenty of money?” queried Dismukes,
-gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I have,” rejoined Adam, eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll take what the burro an’ grub cost.”</p>
-
-<p>He named a sum that appeared very small to Adam, and,
-receiving the money in his horny hands, he carefully deposited
-it in a greasy buckskin sack.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, may we meet again,” he said in farewell.
-“Good luck an’ good by.... Don’t forget.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good by,” returned Adam, unable to say more.</p>
-
-<p>With a whoop at the four burros and a slap on the
-haunch of one of them, Dismukes started them southward.
-They trotted ahead with packs bobbing and wagging.
-What giant strides Dismukes took! He seemed the incarnation
-of dogged strength of manhood, yet something
-ludicrous clung about him in his powerful action as well
-as in his immense squat form. He did not look back.</p>
-
-<p>Adam slapped Jinny on the haunch and started her
-westward.</p>
-
-<p>The hour was still early morning. A rosy freshness of
-the sunrise still slanted along the bronze slopes of the
-range and here and there blossoms of <i>ocatilla</i> shone red.
-The desert appeared to be a gently rising floor of gravel,
-sparsely decked with ironwood and mesquite, and an occasional
-cactus, that, so far as Adam could see, did not
-harbor a living creature. The day did not seem to feel
-hot, but Adam knew from the rising heat veils that it was
-hot. Excitement governed his feelings. Actually he was
-on the move, with an outfit and every hope to escape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-possible pursuers, with the absolute surety of a hard yet
-wonderful existence staring him in the face.</p>
-
-<p>Not until he felt a drag in his steps did he think of his
-weakened condition. Resting awhile in the shade of a
-tree, he let the burro graze on the scant brush, and then
-went on again. Thus he traveled on, with frequent rests,
-until the heat made it imperative for him to halt till afternoon.
-About the middle of the afternoon he packed and
-set forth again.</p>
-
-<p>A direct line westward appeared to be bringing him
-closer to the slope of the mountain; and it was not long
-before he saw a thick patch of green brush that surely
-indicated a water hole. The very sight seemed to invigorate
-him. Nevertheless, the promised oasis was far away,
-and not before he had walked till he was weary and rested
-many times did he reach it. To find water and grass was
-like making a thrilling discovery. Adam unpacked Jinny
-and turned her loose, not, however, without some misgivings
-as to her staying there.</p>
-
-<p>Though he suffered from an extreme fatigue and a
-weakness that seemed to be in both muscle and bone, a
-kind of cheer came to him with the camp-fire duties.
-Never had he been so famished! The sun set while he
-ate, and, despite his hunger, more than once he had to
-stop to gaze down across the measureless slope, smoky and
-red, that ended in purple obscurity. It struck him suddenly,
-as he was putting some sticks of dead ironwood on
-the fire, how he had ceased to look back over his shoulder
-toward the south. The fire sputtered, the twilight deepened,
-the silence grew vast and vague. His eyelids were
-as heavy as lead, and all the nerves and veins of his body
-seemed to run together and to sink into an abyss the restfulness
-of which was unutterably sweet.</p>
-
-<p>Some time during Adam’s slumbers a nightmare possessed
-him. At the moment he was about to be captured
-he awakened, cold with clammy sweat and shaking in
-every limb. With violent start of consciousness, with fearful
-uncertainty, he raised himself to peer around. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-desert night encompassed him. It was late, somewhere
-near the morning hour. Low down over the dark horizon
-line hung a wan distorted moon that shone with weird
-luster. Adam saw the black mountain wall above him
-apparently lifting to the stars, and the thick shadow of
-gloom filling the mouth of the canyon where he lay. He
-listened. And then he breathed a long sigh of relief and
-lay back in his blankets. The silence was that of a grave.
-There were no pursuers. He had only dreamed. And he
-closed his eyes again, feeling some blessed safeguard in
-the fact of his loneliness.</p>
-
-<p>Dawn roused him to his tasks, stronger physically, eager
-and keen, but more watchful than he had been the preceding
-day and with less thrill than he had felt. He packed
-in half an hour and was traveling west when the sun rose.
-Gradually with the return of his habit of watchfulness
-came his former instinctive tendency to look back over his
-shoulder. He continually drove this away and it continually
-returned. The only sure banishment of it came through
-action, with its attendant exercise of his faculties. Therefore
-he rested less and walked more, taxing his strength
-to its utmost that morning, until the hot noon hour forced
-him to halt. Then while Jinny nibbled at the bitter desert
-plants Adam dozed in the thin shade of a mesquite. Close
-by grew a large <i>ocatilla</i> cactus covered with red flowers
-among which bees hummed. Adam never completely lost
-sense of this melodious hum, and it seemed to be trying
-to revive memories that he shunned.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was still high and hot when Adam resumed
-travel, but it was westering and the slanting rays were
-bearable. After he got thoroughly warmed up and sweating
-freely he did not mind the heat, and was able to drive
-Jinny and keep up a strong stride for an hour at a time.
-His course now led along the base of the mountain wall,
-and that long low ridge which marked his destination began
-to seem less unattainable. The afternoon waned, the
-sun sank, the heat declined, and Jinny began to show
-signs of weariness. It bothered Adam to keep her headed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-straight. He searched the line where desert slope met the
-mountain wall for another green thicket of brush marking
-a water hole, but he could not see one. Darkness overtook
-him and he was compelled to make dry camp. This
-occasioned him some uneasiness, not that he did not have
-plenty of water for himself, but because he worried about
-the burro and the possibility of not finding water the next
-day. Nevertheless, he slept soundly.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning, when he had been tramping
-along for an hour or more, he espied far ahead the unmistakable
-green patch of thicket that heralded the presence
-of water. The sight stirred him. He walked well that
-morning, resting only a couple of hours at noon; but the
-green patch, after the manner of distant objects on the
-desert, seemed just as far away as when he saw it first.
-The time came, however, when there was no more illusion
-and he knew he was getting close to the place. At last
-he reached it, a large green thicket that choked the mouth
-of a narrow canyon. He found a spring welling from
-under the mountain base and sending a slender stream
-out to be swallowed by the sand.</p>
-
-<p>Adam gave Jinny a drink before he unpacked her.
-There was a desirable camp site, except that it lacked
-dead firewood close at hand. Adam removed the pack,
-being careful to put boxes and bags together and to cover
-them with the canvas. Then he started out to look for some
-dead ironwood or mesquite to burn. All the desert growths,
-mostly greasewood and mesquite, were young and green.
-Adam searched in one direction and then in another,
-without so much as finding a stick. Next he walked
-west along the rocky wall, and had no better success until
-he came to a deep recession in the wall, full of brush; and
-here with considerable labor he collected a bundle of dry
-sticks. With this he trudged back toward camp.</p>
-
-<p>Before long he imagined he saw smoke. “Queer how
-those smoke trees fool a fellow,” he said. And even after
-he thought he smelled smoke, he was sure of deception.
-But upon nearing the green thicket that hid his camp he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-actually did see thin blue smoke low down against the
-background of rocky wall. The sight alarmed him. The
-only explanation which offered itself to his perplexity was
-the possibility that a prospector had arrived at the spring
-during his absence and had started a fire. Adam began
-to hurry. His alarm increased to dread.</p>
-
-<p>When he ran around the corner of thicket to his camp
-site he did see a fire. It was about burned out. There
-was no prospector, no signs of packs or burros. And
-Jinny was gone!</p>
-
-<p>“What—what?” stammered Adam, dropping his bundle
-of sticks. He was bewildered. A sense of calamity beset
-him. He ran forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Where—where’s my pack?” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>The dying fire was but the smoldering remains of his
-pack. It had been burned. Blankets, boxes, bags had been
-consumed. Some blackened utensils lay on the ground
-near the charred remains of his canvas. Only then did
-the truth of this catastrophe burst upon him. All his food
-had been burned.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Some</span> moments elapsed before the stunning effects
-of this loss had worn off enough to permit Adam’s
-mind to connect the cause of it with the disappearance
-of Jinny.</p>
-
-<p>After careful scrutiny of tracks near where the pack
-had lain, Adam became convinced that Jinny was to blame
-for his destitution. His proofs cumulated in a handful of
-unburnt matches that manifestly had been flung and scattered
-away from the pack. The tricky burro, taking advantage
-of Adam’s absence, had pulled the canvas off the
-pack, and in tearing around in the boxes for morsels to
-eat she had bitten into the box of matches and set them on
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t think—I didn’t think!” cried Adam, remembering
-the advice of Dismukes.</p>
-
-<p>Overcome by the shock, he sank upon the ground and
-fell prey to gloomy and hopeless forebodings.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll lie down and die,” he muttered. But he could not
-so much as lie down. He seemed possessed by a devil
-who would not admit the idea of surrender or death. And
-this spirit likewise seemed to take him by the hair of his
-head and lift him up to scatter the tears from his eyes.
-“Why can’t I cuss the luck like a man—then look round
-to see what’s got to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>Jinny had made good her escape. When Adam gave
-up all hope of finding the burro the hour was near sunset
-and it was high time that he should decide what to do.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on—to the Indian camp,” he declared, tersely.</p>
-
-<p>He decided to start at once and walk in the cool of
-night, keeping close to the mountain wall so as not to
-lose his way. His spirits rallied. Going back to the camp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-scene, he carefully gathered up all the unburnt matches
-and placed them with others he carried in his pocket. He
-found his bag of salt only partly consumed, and he made
-haste to secure it. His canteen lay beside the spring.</p>
-
-<p>The ruddy sunset and the stealing down of twilight and
-the encroaching blackness of night had no charms for
-Adam now. His weariness increased as the hours prolonged
-themselves. Short, frequent rests were more advisable
-than long ones. The canopy of stars seemed in
-procession westward; and many a bright one he watched
-sink behind the black slope of mountain toward which he
-was bound. There were times when his eyes closed
-involuntarily and all his body succumbed to sleep as he
-toiled on. These drowsy spells always came to a painful
-end, for he would walk into a thorny mesquite. Adam
-saw a weird, misshapen moon rise late over a dark range
-to blanch the desert with wan light. He walked all night,
-and when dawn showed him landmarks now grown familiar
-he had a moment of exhilaration. The long, low-reaching
-ridge of mountain loomed right before him.
-When he rounded the sharp, blunt corner his eyes were
-greeted by sight of a deep-mouthed canyon yawning out
-of the range, and full of palms and other green trees.
-He saw a white stream bed and the shine of water,
-and what he took to be the roofs of palm-thatched
-huts.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got there. This is the Indian canyon—where Dismukes
-told me to stay,” said Adam, with pride in his
-achievement. A first sight of what he took to be habitations
-cheered him. Again that gloomy companion of his
-mind was put to rout. It looked worth striving and suffering
-for—this haven. The barrenness of the desert all
-around made this green canyon mouth an oasis. It appeared
-well hidden, too. Few travelers passing along the
-valley would have suspected its presence. The long, low
-ridge had to be rounded before the canyon could be
-detected.</p>
-
-<p>With steps that no longer dragged Adam began his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-descent of the canyon slope. It was a long, gradual incline,
-rough toward the bottom, and the bottom was a
-good deal farther down than it had seemed. At length he
-reached the wide bed of white boulders, strewn about in
-profusion, where some flood had rolled them. In the
-center of this bed trickled a tiny stream of water, slightly
-alkaline, Adam decided, judging from the white stain on
-the margin of sand. Following the stream bed, he made
-his way up into the zone of green growths, a most welcome
-change from the open glare of the desert. He
-plodded on perhaps a mile, without reaching the yellow
-thatch of palms.</p>
-
-<p>“Will I—never—get there?” panted Adam, almost spent.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Adam reached a well-defined trail leading up
-out of the stream bed. He followed it to a level flat covered
-with willows and cottonwoods, all full foliaged and
-luxuriantly green, and among which stately palms,
-swaddled in huge straw sheaths of their own making,
-towered with lofty tufted crowns. The dust in the trail
-showed no imprints of feet. Adam regarded that as
-strange. Still, he might be far from the camp or village
-that had looked so close from the slope above. Suddenly
-he emerged from the green covert into an open glade that
-contained palm-thatched huts, and he uttered a little cry
-of joy. But it took only a second glance to convince him
-that the huts were deserted, and his joy was short lived.
-Hastily he roamed from one hut to another. He found
-ollas, great, clay water jars, and pieces of broken pottery,
-and beds of palm leaves through which the lizards rustled,
-but no Indians, nor any signs of recent habitation.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone! Gone!” he whispered, hoarsely. “Now—I’ll
-starve—to death!”</p>
-
-<p>His accents of despair contained a note of hardness,
-of indifference born of his extreme fatigue. His eyes
-refused to stay open, and sleep glued them shut. When
-he opened them again it was to the light of another day.
-Stiff and lame, with a gnawing at the pit of his stomach
-and an oppressed mind, Adam found himself in sad<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-plight. Limping down to the stream, he bathed his face
-and quenched his thirst, and then, removing his boots, he
-saw that his feet were badly blistered. He decided to go
-barefoot, to save his boots as well as to give the raw places
-a chance to heal.</p>
-
-<p>Then without any more reflection he wrought himself
-into a supreme effort of will, and it was so passionate and
-strong that he believed it would hold as long as intelligence
-governed his actions.</p>
-
-<p>“My one chance is to live here until the Indians come
-back,” he decided. “There’s water here and green growths.
-It’s an oasis where animals, birds, living creatures come
-to drink.... I must eat.”</p>
-
-<p>His first move was to make slow and careful examination
-of the trails. One which led toward the mountain
-bore faint traces of footprints that a recent rain had
-mostly obliterated. He lost this trail on the smooth rock
-slope. The others petered out in the stones and sage.
-Then he searched along the sand bars of the stream for
-tracks of living creatures; and he found many, from cat
-tracks to the delicate ones of tiny birds. After all, then,
-the desert was an abode for living things. The fact
-stimulated Adam, and he returned to the glade to exercise
-every faculty he possessed in the invention of instruments
-or traps or snares.</p>
-
-<p>He had a knife and a pair of long leather boot strings.
-With these, and a bundle of arrowweed sticks, and a tough
-elastic bow of ironwood, and strips of bark, and sharp bits
-of flinty rock Adam set to work under the strong, inventive
-guiding spirit of necessity. As a boy he had been an
-adept at constructing figure-four traps. How marvelous
-the accuracy of memory! He had been the one to build
-traps for his brother Guerd, who had not patience or
-skill, but who loved to set traps in the brier patches for
-redbirds. Adam’s nimble fingers slacked a little as his
-mind surveyed that best part of his life. To what extremity
-a man could be reduced! The dexterity of his
-idle youth to serve him thus in his terrible hour of need!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-He remembered then his skill at making slings; and following
-this came the inspired thought of the possibility
-of constructing one. He had a strong rubber band
-doubled round his pocketbook. Sight of it thrilled him.
-He immediately left off experimenting with the bow and
-went to making a sling. His difficulty was to find cords
-to make connections between the rubbers and a forked
-prong, and also between the rubbers and a carrier of some
-sort. For the latter he cut a triangular piece out of the
-top of his boot. Always in the old days he had utilized
-leather from cast-off shoes, and had even made a collection
-of old footgear for this purpose. But where to get
-the cords? Bark would not be pliable and strong enough.
-Somewhere from the clothes he wore he must extract
-cords. The problem proved easy. His suspenders were
-almost new and they were made of linen threads woven
-together. When he began to ravel them he made the
-discovery that there was enough rubber in them to serve
-for a second sling.</p>
-
-<p>When the instrument was finished he surveyed it with
-satisfaction. He had no doubt that the deadly accuracy
-he had once been master of with this boyish engine of
-destruction would readily return to him. Then he went
-back to work on the other contrivances he had planned.</p>
-
-<p>A failing of the daylight amazed him. For an instant
-he imagined a cloud had crossed the sun. But the sun
-had set and darkness was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>“If days fly like this one, life will soon be over,” he
-soliloquized, with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the thatched huts he made a comfortable bed
-of palm leaves. They seemed to retain the heat of the
-day. When Adam lay down to go to sleep he experienced
-a vague, inexplicable sense that the very strangeness of
-the present circumstance was familiar to him. But he could
-not hold the sensation, so did not understand it. He
-was very tired and very sleepy, and there was an uncomfortable
-empty feeling within him. He looked out and
-listened, slowly aware of a great, soft, silent black enveloping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-of his environment by the desert night. There seemed
-to be an aloofness in the immensity of this approach and
-insulation—a nature that, once comprehended, would be
-appalling. This thought just flashed by. His mind seemed
-concerned with something between worry and fear which
-persisted till he fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>In the dim, gray dawn he awoke and realized that it was
-hunger which had awakened him. And he stole out on
-his imperative quest. He did not see the sunrise nor the
-broadening day. His instinct was to hunt. Doves and
-blackbirds visited the stream, and a covey of desert quail
-seemed tame; but, owing to overeagerness and clumsiness,
-he did not succeed in killing a single one. He followed
-them from place to place, all over the oasis, until he lost
-sight of them. He baited his two traps with cactus fruit
-and set them, and he prowled into every nook and cranny
-of the canyon oasis. Lizards, rattlesnakes, rats, ground
-squirrels rustled from his stealthy steps. It amazed him
-how wary they were. He might have caught the rattlesnakes,
-but the idea of eating them was repugnant and
-impossible to him. The day passed more swiftly than had
-yesterday. Its close found him so tired he could scarcely
-stand, and with gnawing hunger growing worse. The
-moment he lay down sleep claimed him.</p>
-
-<p>Next day he had more and better opportunities to secure
-meat, but he failed through haste and poor judgment and
-inaccuracy. His lessons were severe and they taught him
-the stern need of perfection. That day he saw a hawk
-poise high over a spot, dart down swiftly, to rise with a
-squealing rat in its claws. Again he saw a shrike, marked
-dull gray and black, sail down from a tree, fly very low
-along an open space of ground to avoid detection, and
-pounce upon a lizard. Likewise he saw a horned toad
-shoot out an extraordinarily long and almost invisible
-tongue, to snatch a bee from a flower. In these actions
-Adam divined his first proof of the perfection of
-desert hunters. They did not fail. But he was not thus
-equipped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-All during the hot period of the day, when birds and
-animals rested, Adam practiced with his crude weapons.
-His grave, serious eagerness began to give way to instinctive
-force, a something of fierceness that began to come
-out in him. It seemed every moment had its consciousness
-of self, of plight, of presaged agony, but only in
-flashes of thought, only fleeting ideas instantly repudiated
-by the physical. He had given a tremendous direction to
-his mind and it spent its force that way.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning, just at sunrise, he located the
-covey of desert quail. They had sailed down from the
-sage slopes to alight among the willows bordering the
-stream. Adam crawled on the sand, noiseless as a snake,
-his sling held in readiness. He was breathless and hot.
-His blood gushed and beat in his veins. The very pursuit
-of meat made the saliva drip from his mouth and made
-his stomach roll with pangs of emptiness. Then the strain,
-the passion of the moment, were beyond his will to control,
-even if there had not been a strange, savage joy in
-them. He glided through the willows, never rustling a
-branch. The plaintive notes of the quail guided him. Then
-through an opening he saw them—gray, sleek, plump
-birds, some of them with tiny plumes. They were picking
-in the damp sand near the water. Adam, lying flat,
-stretched his sling and waited for a number of the quail
-to bunch. Then he shot. The heavy pebble sped true,
-making the gray feathers fly. One quail lay dead. Another
-fluttered wildly. The others ran off through the
-willows. Adam rushed upon the crippled quail, plunging
-down swift and hard; and catching it, he wrung its neck.
-Then he picked up the other.</p>
-
-<p>“I got ’em! I got ’em!” he cried, elated, as he felt the
-warm plump bodies. It was a moment of strange sensation.
-Breathless, hot, wet with sweat, shaking all over,
-he seemed to have reverted to the triumph of the boy
-hunter. But there was more, and it had to do with the
-physical reactions inside his body. It had to do with
-hunger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-Picking the feathers off these birds required too much
-time. Adam skinned them and cleaned them, and then
-washed them in the stream. That done, he hurried back
-to his camp to make a fire and cook them. A quick method
-would be to broil them. He had learned how to do this
-with strips of meat. His hunger prevented him from
-waiting until the fire was right, and it also made him
-hurry the broiling. The salt that he had rescued from
-his pack now found its use, and it was not long before he
-had picked clean the bones of these two quail.</p>
-
-<p>Adam found that this pound or so of meat augmented
-his hunger. It changed the gnawing sensations, in fact
-modified them, but it induced a greedy, hot hunger for
-more. An hour after he had eaten, as far as appetite was
-concerned, he seemed worse off. Then he set out again
-in quest of meat.</p>
-
-<p>The hours flew, the day ended, night intervened, and
-another dawn broke. Success again crowned his hunt.
-He feasted on doves. Thereafter, day by day, he decimated
-the covey of tame quail and the flock of tame doves until
-the few that were left grew wary and finally departed.
-Then he hunted other birds. Quickly they learned the
-peril of the white man; and the day came when few birds
-visited the oasis.</p>
-
-<p>Next to invite Adam’s cunning, were the ground squirrels,
-the trade rats, and the kangaroo rats. He lived off
-them for days. But they grew so wary that he had to dig
-them out of the ground, and they finally disappeared.
-At this juncture a pair of burros wandered into the oasis.
-They were exceedingly wild. Adam failed to trap one
-of them. He watched for hours from a steep place where
-he might have killed one by throwing down a large rock.
-But it was in vain. At last, in desperation, holding his
-naked knife in hand, he chased them over stones and
-through the willows and under the thorny mesquites, all
-to no avail. He dropped from exhaustion and weakness,
-and lay where he had fallen till the next morning.</p>
-
-<p>The pangs of hunger now were maddening. He had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-suffered them, more or less, and then alleviated them with
-meat, and then felt them grow keener and stronger until
-the edge wore off. After a few more meatless days the
-pains gradually subsided. It was a relief. He began
-to force himself to go out and hunt. Then an exceedingly
-good stroke of fortune befell him in that he killed a rabbit.
-His strength revived, but also his pains.</p>
-
-<p>Then he lost track of days, but many passed, and each
-one of them took something from him in effort, in wakefulness,
-in spirit. His aggressiveness diminished daily
-and lasted only a short while. The time came when he fell
-to eating rattlesnakes and any living creatures in the oasis
-that he could kill with a club.</p>
-
-<p>But at length pain left him, and hunger, and then his
-peril revealed itself. He realized it. The desire to kill
-diminished. With the cessation of activity there returned
-a mental state in which he could think back and remember
-all that he had done there, and also look forward to the
-inevitable prospect. Every morning he dragged his weary
-body, now merely skin and bones, out to the stream to
-drink, and then around and around in a futile hunt. He
-chewed leaves and bark; he ate mesquite beans and cactus
-fruit. After a certain number of hours the longer he went
-without meat the less he cared for it, or for living. But
-when, now and then, he did kill something to eat, then
-his instinct to survive flashed up with revived hunger.
-The process of detachment from passion to live was one
-of agony, infinitely worse than starvation. He had come
-to learn that starvation would be the easiest and most
-painless of deaths. It would have been infinitely welcome
-but for the thought that always followed resignation—that
-he had sworn to fight. That kept him alive.</p>
-
-<p>His skin turned brown and shriveled up like dried parchment
-wrinkling around bones. He did not recognize his
-hands, and when he lay flat on the stones to drink from
-the stream, he saw reflected there a mummified mask with
-awful eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Longer and longer grew the hours wherein he slept<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-by night and lay idle by day, watching, listening, feeling.
-Something came back to him or was born in him during
-these hours. But the truth of his state eluded him. It
-had to do with peace, with dream, with effacement. He
-seemed no longer real. The hot sun, the pleasant wind, the
-murmur of bees, the tinkle of water, the everlasting processional
-march of the heat veils across the oasis—with
-all these things his mind seemed happily concerned. At
-dawn when he awoke his old instinct predominated and
-he searched for meat. But unless he had some success
-this questing mood did not last. It departed as weakness
-and lassitude overbalanced the night’s rest. For the other
-hours of that day he lay in the sun, or the shade—it did
-not matter—and felt or dreamed as he starved.</p>
-
-<p>As he watched thus one drowsy noon hour, seeing the
-honeybees darting to and fro, leaving the flowers to fly
-in straight line across the oasis, there occurred to him
-the significance of their toil. He watched these flying
-bees come and go; and suddenly it flashed over him that
-at the end of the bee line there must be a hive. Bees
-made nests in trees. If he could find the nest of the
-bees that were working here he would find honey. The
-idea stimulated him.</p>
-
-<p>Adam had never heard how bee hunters lined bees to
-their hives, but in his dire necessity he instinctively adopted
-the correct method. He watched the bees fly away, keeping
-them in sight as long as possible, then he walked to
-the point he had marked as the last place he had seen
-them, and here he watched for others. In half an hour
-the straight bee flights led to a large dead cottonwood,
-hollow at top and bottom, a tree he had passed hundreds
-of times. The bees had a hive in the upper chamber of
-the trunk. Adam set fire to the tree and smoked the bees
-out. Then the problem consisted of felling the tree, for
-he had not the strength to climb it. The trunk was rotten
-inside and out. It burned easily, and he helped along the
-work by tearing out pieces of the soft wood. Nearly all
-the day was consumed in this toil, but at length the tree<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-fell, splitting and breaking to pieces. The hollow chamber
-contained many pounds of honey.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s struggle then was to listen to an intelligence
-that warned him that if he made a glutton of himself it
-would cause him great distress and perhaps kill him.
-How desperately hard it was to eat sparingly of the delicious
-honey! He tried, but did not succeed. That restraint
-was beyond human nature. Nevertheless, he
-stopped far short of what he wanted. He stored the
-honey away in ollas left there by the Indians.</p>
-
-<p>All night and next day he paid in severe illness for the
-honey of which he had partaken. The renewed exercise
-of internal organs that had ceased to function produced
-convulsions and retching that made him roll on the ground
-as a man poisoned. Life was tenacious in him and he
-recovered; and thereafter, while the honey lasted, he
-slowly gained strength enough to hunt once more for meat.
-But the fertile oasis was now as barren of living creatures
-as was the naked desert outside. Adam’s hope revived
-with his barely recovered strength. He pitied himself
-in his moments of deluded cheerfulness, of spirit that
-refused to die. Long ago his physical being had resigned
-itself, but his soul seemed beyond defeat. How strange
-the variations of his moods! His intelligence told him
-that sight of an animal would instantly revert him to
-the level of a beast of prey or a stalking, bloodthirsty
-savage.</p>
-
-<p>During these days his eyes scanned the bronze slope of
-mountain where the tracks of the Indians had faded.
-They might return in time to save his life. He hoped in
-spite of himself. In the early time of his imprisonment
-there he had prayed for succor, but he had long since
-ceased that. The desert had locked him in. Every moment,
-every hour that had passed, the ceaseless hunts and
-then the dreaming spells, held their clear-cut niches in
-his memory. Looked back at, they seemed far away in
-the past, even those as close as yesterday; and every sensation
-was invested by a pang. At night he slept the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-slumber of weakness, and so the mockery of the dark
-hours did not make their terrible mark upon his mind.
-But the solemn days! They sped swiftly by, yet, remembered,
-they seemed eternities. Desert-bound days—immeasurably
-silent—periods of the dominance of the blasting
-sun; days of infinite space, beyond time, beyond life,
-as they might have been upon the burned-out moon! The
-stones that blistered unprotected flesh, the sand and the
-dust, the rock-ribbed ranges of bronze and rust—these
-tangible evidences of the earth seemed part of those endless
-days. There were sky and wind, the domain of the
-open and its master; but these existed for the eagles, and
-perhaps for the spirits that wailed down the naked shingles
-of the desert. A man was nothing. Nature filled this
-universe and had its inscrutable and ruthless laws.</p>
-
-<p>How little the human body required to subsist on!
-Adam lived long on that honey; and he gained so much
-from it that after it was gone the hunger pangs revived
-a hundred times more fiercely than ever. They had been
-deadened, which fact left him peace; revived by a windfall
-of food, they brought him agony. It drove him out
-to hunt for meat. He became a stalking specter whose
-keen eye an insect could not have escaped. Hunger now
-beset him with all its terrors magnified. To starve was
-nothing, but to eat while starving was hell! The pangs
-were as if made by a serpent with teeth of fire tearing at
-his vitals. Tighter and tighter he buckled his belt until
-he could squeeze his waist in his long, skinny hands so
-that his fingers met. Whenever his pains began to subside,
-like worms growing quiet, then a rat or a stray bird
-or a lizard or a scaly little side-winder rattlesnake would
-fall to his cunning, as if in mockery of the death that ever
-eluded him; and next day the old starving pains would
-convulse his bowels again.</p>
-
-<p>So that he was driven, a gaunt and ever gaunter
-shadow of a man, up and down the beaten trails of the
-oasis. Soon he would fall and die, be sun-dried and blow
-away like powdered leather on the desert wind. By his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-agonies he measured the inhospitableness and inevitableness
-of the wasteland. Every thought had some connection
-with his torture or some relation to his physical being
-in its fight for existence. In this desert oasis were living
-things, creatures grown too wary for him now, and willows,
-cacti, sages, that had conquered over the barrenness
-of the desert. On his brain had been etched by words of
-steel the fact that no power to fight was so great and unquenchable
-as that of man’s. He lived on, he staggered
-on through the solemn, glaring days.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>One morning huge columnar clouds, white as fleece, with
-dark-gray shades along their lower borders, blotted out
-the sun. How strangely they shaded the high lights!
-Usually when clouds formed on the desert they lodged
-round the peaks and hung there. But these were looming
-across the wasteland, promising rain. A fresh breeze blew
-the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was making his weary round of the oasis, dragging
-one foot like a dead weight after the other. Once
-he thought he heard an unusual sound, and with lips wide
-and with bated breath he listened. Only the mocking,
-solemn silence! Often he was haunted by the memory
-of sounds. Seldom indeed did he hear his own voice any
-more. Then he plodded on again with the eyes of a ferret,
-roving everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>He had proceeded a few rods when a distant but shrill
-whistle brought him to a startled and thrilling halt. It
-sounded like the neigh of a horse. Often he had heard
-the brays of wild burros. In the intense silence, as he
-strained his ears, he heard only the labored, muffled throbs
-of his heart. Gradually his hopes, so new and strange,
-subsided. Only another mockery of his memory! Or
-perhaps it was a whistle of the wind in a crevice, or of an
-eagle in flight.</p>
-
-<p>Parting the willows before him as he walked, he went
-through the thicket out into the open where the stream
-flowed. It was very low, just a tiny rill of crystal-clear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-water. He was about to step forward toward the flat
-rock where he always knelt to drink, when another sound
-checked him. A loud, high buzz, somehow startling! It
-had life.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he espied a huge rattlesnake coiled in the sand,
-with head erect and its rattles quivering like the wings of
-a poised humming bird. The snake had just shed an ugly,
-brown, scaly skin, and now shone forth resplendent, a
-beautiful clean gray with markings of black. It did not
-show any fear. The flat triangular head, sleek and cunning,
-with its deadly jewel-like eyes, was raised half a foot
-above the plump coils.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s weary, hopeless hunting instinct sustained a
-vivifying, galvanizing shock. Like a flash he changed,
-beginning to tremble. He dropped his sling as an ineffective
-weapon against so large a snake. His staring eyes
-quivered like the vibrating point of a compass needle as
-he tried to keep them on the snake and at the same time
-sight a stone or club with which to attack his quarry. A
-bursting gush of blood, hot in its tearing pangs, flooded
-out all over his skin, starting the sweat. His heart lifted
-high in his breast, almost choking him. A terrible excitement
-animated him and it was paralleled by a cold and
-sickening dread that the snake would escape and pounds
-of meat be lost to him.</p>
-
-<p>Never taking eyes off the snake, Adam stooped down
-to raise a large rock in his hand. He poised it aloft and,
-aiming with intense keenness, he flung the missile. It
-struck the rattlesnake a glancing blow, tearing its flesh
-and bringing blood. With the buzz of a huge bee caught
-in a trap the snake lunged at Adam, stretching its mutilated
-length on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>It was long, thick, fat. Adam smelled the exuding blood
-and it inflamed him. Almost he became a beast. The
-savage urge in him then was to fall upon his prey and
-clutch it with his bare hands and choke and tear and
-kill. But reason still restrained such limit as that. Stone
-after stone he flung, missing every time. Then the rattlesnake<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-began to drag itself over the sand. Its injury did
-not retard a swift progress. Adam tried to bound after
-it, but he was so weak that swift action seemed beyond
-him. Still, he headed off the snake and turned it back.
-Stones were of no avail. He could not hit with them,
-and every time he bent over to pick one up he got so
-dizzy that he could scarcely rise.</p>
-
-<p>“Club! Club! Got—have club!” he panted, hoarsely.
-And espying one along the edge of the stream, he plunged
-to secure it. This moment gave the rattlesnake time to
-get ahead. Wildly Adam rushed back, brandishing the
-club. His tall gaunt form, bent forward, grew overbalanced
-as he moved, and he made a long fall, halfway
-across the stream. He got up and reached the snake in
-time to prevent it from escaping under some brush.</p>
-
-<p>Then he swung the club. It was not easy to hit the
-snake crawling between stones. And the club was of
-rotten wood. It broke. With the blunt end Adam managed
-to give his victim a blow that retarded its progress.</p>
-
-<p>Adam let out a hoarse yell. Something burst in him—a
-consummation of the instinct to kill and the instinct to
-survive. There was no difference between them. Hot
-and mad and weak, he staggered after the crippled snake.
-The chase had transformed the whole internal order of
-him. He was starving to death, and he smelled the blood
-of fresh meat. The action infuriated him and the odor
-maddened him. Not far indeed was he then from the
-actual seizing of that deadly serpent in his bare hands.</p>
-
-<p>But he tripped and fell again in a long forward plunge.
-It brought him to the sand almost on top of the snake.
-And here the rattlesnake stopped to coil, scarcely two
-feet from Adam’s face.</p>
-
-<p>Adam tried to rise on his hands. But his strength had
-left him. And simultaneously there left him the blood
-madness of that chase to kill and eat. He realized his
-peril. The rattlesnake would strike him. Adam had one
-flashing thought of the justice of it—one sight of the
-strange, cold, deadly jewel eyes, one swift sense of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-beauty and magnificent spirit of this reptile of the desert,
-and then horror possessed him. He froze to his marrow.
-The icy mace of terror had stunned him. And with it
-had passed the flashing of his intelligence. He was only
-a fearful animal, fascinated by another, dreading death
-by instinct. And as he collapsed, sagging forward, the
-rattlesnake struck him in the face with the stinging blow
-of a red-hot iron. Then Adam fainted.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> Adam recovered consciousness he imagined
-he was in a dream.</p>
-
-<p>But a dragging, throbbing pain in his face seemed
-actuality enough to discredit any illusions of slumber. It
-was shady where he lay or else his eyes were dimmed.
-Presently he made out that he reclined under one of the
-palm-thatched roofs.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been moved!” he cried, with a start. And that
-start, so full of pain and queer dragging sensations as of
-a weighted body, brought back memory to him. His mind
-whirled and darkened. The sickening horror of close
-proximity to the rattlesnake, its smell and color and deadly
-intent, all possessed Adam again. Then it cleared away.
-What had happened to him? His hand seemed to have
-no feeling; just barely could he move it to his face, where
-the touch of wet cloth bandages told a story of his rescue
-by some one. Probably the Indians had returned. It had
-been the whistle of a horse that had thrilled him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve—been—saved!” whispered Adam, and he grew
-dizzy. His eyes closed. Dim shapes seemed to float over
-the surface of his mind; and there were other strange
-answerings of his being to this singular deliverance.</p>
-
-<p>Then he heard voices—some low, and others deep and
-guttural. Voices of Indians! How strong the spirit of
-life in him! “I—I wasn’t ready—to die,” he whispered.
-Gleams of sunlight low down, slanting on the palm leaves,
-turning them to gold, gave him the idea that the time
-was near sunset. In the corner of the hut stood ollas and
-bags which had not been there before, and on the ground
-lay an Indian blanket.</p>
-
-<p>A shadow crossed the sunlit gleams. An Indian girl<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-entered. She had very dark skin and straight hair as
-black as night. Upon seeing Adam staring at her with
-wide-open eyes she uttered a cry and ran out. A hubbub
-of low voices sounded outside the shack. Then a tall
-figure entered; it was that of an Indian, dressed in the
-ragged clothes of a white man. He was old, his dark
-bronze face like a hard, wrinkled mask.</p>
-
-<p>“How?” he asked, gruffly, as he bent over Adam. He
-had piercing black eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“All right—good,” replied Adam, trying to smile. He
-sensed kindliness in this old Indian.</p>
-
-<p>“White boy want dig gold—get lost—no grub—heap
-sick belly?” queried the Indian, putting a hand on Adam’s
-flat abdomen.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—you bet,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Hahh! Me Charley Jim—heap big medicine man. Me
-fix um. Snake bite no hurt.... White boy sick bad—no
-heap grub—long time.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right—Charley Jim,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Hahh!” Evidently this exclamation was Charley Jim’s
-expression for good. He arose and backed away to the
-opening that appeared blocked by dark-skinned, black-haired
-Indians. Then he pointed at one of them. Adam
-saw that he indicated the girl who had first come to him.
-She appeared very shy. Adam gathered the impression
-that she had been the one who had saved him.</p>
-
-<p>“Charley Jim, who found me—who saved me from that
-rattlesnake?”</p>
-
-<p>The old Indian understood Adam well enough. He
-grinned and pointed at the young girl, and pronounced a
-name that sounded to Adam like, “Oella.”</p>
-
-<p>“When? How long ago? How many days?” asked
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Charley Jim held up three fingers, and with that he waved
-the other Indians from the opening and went out himself.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was left to the bewildered thoughts of a tired
-and hazy mind. He had no strength at all, and the brief
-interview, with its excitement, and exercise of voice,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-brought him near the verge of unconsciousness. He wavered
-amid dim shadows of ideas and thoughts. When
-that condition passed, he awoke to dull, leaden pain in his
-head. And his body felt like an empty sack the two
-sides of which were pasted together flat.</p>
-
-<p>The sunlit gleams vanished and the shades of evening
-made gloom around him. He smelled fragrant wood smoke,
-and some other odor, long unfamiliar, that brought a
-watery flow to his mouth and a prickling as of many
-needles. Then in the semidarkness one of the Indians
-entered and knelt beside him. Adam distinguished the
-face of the girl, Oella. She covered him with a blanket.
-Very gently she lifted his head, and moved her body so
-that it would support him. The lifting hurt Adam; he
-seemed to reel and sway, and a blackness covered his
-sight. The girl held him and put something warm and
-wet between his lips. She was trying to feed him with a
-stick or a wooden spoon. The act of swallowing made his
-throat feel as if it was sore. What a slow process! Adam
-rather repelled than assisted his nurse, but his antagonism
-was purely physical and involuntary. Whatever the food
-was, it had no taste to him. The heat of it, however, and
-the soft, wet sensation, grew pleasant. He realized when
-hunger awakened again in him, for it was like a shot
-through his vitals.</p>
-
-<p>Then the girl laid him back, spread the blanket high,
-and left him. The strange sensation of fullness, of movement
-inside Adam’s breast, occupied his mind until drowsiness
-overcame him.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Another day awakened Adam to the torture of reviving
-hunger and its gnawing pains, so severe that life seemed
-unwelcome. The hours were weary and endless. But
-next day was not so severe, and thereafter gradually he
-grew better and was on the road to a slow recovery.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The Indians that had befriended Adam were of a family
-belonging to the Coahuila tribe. Charley Jim appeared to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-be a chief of some degree, friendly toward the whites,
-and nomadic in spirit, as he wandered from oasis to oasis.
-He knew Dismukes, and told Adam that the prospector
-and he had found gold up this canyon. Charley Jim’s
-family consisted of several squaws, some young men, two
-girls, of whom Oella was the younger, and a troop of
-children, wild as desert rats.</p>
-
-<p>Adam learned from Charley Jim that the head of this
-canyon contained a thicket of mesquite trees, the beans
-of which the Indians prized as food. Also there were
-abundant willows and arrowweeds, with which wood the
-Indians constructed their huge, round, basket granaries.
-The women of the family pounded the mesquite beans into
-meal or flour, which was dampened and put away for use.
-Good grass and water in this remote canyon were further
-reasons why Charley Jim frequented it. But he did not
-appear to be a poor Indian, for he had good horses, a drove
-of burros, pack outfits that were a mixture of Indian and
-prospector styles, and numerous tools, utensils, and accouterments
-that had been purchased at some freighting post.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was so long weak, and dependent upon Oella,
-that when he did grow strong enough to help himself the
-Indian girl’s habit of waiting upon him and caring for
-him was hard to break. She seemed to take it for granted
-that she was to go on looking after him; and the fineness
-and sensitiveness of her, with the strong sense of
-her delight in serving him, made it impossible for Adam
-to offend her. She was shy and reserved, seldom spoke,
-and always maintained before him a simplicity, almost a
-humility, as of servant to master. With acquaintance,
-too, the still, dark, impassive face of her had become
-attractive to look at, especially her large, black, inscrutable
-eyes, soft as desert midnight. They watched Adam at
-times when she imagined he was unaware of her scrutiny,
-and the light of them then pleased Adam, and perturbed
-him also, reminding him of what an old aunt had told
-him once, “Adam, my boy, women will always love you!”
-The prophecy had not been fulfilled, Adam reflected with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-sadness, and in Oella’s case he concluded his fancies were
-groundless.</p>
-
-<p>Still, he had to talk to somebody or grow into the desert
-habit of silence, and so he began to teach Oella his language
-and to learn hers. The girl was quick to learn and
-could twist her tongue round his words better than he
-could round hers. Moreover, she learned quickly anything
-he cared to teach her; and naturally even in the
-desert there were customs into which Adam preferred to
-introduce something of the white man’s way. Indians
-were slovenly and dirty, and Adam changed this in Oella’s
-case. The dusky desert maiden had little instinctive vanities
-that contact with him developed.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>One day, when the summer was waning and Adam was
-getting about on his feet, still a gaunt and stalking shadow
-of his former self, but gaining faster, the old Indian chief
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“White man heap strong—ride—go away soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Charley Jim, I want stay here,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Hahh!” replied the Indian, nodding.</p>
-
-<p>“Me live here—work with Indian. White man no home—no
-people. He like Indian. He work—hunt meat for
-Indian.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heap sheep,” replied Charley Jim, with a slow, expressive
-wave of his hand toward the mountain peaks.</p>
-
-<p>“Charley Jim take white man’s money, send to freight
-post for gun, shells, clothes, flour, bacon—many things
-white man need?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hahh!” The chief held up four fingers and pointed
-west, indicating what Adam gathered was four days’ ride
-to a freighting post.</p>
-
-<p>“Charley Jim no tell white men about me.”</p>
-
-<p>The Indian took the money with grave comprehension,
-and also shook the hand Adam offered.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The Indian boys who rode away to the freighting post
-on the river were two weeks in returning. To celebrate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-the return of the boys Adam suggested a feast and that
-he would bake the bread and cook the bacon. Oella took
-as by right the seat of honor next to Adam, and her habitual
-shyness did not inhibit a rather hearty appetite. On
-this occasion Adam finally got the wild little half-naked
-dusky children to come to him. They could not resist sweets.</p>
-
-<p>A shining new rifle, a Winchester .44, was the cynosure
-of all eyes in that Indian encampment. When Adam took
-it out to practice, the whole family crowded around to
-watch, with the intense interest of primitive people who
-marveled at the white man’s weapon. Only the little children
-ran from the sharp reports of the rifle, and they soon
-lost their fear. Whenever Adam made a good shot it
-was Oella who showed pride where the others indicated
-only their wonder.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the days of simplicity slipped by, every one of
-which now added to Adam’s fast-returning strength.
-Flour and bacon quickly built up his reduced weight; and
-as for rice and dried fruits, they were so delicious to
-Adam that he feared it would not be a great while before
-he must needs send for more. He remembered the advice
-of Dismukes anent the value of his money.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The hot summer became a season of the past. The
-withering winds ceased to blow. In the early autumn
-days Adam began his hunting. Charley Jim led the way,
-keeping behind a fringe of mesquite, out to a gray expanse
-of desert, billowy and beautiful in the ruddy sunlight.
-They crawled through sage to the height of a low ridge,
-and from here the chief espied game. He pointed down
-a long gray slope, but Adam could see only a monotonous
-beauty, spotted by large tufts of sage and here and there
-a cactus. Then the Indian took Adam’s sombrero, and
-the two scarfs he had, one red and one blue, and tied them
-round the hat, which he elevated upon a stick. After that
-he bent his falcon gaze on the slope. Adam likewise gazed,
-with infinite curiosity, thrill, and expectation.</p>
-
-<p>“Hahh!” grunted Charley Jim, presently, and his sinewy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-dark hand clutched Adam. Far down vague gray spots
-seemed to move. Adam strained his eyes. It seemed a
-long time till they approached close enough to distinguish
-their species.</p>
-
-<p>“Antelope, by jiminy!” ejaculated Adam, in excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Heap jiminy—you bet!” responded Charley Jim.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was experiencing that thrill to its utmost, and
-also other sensations of wonder and amaze. Was it possible
-these wild-looking desert creatures were actually so
-curious about the brightly decked sombrero that they could
-not resist approaching it to see what it was? There they
-came, sleek, tawny-gray, alert, deerlike animals, with fine
-pointed heads, long ears, and white rumps. The bold
-leader never stopped at all. But some of his followers
-hesitated, trotted to and fro, then came on. How graceful
-they were! How suggestive of speed and wildness!
-Adam’s finger itched to shoot off the gun and scare them
-to safety. “Fine hunter, I am!” he muttered. “This is
-murder.... Why on earth does a man have to eat meat?”
-The Indian beside him was all keen and strung with his
-instincts and perhaps they were truer to the needs of
-human life.</p>
-
-<p>Soon, however, all of Adam’s sensations were blended
-in a thrilling warmth of excitement. The antelope were
-already within range, and had it not been for Charley
-Jim’s warning hand Adam would not have been able to
-resist the temptation to fire. Perhaps he would have
-missed then, for he certainly shook in every muscle, as a
-man with the ague. Adam forced himself to get the better
-of this spell of nerves.</p>
-
-<p>“Heap soon!” whispered Charley Jim, relaxing the pressure
-of his hand on Adam. The leader approached to
-within fifty feet, with several other antelope close behind,
-when the Indian whistled. Like statues they became.
-Then Adam fired. The leader fell, and also one of those
-behind him. The others flashed into gray speeding shapes,
-with rumps darting white; and Adam could only stare in
-admiring wonder at their incomparable swiftness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-“Hahh!” ejaculated the chief, in admiration. “White
-man heap hunter—one shoot—two bucks. Him eye like
-eagle!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus did a lucky shot by Adam, killing two antelope
-when he had aimed at only one, initiate him into his hunting
-on the desert and win for him the Indian sobriquet of
-Eagle.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>And so began Adam’s desert education. He had keen
-appreciation of his good fortune in his teacher. The
-Coahuila chief had been born on that desert and he must
-have been nearly sixty years old. As a hunter he had the
-eye of a mountain sheep, the ear of a deer, the nose of a
-wolf. He had been raised upon meat. He loved the stalking
-of game. Thus Adam, through this old Indian’s senses
-and long experience and savage skill, began to see the life
-of the desert. It unfolded before his eyes, manifold in
-its abundance, infinitely strange and marvelous in its ferocity
-and ability to survive. Adam learned to see as the
-Indian, and had his own keen mind to analyze and weigh
-and ponder. But his knowledge came slowly, painfully,
-hard earned, in spite of its thrilling time-effacing quality.</p>
-
-<p>In those wonderful autumn days Adam learned that the
-antelope could go long without water, that nature had
-endowed it with great speed to escape the wolves and
-cats of the desert, that from its prominent eyes it could
-see in any direction, that its coloring was the protective
-gray of the sage plains.</p>
-
-<p>He learned that the lizard could change its color like the
-chameleon, adapting itself to the color of the rock upon
-which it basked in the sun, that it could dart across the
-sands almost too swiftly for the eye to follow.</p>
-
-<p>He learned that the gray desert wolf was a king of
-wolves, living high in the mountains and coming down to
-the flats; and there, by reason of his wonderfully developed
-strength and speed, chasing and killing his prey in the
-open.</p>
-
-<p>He learned that the coyote was an eater of carrion, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-rabbits and rats, of bird’s eggs, of mesquite beans, of
-anything that happened to come its way—a gray, skulking,
-cunning beast, cowardly as the wolf was brave, able, like
-the antelope and the jack rabbit, to live without water, and
-best adapted of all beasts to the desert.</p>
-
-<p>He learned that the jack rabbit survived through the
-abnormal development of his ears and legs—the first extraordinarily
-large organs built to catch sound, and the
-latter long, strong members that enable him to run with
-ease away from his foes. And he learned that the cottontail
-rabbit lived in thickets near holes into which he could
-pop, and that his fecundity in reproducing his kind saved
-his species from extinction.</p>
-
-<p>Adam learned about the desert ants, the kangaroo rats,
-the trade rats, the horned toads, the lizards, the snakes,
-the spiders, the bees, the wasps—the way they lived and
-what they lived upon. How marvelously nature adapted
-them to their desert environment, each perfect, each in its
-place, each fierce and self-sufficient, each fulfilling its
-mysterious destiny of sacrificing its individual life to the
-survival of its species! How cruel nature was to the
-individual—how devoted to the species!</p>
-
-<p>Adam learned that the same fierce life of all desert
-creatures was likewise manifested in the life of the plants.
-By thorns and poison sap and leafless branches, and by
-roots penetrating far and deep, and by organs developed
-to catch and store water, so the plants of the desert outwitted
-the beasts and endured the blasting sun and drought.
-How beyond human comprehension was the fact that a
-cactus developed a fluted structure less exposed to heat—that
-a tree developed a leaf that never presented its broad
-surface to the sun!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The days passed, with ruddy sunrises, white, glaring,
-solemn noons, and golden sunsets. The simplicity and
-violence of life on the desert passed into Adam’s being.
-The greatness of stalking game came to him when the
-Indian chief took him to the heights after bighorn sheep;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-but it was not the hunting and killing of this wariest and
-finest of wild beasts, wonderful as it was, that constituted
-for Adam something great. It was the glory of the
-mountain heights. All his life he had dreamed of high
-places, those to which he could climb physically and those
-that he aspired to spiritually. Lost indeed were hopes
-of the latter, but of the former he had all-satisfying fulfillment.
-Adam dated his changed soul from the day he
-first conquered the heights. There, on top of the Chocolate
-range, his keen sight, guided by the desert eyes of the
-old Indian, ranged afar over the gray valleys and red
-ranges to the Rio Colorado, down the dim wandering line
-of which he gazed, to see at last Picacho, a dark, purple
-mass above the horizon. From the moment Adam espied
-this mountain he suffered a return of memory and a sleepless
-and eternal remorse. The terrible past came back to
-him; never again, he divined, to fade while life lasted.
-His repentance, his promise to Dismukes, his vow to himself,
-began there on the heights with the winds sweet and
-strong in his face and the dark blue of the sky over his
-head, and beneath the vast desert, illimitable on all sides,
-lonely and grand, the abode of silence.</p>
-
-<p>The days passed into months. Far to the north the
-dominating peaks of San Jacinto and San Gorgonio took
-on the pure-white caps of snow, that slowly spread, as the
-days passed, down the rugged slopes. Winter abided up
-there. But on the tops of the Chocolate and Chuckwalla
-ranges no snow fell, although the winter wind sometimes
-blew cold and bleak. Adam loved the wind of the heights.
-How cold and pure, untainted by dust or life or use! He
-grew to have the stride of a mountaineer. And the days
-passed until that one came in which the old Indian chief
-let Adam hunt alone. “Go, Eagle!” he said, with sorrow
-for his years and pride in the youth of his white friend.
-“Go!” And the slow gestures of his long arms were as
-the sailing movement of the wings of an eagle.</p>
-
-<p>The days passed, and few were they that did not see
-Adam go out in the sweet, cool dawn, when the east glowed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-like an opal, to climb the bronze slope, sure footed as a
-goat, up and up over the bare ridges and through the high
-ravines where the lichens grew and a strange, pale flower
-blossomed, on and on over the jumble of weathered rock
-to the heights. And there he would face the east with its
-glorious burst of golden fire, and spend the last of that
-poignant gaze on the sunrise-crowned glory of old Picacho.
-The look had the meaning of a prayer to Adam, yet it was
-like a blade in his heart. In that look he remembered
-his home, his mother, his brother, and the vivid days of
-play and love and hope, his fateful journey west, his fall
-and his crime and his ruin. Alone on the heights, he
-forced that memory to be ever more vivid and torturing.
-Hours he consecrated to remorse, to regret, to suffering,
-to punishment. He lashed his soul with bitter thoughts, lest
-he forget and find peace. Life and health and strength
-had returned to him in splendid growing measure which
-he must use to pay his debt.</p>
-
-<p>But there were others hours. He was young. Red
-blood throbbed in his veins, and action sent that blood
-in a flame over his eager body. To stride along the rocky
-heights was something splendid. How free—alone! It
-connected Adam’s present hour with a remote past he
-could not comprehend. He loved it. He was proud that
-the Indians called him Eagle. For to watch the eagles in
-their magnificent flights became a passion with him. The
-great blue condors and the grisly vultures and the bow-winged
-eagles—all were one and the same to him, indistinguishable
-from one another as they sailed against the
-sky, sailing, sailing so wondrously, with never a movement
-of wings, or shooting across the heavens like thunderbolts,
-or circling around and upward to vanish in the deep
-blue. There were moments when he longed to change his
-life to that of an eagle, to find a mate and a nest on a
-lofty crag, and there, ringed by the azure world above
-and with the lonely barren below, live with the elements.</p>
-
-<p>Here on the heights Adam was again visited by that
-strange sensation, inexplicable and illusive and fast fleeting,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-which had been born in him one lonely hour in the
-desert below. Dismukes had told him how men were lured
-by the desert and how they all had their convictions as to
-its cause, and how they missed the infinite truth.</p>
-
-<p>“It will come to me!” cried Adam as he faced the cool
-winds.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Stalking mountain sheep upon the mighty slopes was
-work to make a man. It was a wild and perilous region
-of jagged ridges and bare slants and loose slopes of
-weathered rocks. The eyes of the sheep that lived at this
-height were like telescopes; they had the keenest sight of
-all wild beasts. The marvelous organ of vision stood out
-on the head as if it were the half of a pear, so that there
-was hardly an angle of the compass toward which a sheep
-could not see. Like the antelope, mountain sheep were
-curious and could be lured by a bright color and thereby
-killed. But Adam learned to abhor this method. He pitted
-his sight and his strength and endurance against those of
-the sheep. In this way he magnified the game of hunting.
-His exhaustion and pain and peril he welcomed as lessons
-to the end that his knowledge and achievement must
-be in a measure what Dismukes might have respected.
-Failure to Adam was nothing but a spur to renewed endeavor.
-The long climb, the crumbling ledge, the slipping
-rock, the deceitful distance, the crawl over sharp rocks,
-the hours of waiting—these too he welcomed as one who
-had set himself limitless tasks. Then when he killed a
-ram and threw it over his shoulder to carry it down the
-mountain, he found labor which was harder even than the
-toil of the gold mill at Picacho. To stride erect with a
-rifle in one hand, and a hold upon a heavy sheep with
-the other, down the slippery ledges, across the sliding
-banks, over the cracked and rotten lava, from the sunset-lighted
-heights to the gloomy slopes below—this was how
-in his own estimation he must earn and keep the respect
-of the Indians. They had come to look up to the white
-man they called Eagle. He taught them things to do with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-their hands, work of white men which bettered their existence,
-and he impressed them the more by his mastery of
-some of their achievements.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The days passed into months. Summer came again and
-the vast oval bowl of desert glowed in the rosy sunrise,
-glared in the white noon hours, and burned at sunset. The
-moving heat veils smoked in rippling clouds over the
-Salton Sink; the pale wavering line of the Superstition
-Mountains changed mysteriously with each day; the fog
-clouds from the Pacific rolled over to lodge against the
-fringed peaks. Time did not mean anything to the desert,
-though it worked so patiently and ceaselessly in its infinite
-details. The desert might have worked for eternity. Its
-moments were but the months that were growing into
-years of Adam’s life. Again he saw San Jacinto and San
-Gorgonio crowned with snow that gleamed so white
-against the blue.</p>
-
-<p>Once Charley Jim showed Adam a hole in the gravel
-and sand of a gulley, where Dismukes had dug out a
-pocket of gold. Adam gathered that the Indian had
-brought Dismukes here. “White man gold mad,” said the
-chief. “No happy, little gold. Want dig all—heap hog—dam’
-fool!”</p>
-
-<p>So Charley Jim characterized Dismukes. Evidently
-there had been some just cause, which he did not explain,
-for his bringing Dismukes into this hidden canyon. And
-also there was some significance in his bringing Adam
-there. Many had been the rewards of Charley Jim and
-his family for saving and succoring Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Indian show Eagle heap gold,” said Charley Jim, and
-led him to another gully opening down into the canyon.
-In the dry sand and gravel of this wash Adam found gold.
-The discovery gave him a wonderful thrill. But it did
-not drive him mad. Adam divined in the dark, impassive
-face of his guide something of the Indian’s contempt for
-a white man’s frenzy over gold.</p>
-
-<p>Then the chief said in his own tongue that the Indian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-paid his debt to friend and foe, good for good and evil
-for evil—that there were white men to whom he could
-trust the secret treasures of the desert.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The day came when something appeared to stimulate
-the wandering spirit of the Coahuila chief. Taking his
-family and Adam, he began a nomadic quest for change
-of scene and work and idleness. The life suited Adam,
-for he knew Charley Jim did not frequent the trails of
-white men.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>No time so swiftly fleeting as days and nights out in
-new and strange places of the desert! Adam kept track
-of time by the coming and going of the white crowns of
-snow on the peaks, and by the green and gold and then
-barren gray of the cottonwoods.</p>
-
-<p>Like coming home was it to get back to the oasis in
-the canyon of the Chocolate range. Adam loved the scene
-of his torture. Every stone, every tree, was a familiar
-friend, and seemed to whisper welcome to him. Here
-also had passed the long, long months of mental anguish.
-On this flat rock he had sat a whole day in hopeless pain.
-In this sandy-floored aisle of palms he had walked hour
-by hour, through many weary days, possessed by the
-demon of remorse.</p>
-
-<p>Best of all, out there reached the gray, endless expanse
-of desert, so lonely and melancholy and familiar, extending
-away to the infinitude of purple distance; and there
-loomed the lofty, bare heights of rock which, when he
-scaled them as an Indian climbing to meet his spirits,
-seemed to welcome him with sweet, cold winds in his
-face. How he thrilled at sight of the winding gleam of
-the Rio Colorado! What a shudder, as keen and new a
-pang as ever, wrenched him at sight of Picacho! It did
-not change. Had he expected that? It towered there in
-the dim lilac colors of the desert horizon, colossal and
-commanding, immutable and everlasting, like the sin he
-had committed in its shadow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-Somewhere in the shadow of that doomed and turreted
-peak lay the grave of his brother Guerd.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go back some day!” whispered Adam, and the
-spoken words seemed the birth of a long-germinating idea.
-Picacho haunted him. It called him. It was the place
-that had given the gray color and life to his destiny. And
-suddenly into his memory flashed an image of Margarita.
-Poor, frail, dusky-eyed girl! She had been but the instrument
-of his doom. He held her guiltless—long ago he
-had forgiven her. But memory of her hurt. Had she
-not spoken so lightly of what he meant to hold sacred?
-“Ah, señor—so long ago and far away!” Faithless, mindless,
-soulless! Adam would never forget. Never a sight
-of a green <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">palo verde</i> but a pang struck through his breast!</p>
-
-<p>At sunset the old chief came to Adam, somber and
-grave, but with dignity and kindness tempering the seriousness
-of his aspect. He spoke the language of his people.</p>
-
-<p>“White man, you are of the brood of the eagle. Your
-heart is the heart of an Indian. Take my daughter Oella
-as your wife.”</p>
-
-<p>Long had Adam feared this blow, and now it had fallen.
-He had tried to pay his debt, but it could not be paid.</p>
-
-<p>“No, chief, the white man cannot marry Oella. He
-has blood upon his hands—a price on his head. Some
-day—he might have to hang for his crime. He cannot be
-dishonest with the Indian girl who saved him.”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the chief had expected that reply, but his
-inscrutable face showed no feeling. He made one of his
-slow, impressive gestures—a wave of his hand, indicating
-great distance and time; and it meant that Adam was to go.</p>
-
-<p>Adam dropped his head. That decree was irrevocable
-and he knew it was just. While he packed for a long
-journey twilight stole down upon the Indian encampment.
-Adam knew, when he faced Oella in the shadow of the
-palms, that she had been told. Was this the Indian
-maiden who had been so shy, so strange? No, this seemed
-a woman of full, heaving breast, whose strong, dark face
-grew strained, whose magnificent eyes, level and piercing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-searched his soul. How blind he had been! All about
-her seemed eloquent of woman’s love. His heart beat with
-quick, heavy throbs.</p>
-
-<p>“Oella, your father has ordered me away,” said Adam.
-“I am an outcast. I am hunted. If I made you my wife
-it might be to your shame and sorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stay. Oella is not afraid. We will hide in the
-canyons,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I have sinned. I have blood on my hands. But,
-Oella, I am not dishonorable. I will not cheat you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take me,” she cried, and the soft, deep-toned, passionate
-voice shook Adam’s heart. She would share his
-wanderings.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by, Oella,” he said, huskily. And he strode forth
-to drive his burro out into the lonely, melancholy desert
-night.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> second meeting between Adam and the prospector
-Dismukes occurred at Tecopah, a mining camp
-in the Mohave Desert.</p>
-
-<p>The mining camp lay in a picturesque valley where
-green and gray growths marked the course of the gravel-lined
-creek, and sandy benches spread out to dark,
-rocky slopes, like lava, that heaved away in the bleak
-ranges.</p>
-
-<p>It was in March, the most colorful season in the Mohave,
-that Adam arrived at Tecopah to halt on a grassy bench
-at the outskirts of the camp. A little spring welled up here
-and trickled down to the creek. It was drinking water
-celebrated among desert men, who had been known to go
-out of their way to drink there. The telltale ears of
-Adam’s burros advised him of the approach of some one,
-and he looked up from his camp tasks to find a familiar
-figure approaching him. He rubbed his eyes. Was that
-strange figure the same as the one so vividly limned on his
-memory? Squat, huge, grotesque, the man coming toward
-him was Dismukes! His motley, patched garb, his old
-slouch hat, his boots yellow with clay and alkali, appeared
-the same he had worn on the memorable day Adam’s eyes
-had unclosed to see them.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes drove his burros up to the edge of the bench,
-evidently having in mind the camp site Adam occupied.
-When he espied Adam he hesitated and, gruffly calling to
-the burros, he turned away.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Dismukes!” called Adam. “Come on. Plenty
-room to camp here.”</p>
-
-<p>The prospector halted stolidly and slowly turned back.
-“You know me?” he asked, gruffly, as he came up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-“Yes, I know you, Dismukes,” replied Adam, offering
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got the best of me,” said Dismukes, shaking
-hands. He did not seem a day older, but perhaps there
-might have been a little more gray in the scant beard.
-His great ox eyes, rolling and dark, bent a strange, curious
-glance over Adam’s lofty figure.</p>
-
-<p>“Look close. See if you can recognize a man you befriended
-once,” returned Adam. The moment was fraught
-with keen pain and a melancholy assurance of the changes
-time had made. Strong emotion of gladness, too, was
-stirring deep in him. This was the man who had saved
-him and who had put into his mind the inspiration and
-passion to conquer the desert.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes was perplexed, and a little ashamed. His
-piercing gaze was that of one who had befriended many
-men and could not remember.</p>
-
-<p>“Stranger, I give it up. I don’t know you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell,” said Adam, his voice full.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes stared. His expression changed, but it was
-not with recognition.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell! Wansfell!” he ejaculated. “I know that
-name.... Hell, yes! I’ve heard of you all over the
-Mohave!... I’m sure glad to meet you.... But, I
-never met you before.”</p>
-
-<p>The poignancy of that meeting for Adam reached a climax
-in the absolute failure of Dismukes to recognize him.
-Last and certain proof of change! The desert years had
-transformed Adam Larey, the youth, into the man Wansfell.
-For the first moment in all that time did Adam feel an
-absolute sense of safety. He would never be recognized,
-never be apprehended for his crime. He seemed born again.</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, how near are you to getting all your five
-hundred thousand?” queried Adam, with a smile. There
-seemed to be a sad pleasure in thus baffling the old
-prospector.</p>
-
-<p>“By Gad! how’d you know about that?” exclaimed
-Dismukes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-“You told me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Wansfell! Am I drunk or are you a mind
-reader?” demanded the prospector, bewildered. “Comin’
-along here I was thinkin’ about that five hundred thousand.
-But I never told anyone—except a boy once—an’ he’s
-dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about your white-faced burro Jinny—the one
-that used to steal things out of your pack?” asked Adam,
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Jinny! Jinny!” ejaculated Dismukes, with a start.
-His great ox eyes dilated and something of shock ran
-through his huge frame. “That burro I never forgot. I
-gave her away to a boy who starved on the desert. She
-came back to me. Tracked me to Yuma.... An’ you—you—how’d
-you know Jinny?... Man, who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, I was the boy you saved—down under the
-Chocolates—ninety miles from Yuma. Remember ...
-it was Jinny saw me wandering in a circle, mad with
-thirst. You saved me—gave me Jinny and a pack—told
-me how to learn the desert—sent me to the Indians....
-Dismukes, I was that boy. I am now—Wansfell.”</p>
-
-<p>The prospector seemed to expand with the increased
-strain of his gaze into Adam’s eyes, until the instant of
-recognition.</p>
-
-<p>“By God! I know you now!” he boomed, and locked
-his horny hands on Adam in a gladness that was beyond
-the moment and had to do, perhaps, with a far-past faith
-in things. “I thought you died on the desert. Jinny’s
-comin’ back seemed proof of that.... But you lived!
-You—that boy, tall as a mescal plant—with eyes of agony....
-I never forgot.... An’ now you’re Wansfell!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, my friend. Life is strange on the desert,” replied
-Adam. “And now unpack your burros. Make camp with
-me here. We’ll eat and talk together.”</p>
-
-<p>A sunset, rare on the Mohave, glowed over the simple
-camp tasks of these men who in their wanderings had met
-again. Clouds hung along the mountain tops, colored
-into deeper glory as the sun sank. The dark purples had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-an edge of silver, and the fleecy whites turned to pink and
-rose, while golden rays shot up from behind the red-hazed
-peaks. Over the valley fell a beautiful and transparent
-light, blending and deepening until a shadow as blue as
-the sea lay on Tecopah.</p>
-
-<p>While the men ate their frugal repast they talked, each
-gradually growing used to a situation that broke the desert
-habit of silence. There was an unconscious deference of
-each man toward the other—Wansfell seeing in Dismukes
-the savior of his life and a teacher who had inspired him
-to scale the heights of human toil and strife; Dismukes
-finding in Wansfell a development of his idea, the divine
-spirit of man rising above the great primal beasts of the
-desert, self-preservation and ferocity.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, have you kept track of time?” asked Dismukes,
-reflectively, as he got out a black, stumpy pipe
-that Adam remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Days and weeks glide into years—that’s all I
-can keep track of,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I never could, either. What is time on the desert?
-Nothin’.... Well, it flies, that’s sure. An’ it must be
-years since I met you first down there in the Colorado.
-Let’s see. Three times I went to Yuma—once to Riverside—an’
-twice to San Diego. Six trips inside. That’s
-all I’ve made to bank my money since I met you. Six
-years. But, say, I missed a year or so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, I’ve seen the snows white on the peaks eight
-times. Eight years, my friend, since Jinny cocked her
-ears that day and saved me. How little a thing life is in
-the desert!”</p>
-
-<p>“Eight years!” echoed Dismukes, and wagged his huge
-shaggy head. “It can’t be.... Well, well, time slips
-away.... Wansfell, you’re a young man, though I
-see gray over your temples. And you can’t have any
-more fear because of that—that crime you confessed
-to me. Lord! man, no one would ever know you as
-that boy!”</p>
-
-<p>“No fear that way any more. But fear of myself,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-Dismukes. If I went back to the haunts of men I would
-forget.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah yes, yes!” sighed Dismukes. “I understand. I
-wonder how it’ll be with me when my hour comes to
-leave the desert. I wonder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will that be long?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can never tell. I might strike it rich to-morrow.
-Always I dream I’m goin’ to. It’s the dream that keeps
-a prospector nailed to the lonely wastes.”</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, this strange man was a dreamer of dreams.
-Adam understood him now, all except that obsession for
-just so much gold. It seemed the only flaw in a great
-character. But the fidelity to that purpose was great as
-it was inexplicable.</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, you had a third of your stake when we
-met years ago. How much now?”</p>
-
-<p>“More than half, Wansfell, safe in banks an’ some hid
-away,” came the answer, rolling and strong. What
-understanding of endless effort abided in that voice!</p>
-
-<p>“A quarter of a million! My friend, it is enough.
-Take it and go—fulfill your cherished dream. Go before
-it’s too late.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve thought of that. Many times when I was sick
-an’ worn out with the damned heat an’ loneliness I’ve
-tempted myself with what you said. But, no. I’ll never do
-that. It’s the same to me now as if I had no money at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take care, Dismukes,” warned Adam. “It’s the gaining
-of gold—not what it might bring—that drives you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Quien sabe</i>, as the Mexicans say?... Wansfell,
-have you learned the curse—or it may be the blessing—of
-the desert—what makes us wanderers of the
-wastelands?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I have not. Sometimes I feel it’s close to me,
-like the feeling of a spirit out there on the lonely desert
-at night. But it’s a great thing, Dismukes. And it is
-linked to the very beginnings of us. Some day I’ll know.”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes smoked in silence, thoughtful and sad. The
-man’s forceful assurance and doggedness seemed the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-same, yet Adam sensed a subtle difference in him, beyond
-power to define. The last gold faded from the bold domes
-of the mountains, the clouds turned gray, the twilight
-came on as a stealthy host. And from across the creek
-came discordant sounds of Tecopah awakening to the
-revelry of a gold diggings by night.</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you happen along here?” queried Dismukes,
-presently.</p>
-
-<p>“Tecopah was just a water hole for me,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Me, too. An’ I’m sure sayin’ that I like to fill my
-canteens here. Last year I camped here, an’ when I
-went on I kept one of my canteens so long the water
-spoiled.... Found some gold trace up in the Kingston
-range, but my supplies ran low an’ I had to give up.
-My plan now is to go in there an’ then on to the Funeral
-Mountains. They’re full of mineral. But a dry, hard,
-poison country for a prospector. Do you know that
-country?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been on this side of the range.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bad enough, but the <em>other</em> side of the Funerals is
-Death Valley. That gash in summer is a blastin’, roarin’
-hell. I’ve crossed it every month in the year. None but
-madmen ever tackle Death Valley in July, in the middle
-of the day. I’ve seen the mercury go to one hundred and
-forty degrees. I’ve seen it one hundred and twenty-five
-at midnight, an’, friend, when them furnace winds blow
-down the valley at night sleep or rest is impossible. You
-just gasp for life.... But strange to say, Wansfell,
-the fascination of the desert is stronger in Death Valley
-than at any other place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I can appreciate that,” replied Adam, thoughtfully.
-“It must be the sublimity of death and desolation—the
-terrible loneliness and awfulness of the naked earth.
-I am going there.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I reckoned. An’ see here, Wansfell, I’ll get out
-my pencil an’ draw you a little map of the valley, showin’
-my trails an’ water holes. I know that country better than
-any other white man. It’s a mineral country. The lower<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-slope of the Funerals is all clay, borax, soda, alkali, salt,
-niter, an’ when the weather’s hot an’ that stuff blows on the
-hot winds, my God! it’s a horror! But you’ll want to
-go through it all an’ you’ll go back again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you advise me to go in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d follow the Amargosa. It’s bad water, but
-better than none. Go across an’ up into the Panamints,
-an’ come back across again by Furnace Creek. I’ll make
-you a little map. There’s more bad water than good,
-an’ some of it’s arsenic. I found the skeletons of six
-men near an arsenic water hole. Reckon they’d come on
-this water when bad off for thirst an’ didn’t know enough
-to test it. An’ they drank their fill an’ died in their
-tracks. They had gold, too. But I never could find out
-anythin’ about these men. No one ever heard of them
-an’ I was the only man who knew of the tragedy. Well,
-well, it’s common enough for me, though I never before
-run across so many dead men. Wansfell, I reckon you’ve
-found that common, too, in your wanderings—dried-up
-mummies, yellow as leather, or bleached bones an’ grinnin’
-skull, white in the sun?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ve buried the remains of more than one poor
-devil,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it best to bury them? I let them lay as warnin’ to
-other poor devils. No one but a crazy man would drink
-at a water hole where there was a skeleton.... Well,
-to come back to your goin’ to Death Valley. I’d go in
-by the Amargosa. It’s a windin’ stream an’ long, but
-safe. An’ there’s firewood an’ a little grass. Now when
-you get across the valley you’ll run into prospectors an’
-miners an’ wanderers at the water holes. An’ like as not
-you’ll meet some of the claim jumpers an’ robbers that
-live in the Panamints. From what I hear about you,
-Wansfell, I reckon a meetin’ with them would be a bad
-hour for them, an’ somethin’ of good fortune to honest
-miners. Hey?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, I don’t run from men of that stripe,” replied
-Adam, grimly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-“Ahuh! I reckon not,” said Dismukes, just as grimly.
-“Well, last time I was over there—let’s see, it was in
-September, hotter ’n hell, an’ I run across two queer
-people up in a canyon I’d never prospected before. Didn’t
-see any sign of any other prospectors ever bein’ in there....
-Two queer people—a man an’ a woman livin’ in a
-shack they’d built right under the damnedest roughest
-slope of weathered rock you ever saw in your life. Why,
-it was a plain case of suicide, an’ so I tried to show them!
-Every hour you could hear the crack of a rollin’ bowlder
-or the graty slip of an avalanche, gettin’ oneasy an’ wantin’
-to slide. But the woman was deathly afraid of her husband
-an’ he was a skunk an’ a wolf rolled into a man, if
-I ever saw one. I couldn’t do anythin’ for the poor
-woman, an’ I couldn’t learn any more than I’m tellin’ you.
-That’s not much. But, Wansfell, she wasn’t a common
-sort. She’d been beautiful once. She had the saddest
-face I ever saw. I got two feelin’s, one that she wasn’t
-long for this earth, an’ the other that the man hated her
-with a terrible hate.... I meet with queer people an’
-queer situations as I wander over this desert, but here’s
-the beat of all my experience. An’, Wansfell, I’d like to
-have you go see that couple. I reckon they’ll be there,
-if alive yet. He chose a hidden spot, an’ he has Shoshone
-Indians pack his supplies in from the ranches way on the
-other side of the Panamints. A queer deal, horrible for
-that poor woman, an’ I’ve been haunted by her face ever
-since. I’d like you to go there.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go. But why do you say that, Dismukes?” asked
-Adam, curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—you ought to know what your name means to
-desert men,” replied Dismukes, constrainedly, and he
-looked down at the camp fire, to push forward a piece of
-half-burnt wood.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I never heard,” said Adam. “I’ve lived ’most
-always alone. Of course I’ve had to go to freighting
-posts and camps. I’ve worked in gold diggings. I’ve
-guided wagon trains across the Mohave. Naturally, I’ve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-been among men. But I never heard that my name meant
-anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell! I remember <em>now</em> that you called yourself
-Wansfell. I’ve heard that name. Some of your doings,
-Wansfell, have made camp-fire stories. See here, Wansfell,
-you won’t take offense at me.”</p>
-
-<p>“No offense, friend Dismukes,” replied Adam, strangely
-affected. Here was news that forced him to think of
-himself as a man somehow related to and responsible to
-his kind. He had gone to and fro over the trails of the
-desert, and many adventures had befallen him. He had
-lived them, with the force the desert seemed to have taught
-him, and then had gone his way down the lonely trails,
-absorbed in his secret. The years seemed less than the
-blowing sand. He had been an unfortunate boy burdened
-with a crime; he was now a matured man, still young in
-years, but old with the silence and loneliness and strife
-of the desert, gray at the temples, with that old burden
-still haunting him. How good to learn that strange men
-spoke his name with wonder and respect! He had helped
-wanderers as Dismukes had helped him; he had meted
-out desert violence to evil men who crossed his trail; he
-had, doubtless, done many little unremembered deeds of
-kindness in a barren world where little deeds might be
-truly overappreciated; but the name Wansfell meant nothing
-to him, the reputation hinted by Dismukes amazed him,
-strangely thrilled him; the implication of nobility filled
-him with sadness and remorse. What had he done with
-the talents given him?</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, you see—you’re somethin’ of the man I
-might have been,” said Dismukes, hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, Dismukes,” protested Adam. “You are a
-prospector, honest and industrious, and wealthy now, almost
-ready to enjoy the fruits of your long labors. Your
-life has a great object.... But I—I am only a wanderer
-of the wasteland.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, an’ therein lies your greatness!” boomed the prospector,
-his ox eyes dilating and flaring. “I am a selfish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-pig—a digger in the dirt for gold. My passion has made
-me pass by men, an’ women, too, who needed help. Riches—dreams!...
-But you—you, Wansfell—out there in the
-loneliness an’ silence of the wastelands—you have found
-God!... I said you would. I’ve met other men who
-had.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” replied Adam. “You’re wrong. I don’t
-think I’ve found God. Not yet!... I have no religion,
-no belief. I can’t find any hope out there in the desert.
-Nature is pitiless, indifferent. The desert is but one of
-her playgrounds. Man has no right there. No, Dismukes,
-I have not found God.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have, but you don’t know it,” responded Dismukes,
-with more composure, and he began to refill a neglected
-pipe. “Well, I didn’t mean to fetch up such talk as that.
-You see, when I do fall in with a prospector once in a
-month of Sundays I never talk much. An’ then it’d be
-to ask him if he’d seen any float lately or panned any
-color. But you’re different. You make my mind work.
-An’, Wansfell, sometimes I think my mind has been
-crowded with a million thoughts all cryin’ to get free.
-That’s the desert. A man’s got to fight the desert with
-his intelligence or else become less than a man. An’ I
-always did think a lot, if I didn’t talk.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m that way, too,” replied Adam. “But a man should
-talk when he gets a chance. I talk to my burros, and to
-myself, just to hear the sound of my voice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Ah!” exclaimed Dismukes, with deep breath. He
-nodded his shaggy head. Adam’s words had struck an
-answering chord in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve tried for gold here?” queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I was here first just after the strike, an’ often
-since. Water’s all that ever drew me. I’d starve before
-I’d dig for gold among a pack of beasts. I may be a
-desert wolf, but I’m a lone one.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re coyotes and you’re the gray wolf. I liken
-’most every man I meet to some beast or creature of the
-desert.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-“Aye, you’re right. The desert stamps a man. An’,
-Wansfell, it’s stamped you with the look of a desert eagle.
-Ha-ha! I ain’t flatterin’ to either of us, am I? Me a
-starved gray wolf, huntin’ alone, mean an’ hard an’ fierce!
-An’ you a long, lean-headed eagle, with that look of you
-like you were about to strike—<em>pong!</em>... Well, well,
-there’s no understandin’ the work of the desert. The
-way it develops the livin’ creatures! They all have to live,
-an’ livin’ on the desert is a thousand times harder than
-anywhere else. They all have to be perfect machines for
-destruction. Each seems so swift that he gets away, yet
-each is also so fierce an’ sure that he catches his prey.
-They live on one another, but the species doesn’t die out.
-That’s what stumps me about the desert. Take the human
-creatures. They grow fiercer than animals. Maybe that’s
-because nature did not intend man to live on the desert.
-An’ it is no place for man. Nature intended these classes
-of plants an’ these species of birds an’ beasts to live, fight,
-thrive, an’ reproduce their kind on the desert. But men
-can’t thrive nor reproduce their kind here.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about the Indians who lived in the desert for
-hundreds of years?” asked Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s a handful of Indians? An’ what’s a few years
-out of the millions of years that the desert’s been here,
-just as it is now? Nothin’—nothin’ at all! Wansfell,
-there will be men come into the desert, down there below
-the Salton Sink, an’ in other places where the soil is
-productive, an’ they’ll build dams an’ storage places for
-water. Maybe a lot of fools will even turn the Colorado
-River over the desert. They’ll make it green an’ rich an’,
-like the Bible says, blossom as a rose. An’ these men
-will build ditches for water, an’ reservoirs an’ towns an’
-cities, an’ cross the desert with railroads. An’ they’ll
-grow rich an’ proud. They’ll think they’ve conquered it.
-But, poor fools! they don’t know the desert! Only a
-man who has lived with the desert much of his life can
-ever know. Time will pass an’ men will grow old, an’
-their sons an’ grandsons after them. A hundred an’ a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-thousand years might pass with fruitfulness still in the
-control of man. But all that is only a few grains of time
-in all the endless sands of eternity. The desert’s work
-will have been retarded for a little while. But the desert
-works ceaselessly an’ with infinite patience. The sun
-burns, the frost cracks, the avalanche rolls, the rain
-weathers. Slowly the earth crust heaves up into mountains
-an’ slowly the mountains wear down, atom by atom, to be
-the sands of the desert. An’ the winds—how they blow
-for ever an’ ever! What can avail against the desert
-winds? They blow the sand an’ sift an’ seep an’ bury....
-Men will die an’ the places that knew them will know
-them no more. An’ the desert will come back to its own.
-That is well, for it is what God intended.”</p>
-
-<p>“God and nature, then, with you are one and the same?”
-queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Twenty years sleepin’ on the sand with the stars
-in my face has taught me that. Is it the same with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I grant all that you contend for the desert and
-for nature. But I can’t reconcile nature and God. Nature
-is cruel, inevitable, hopeless. But God must be immortality.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, there’s somethin’ divine in some men, but
-not in all, nor in many. So how can that divinity be God?
-The immortality you speak of—that is only your life projected
-into another life.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean if I do not have a child I will not have
-immortality?”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what of my soul?” demanded Adam, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes drooped his shaggy head. “I don’t know. I
-don’t know. I’ve gone so deep, but I can’t go any deeper.
-That always stumps me. I’ve never found my soul!
-Maybe findin’ my soul would be findin’ God. I don’t
-know.... An’ you, Wansfell—once I said you had the
-spirit an’ mind to find God on the desert. Did you?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam shook his head. “I’m no farther than you, Dismukes,
-though I think differently about life and death.... I’ve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-fought to live on this wasteland, but I’ve fought
-hardest to think. It seems that always nature strikes me
-with its terrible mace! I have endless hours to look at the
-desert and I see what you see—the strange ferocity of it
-all—the fierce purpose. No wonder you say the desert
-stamps a man!”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye! An’ woman, too! Take this she-devil who runs
-a place here in Tecopah—Mohave Jo is the name she bears.
-Have you seen her?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I’ve heard of her. At Needles I met the wife
-of a miner, Clark, who’d been killed here at Tecopah.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never heard of Clark. But I don’t doubt the story.
-It’s common enough—miners bein’ killed an’ robbed.
-There’s a gang over in the Panamints who live on miners.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m curious to see Mohave Jo,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, speakin’ of this one-eyed harridan reminds me
-of a man I met last trip across the Salton flats, down on
-the Colorado. Met him at Walters—a post on the stage
-line. He had only one eye, too. There was a terrible
-scar where his eye, the right one, had been. He was one
-of these Texans lookin’ for a man. There seems to be
-possibilities of a railroad openin’ up that part of the desert.
-An’ this fellow quizzed me about water holes. Of course,
-if any one gets hold of water in that country he’ll strike
-it rich as gold, if the country ever opens up. It’s likely to
-happen, too. Well, this man had an awful face. He’d
-been a sheriff in Texas, some one said, an’ later at Ehrenberg.
-Hell on hangin’ men!... Of course I never asked
-him how he lost his eye. But he told me—spoke of it
-more than once. The deformity had affected his mind.
-You meet men like that—sort of crazy on somethin’. He
-was always lookin’ for the fellow who’d knocked out his
-eye. To kill him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you—recall his—name?” asked Adam, his voice
-halting with a thick sensation in his throat. The past
-seemed as yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>“Never was much on rememberin’ names,” responded
-Dismukes, scratching his shaggy head. “Let’s see—why,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-yes, he called himself Collis—Collis—haw. That’s it—Collishaw.
-Hard name to remember. But as a man he
-struck me easy to remember.... Well, friend Wansfell,
-I’ve had enough talkin’ to do me for a spell. I’m goin’
-to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>While Adam sat beside the fire, motionless, pondering
-with slow, painful amaze over what he had just heard,
-Dismukes prepared for his night’s rest. He unrolled a
-pack, spread a ragged old canvas, folded a blanket upon
-it, and arranged another blanket to pull up over him,
-together with the end of the canvas. For a pillow he
-utilized an old coat that lay on his pack. His sole concession
-to man’s custom of undressing for bed was the
-removal of his old slouch hat. Then with slow, labored
-movement he lay down to stretch his huge body and pull
-the coverlets over him. From his cavernous breast heaved
-a long, deep sigh. His big eyes, dark and staring, gazed
-up at the brightening stars, and then they closed.</p>
-
-<p>Adam felt tempted to pack and move on to a quiet and
-lonely place off in the desert, where he could think without
-annoyance. Keen and bitterly faithful as had been
-his memory, it had long ceased to revive thoughts of
-Collishaw, the relentless sheriff and ally of Guerd. How
-strange and poignant had been the shock of recollection!
-It had been the blow Adam had dealt—the savage fling of
-his gun in Collishaw’s face—that had destroyed an eye and
-caused a hideous disfigurement. And the Texan, with
-that fatality characteristic of his kind, was ever on the
-lookout for the man who had ruined his eyesight. Perhaps
-that was only one reason for his thirst for revenge.
-Guerd! Had Collishaw not sworn to hang Adam? “You’ll
-swing for this!” he had yelled in his cold, ringing voice of
-passion. And so Adam lived over again the old agony,
-new and strange in its bitter mockery, its vain hope of
-forgetfulness. Vast as the desert was, it seemed small
-now to Adam, for there wandered over it a relentless and
-bloodthirsty Texan, hunting to kill him. The past was
-not dead. The present and the future could not be wholly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-consecrated to atonement. A specter, weird and grotesque
-as a yucca tree, loomed out there in the shadows of the
-desert night. Death stalked on Adam’s trail. The hatred
-of men was beyond power to understand. Work, fame,
-use, health, love, home, life itself, could be sacrificed by
-some men just to kill a rival or an enemy. Adam remembered
-that Collishaw had hated him and loved Guerd.
-Moreover, Collishaw had that strange instinct to kill men—a
-passion which grew by what it fed on—a morbid mental
-twist that drove him to rid himself of the terrible haunting
-ghost of his last victim by killing a new one. Added
-to that was a certain leaning toward the notorious.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll meet some day,” soliloquized Adam. “But he
-would never recognize me.”</p>
-
-<p>The comfort of that fact did not long abide in Adam’s
-troubled mind. He would recognize Collishaw. And
-that seemed to hold something fatalistic and inevitable.
-“When I meet Collishaw I’ll tell him who I am—and I’ll
-kill him!” That fierce whisper was the desert voice in
-Adam—the desert spirit. He could no more help that
-sudden bursting flash of fire than he could help breathing.
-Nature in the desert did not teach men to meet a threat
-with forgiveness, nor to wait until they were struck.
-Instinct had precedence over intelligence and humanity.
-In the eternal strife to keep alive on the desert a man who
-conquered must have assimilated something of the terrible
-nature of the stinging <i>cholla</i> cactus, and the hard, grasping
-tenacity of the mesquite roots, and the ferocity of the wildcat,
-and the cruelty of the hawk—something of the nature
-of all that survived. It was a law. It forced a man to
-mete out violence in advance of that meant for him.</p>
-
-<p>“To fight and to think were to be my blessings,” soliloquized
-Adam, and he shook his head with a long-familiar
-doubt. Then he had to remember that no blessings of any
-kind whatsoever could be his. Stern and terrible duty
-to himself!</p>
-
-<p>So he rolled in his blankets and stretched his long body
-to the composure of rest. Sleep did not drop with soft<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-swiftness upon his eyes, as it had upon those of Dismukes.
-He had walked far, but he was not tired. He never tired
-any more. There seemed to be no task of a single day
-that could weary his strength. And for long he lay awake,
-listening to the deep breathing of his companion, and the
-howl of the coyotes, and the sounds of Tecopah, so unnatural
-in the quiet of the desert. A sadness weighed
-heavily upon Adam. At first he was glad to have met
-Dismukes, but now he was sorry. A tranquillity, a veil
-seemed to have been rent. The years had not really
-changed the relation of his crime, nor materially the nature
-of his sin. But they had gradually, almost imperceptibly,
-softened his ceaseless and eternal remorse. By this meeting
-with Dismukes he found that time effaced shocks,
-blows, stains, just as it wore away the face of the desert
-rock. That, too, was a law; and in this Adam divined a
-blessing that he could not deny. Dismukes had unleashed
-a specter out of the dim glow of the past. Eight years!
-So many, and yet they were as eight days! There were the
-bright stars, pitiless and cold, and the dark bold mountains
-that had seemed part of his strength. In the deep-blue
-sky above and in the black shadow below Adam saw a
-white face, floating, fading, reappearing, mournful and
-accusing and appalling—a face partaking of the old boyish
-light and joy and of the godlike beauty of perfect manhood—the
-haunting face of his brother Guerd. It haunted
-Adam, and the brand of Cain burned into his brain. The
-old resurging pangs in his breast, the long sighs, the
-oppressed heart, the salt tears, the sleepless hours—these
-were Adam’s again, as keen as in the first days of his
-awakening down on the Colorado Desert, where from the
-peaks of the Chocolate Mountains he had gazed with piercing
-eyes far south to the purple peak—Picacho, the monument,
-towering above his brother’s grave. “Some day I’ll
-go back!” whispered Adam, as if answering to an imperative
-and mysterious call.</p>
-
-<p>The long night wore on with the heavens star-fired by
-its golden train, and the sounds at last yielding to the desert<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-silence. Adam could see Dismukes, a wide, prone figure,
-with dark face upturned to the sky, a man seemingly as
-strange and strong as the wastelands he talked so much
-about, yet now helpless in sleep, unguarded, unconscious,
-wrapped in his deep dreams of the joy and life his gold
-was to bring him. Adam felt a yearning pity for this
-dreamer. Did he really love gold or was his passion only
-a dream? Whatever that was and whatever the man was,
-there rested upon his ragged, dark face a shadow of
-tragedy. Adam wondered what his own visage would
-reflect when he lay asleep, no more master of a mind that
-never rested? The look of an eagle? So Dismukes had
-said, and that was not the first time Adam had heard such
-comparison. He had seen desert eagles, dead and alive.
-He tried to recall how they looked, but the images were
-not convincing. The piercing eye, clear as the desert air,
-with the power of distance in the gray depths; the lean,
-long lines; the wild poise of head, bitter and ruthless and
-fierce; the look of loneliness—these characters surely could
-not be likened to his face. What a strange coincidence
-that Dismukes should hit upon the likeness of an eagle—the
-winged thunderbolt of the heights—the lonely bird
-Adam loved above all desert creatures! And so Adam
-wandered in mind until at last he fell asleep.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> Adam awoke he saw that Dismukes had breakfast
-steaming on the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m on my way to-day,” announced the prospector.
-“What’ll you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll hang around Tecopah as long as I can stand
-it,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! That won’t be long, unless you got in mind
-somethin’ like you did at the Donner Placers, down in
-the Providence Mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Friend, what do you know about that?” queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’. I only heard about it.... Wansfell, do
-you pan any gold?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sometimes, when I happen to run across it,” replied
-Adam, “but that isn’t often.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you work?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ve worked a good deal, taking it all together.
-In the mines, on the river at Needles, driving mule teams
-and guiding wagon trains. Never got paid much, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you live?” asked Dismukes, evidently curious.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I fare well enough to keep flesh on my bones.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got flesh—or I reckon it’s muscle. Wansfell,
-you’re the best-built man I ever saw on the desert. Most
-men dry up an’ blow away.... Will you let me give
-you—lend you some money?”</p>
-
-<p>“Money! So that’s why you’re so curious?” responded
-Adam. “Thanks, my friend. I don’t need money. I
-had some, you know, when you ran across me down in the
-Chocolates. I used about a thousand dollars while I lived
-with the Coahuila Indians. And I’ve got nine thousand
-left.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, you don’t pack all that money along with you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-“Yes. Where else would I keep it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, some of these robbers will murder you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if I see them first. My friend, don’t be concerned.
-Surely I don’t look sick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! Well, just the same, now that you’re headin’
-up into this country, I advise you to be careful. Don’t
-let anybody see you with money. I’ve been held up an’
-robbed three times.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you make a fight for your gold?”</p>
-
-<p>“No chance. I was waylaid—had to throw up my hands....
-They tell me you are ready with a gun, Wansfell?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, you seem to have heard much about me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you didn’t throw a gun on Baldy McKue,” said
-Dismukes, with a dark flare from his rolling eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No—I did not,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“You killed McKue with your bare hands,” flashed Dismukes.
-A red stain appeared to come up under his leathery
-skin. “Wansfell, will you tell me about that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather not, Dismukes. There are <em>some</em> things I
-forget.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it meant a good deal to me,” replied Dismukes.
-“McKue did me dirt. He jumped claims of mine down
-here near Soda Sink. An’ he threatened to kill me—swore
-the claims were his—drove me off. I met him in Riverside,
-an’ there he threatened me with arrest. He was a
-robber an’ a murderer. I believe he ambushed prospectors.
-McKue was like most men who stick to the desert—he
-went down to the level of the beast. I hated him....
-This stranger who told me—he swore there wasn’t an
-uncracked bone left in McKue’s body.... Wansfell, if
-you did that to McKue you’ve squared accounts. Is it
-true?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes rubbed his huge hands together and his ox
-eyes rolled and dilated. A fierce and savage grimness distorted
-his hard face for an instant and passed away.</p>
-
-<p>“What’d you kill him for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because he’d have killed me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-“Didn’t you look him up on purpose to kill him?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.... A year before that time I went to Goffs.
-Some one took me into an old tent where a woman lay
-dying. I could do little for her. She denounced McKue;
-she blamed him that she lay there, about to die. She did
-die and I buried her. Then I kept an eye open for
-McKue.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wondered—I wondered,” said Dismukes. “It struck
-me deep. Lord knows fights are common out here. An’
-death—why, on the desert every way you turn you see
-death. It’s the life of the desert. But the way this was
-told me struck me deep. It was what I’d like to have
-done myself. Wansfell, think of the wonderful meetin’s
-of men on the desert—an’, aye, meetin’ of men with women,
-too! They happen different out here. Think of the first
-time we met! An’ this time! Wansfell, we’ll meet again.
-It’s written in those trails of sand out there, wanderin’
-to an’ fro across the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, the desert is vast. Sometimes you will not
-meet a man in months of travel—and not in years will
-you meet a woman. But when you do meet them life
-seems intensified. The desert magnifies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, I want you to go across into Death Valley,”
-declared Dismukes, with the deep boom in his voice.
-“That woman in the shack! Her eyes haunt me. Somethin’
-terrible wrong! That man who keeps her there—if
-he’s not crazy, he’s worse than a gorilla. For a gorilla
-kills a woman quick.... Wansfell, I’d give a lot to see
-you handle this man like you handled McKue!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">Quien sabe</i>, as you say?” replied Adam. “Draw that
-map of your trails in Death Valley. I’ve got a little book
-here, and a pencil.”</p>
-
-<p>It was singular to see the gold digger labor with his
-great, stumpy, calloused fingers. He took long to draw a
-few lines, and make a few marks, and write a few names
-in the little book. But when he came to talk of distance
-and direction, of trails and springs, of flat valley and
-mountain range—then how swift and fluent he was! All<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-that country lay clearly in his mind, as if he were a great
-desert condor gazing down from the heights upon the
-wasteland which was his home.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I’ll be goin’ down into the Funerals soon,” concluded
-Dismukes. “You see here’s Furnace Creek where
-it runs into Death Valley. You’ll cross here an’ come up
-Furnace Creek till you strike the yellow clay hills on the
-right. It’s a hell of a jumble of hills—absolutely bare. I
-think there’s gold. You’ll find me somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed settled then that Adam and Dismukes were
-to meet in some vague place at some vague time. The
-desert had no limitations. Time, distance, and place were
-thought of in relation to their adaptation to desert men.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s gettin’ late,” said Dismukes, looking up at
-the white flare of sun. “I’ll pack an’ go on my way.”</p>
-
-<p>While Dismukes strode out to drive in his burros Adam
-did the camp chores. In a short time his companion appeared
-with the burros trotting ahead of him. And the
-sight reminded Adam of the difference between prospectors.
-Dismukes was not slow, easy, careless, thoughtless.
-He had not suffered the strange deterioration so common
-to his class. He did not belong to the type who tracked
-his burros all day so that he might get started <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">mañana</i>.
-Adam helped him pack.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, may we meet again,” said Dismukes, as they
-shook hands.</p>
-
-<p>“All trails cross on the desert. I hope you strike it
-rich.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some day—some day. Good-by,” returned Dismukes,
-and with vigorous slaps he started the burros.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was left to his own devices. After Dismukes
-passed out of sight in the universal gray of the benches
-Adam spent a long while watching a lizard on a stone.
-It was a chuckwalla, a long, slim, greenish-bronze reptile,
-covered with wonderful spots of vivid color, and with
-eyes like jewels. Adam spent much time watching the
-living things of the desert, or listening to the silence. He
-had discovered that watching anything brought its reward—sometimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-in a strange action or a phenomenon of nature
-or a new thought.</p>
-
-<p>Later he walked down to the creek bottom where the
-smelter was in operation. Laborers were at a premium
-there, and he was offered work. He said he would consider
-it. But unless there turned out to be some definite
-object to keep him in Tecopah, Adam would not have
-bartered his freedom to the dust-clouded mill for all the
-gold it mined. These clanging mills and hot shafts and
-dark holes oppressed him.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> long-deferred hour at last arrived in which Adam,
-on a ruddy-gold dawn in early April, drove his burros
-out into the lonesome desert toward the Amargosa. He
-did not look back. Tecopah would not soon forget Wansfell!
-That was his grim thought.</p>
-
-<p>The long, drab reaches of desert, the undulating bronze
-slopes waving up to the dark mountains, called to him in a
-language that he felt. If Adam Larey—or Wansfell,
-wanderer of the wasteland, as he had come to believe himself—had
-any home, it was out in the vast open, under
-the great white flare of sunlight and the star-studded
-canopy of night.</p>
-
-<p>This was a still morning in April, and the lurid sun,
-bursting above the black escarpment to the east, promised
-a rising temperature. Day by day the heat had been
-increasing, and now, at sunrise, the smoky heat veils were
-waving up from the desert floor. For Adam the most
-torrid weather had no terrors, and the warmth of a morning
-like this felt pleasant on his cheek. He had been confined
-to one place, without action, for so long that now,
-as he began to feel the slow sweat burn pleasantly on his
-body, there came a loosening of his muscles, a relaxing
-of tension, a marshaling, as it were, of his great forces of
-strength and endurance. The gray slopes beyond did not
-daunt him. His stride was that of a mountaineer, and
-his burros had to trot to keep ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p>And as Adam’s body gradually responded to this readjustment
-to the desert and its hard demands, so his mind
-seemed to slough off, layer by layer, the morbid, fierce,
-and ruthless moods that like lichens had fastened upon it.
-The dry, sweet desert air seemed to permeate his brain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-and clear it of miasmas and shadows. He was free. He
-was alone. He was self-sufficient. The desert called.
-From far beyond that upheaved black and forbidding
-range, the Funeral Mountains, something strange, new,
-thrilling awaited his coming. The strife of the desert had
-awakened in him a craving to find the unattainable. He
-had surmounted all physical obstacles. He would conquer
-Death Valley; he would see it in all its ghastliness; he
-would absorb all its mysteries; he would defy to the limit
-of endurance its most fatal menaces to life.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon Adam rounded a corner of a league-long
-sloping mesa and gazed down into the valley of the
-Amargosa. It looked the bitterness, the poison, and the
-acid suggested by its Spanish name. The narrow meandering
-stream gleamed like silver in the sunlight. Mesquite
-and other brush spotted its gravelly slopes and sandy
-banks. Adam headed down into the valley. The sun was
-already westering, and soon, as he descended, it hung over
-the ragged peaks. He reached the creek. The burros
-drank, but not with relish. Adam gazed at the water of
-the Amargosa with interest. It was not palatable, yet it
-would save life.</p>
-
-<p>Adam set about the camp tasks long grown second
-nature with him, and which were always congenial and
-pleasant. He built a fire of dead mesquite. Then he
-scoured his oven with sand, and greased it. He had a
-heavy pan which did duty as a gold-pan, a dish-pan, and a
-wash-pan. This he half filled with flour, and, adding
-water, began to mix the two. He had gotten the dough
-to about the proper consistency when a rustling in the
-brush attracted his attention. He thought he caught a
-glimpse of a rabbit. Such opportunity for fresh meat
-was rare on the desert. Hastily wiping his hands, he
-caught up his gun and stole out into the aisle between the
-mesquites. As luck would have it, he did espy a young cottontail,
-and was fortunate enough to make a good shot.
-Returning to camp, he made sudden discovery of a catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-Jennie had come out of her nap, if, indeed, she had not
-been shamming sleep, and she had her nose in the dish-pan.
-She was eating the dough.</p>
-
-<p>“Hyar, you camp robber!” yelled Adam, making for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Jennie jerked up her head. The dough stuck to her
-nose and the pan stuck to the dough. She eluded Adam,
-for she was a quick and nimble burro. The pan fell off,
-but the ball of dough adhered to her mouth and nose, and
-as she ran around camp in a circle it was certain that she
-worked her jaws, eating dough as fast as she could. Manifestly
-for Jennie, here was opportunity of a lifetime.
-When finally Adam did catch her the dough was mostly
-eaten. He gave her a cuff and a kick which she accepted
-meekly, and, drooping her ears, she apparently fell asleep
-again.</p>
-
-<p>While Adam was at his simple meal the sun set, filling
-the valley with red haze and tipping with gold the peaks
-in the distance. The heat had gone with the sun. He
-walked to and fro in the lonely twilight. Jennie had
-given up hope of any more opportunity to pilfer, and had
-gone to grazing somewhere down the stream. There was
-absolutely no sound. An infinite silence enfolded the
-solitude. It was such solitude as only men of Adam’s
-life could bear. To him it was both a blessing and a
-curse. But to-night he had an all-pervading and all-satisfying
-power. He seemed to be growing at one with the
-desert and its elements. After a while the twilight shadows
-shaded into the blackness of night, and the stars blazed.
-Adam had been conscious all day of the gradual relaxing
-of strain, and now in the lonely solitude there fell away
-from him the feelings and thoughts engendered at
-Tecopah.</p>
-
-<p>“Loneliness and silence and time!” he soliloquized, as
-he paced his sandy beat. “These will cure any trouble—any
-disease of mind—any agony of soul. Ah! I know.
-I never forget. But how different now to remember!...
-That must be the secret of the power of the desert<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-over men. It is the abode of solitude and silence. It is
-like the beginning of creation. It is like an eternity of
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>By the slow healing of the long-raw wound in his heart
-Adam had come to think of time’s relation to change.
-Memory was still as poignant as ever. But a change had
-begun in him—a change he divined only after long months
-of strife. Dismukes brought a regurgitation of the old
-pain; yet it was not quite the same. Eight years! How
-impossible to realize that, until confronted by physical
-proofs of the passing of time! Adam saw no clear and
-serene haven for his wandering spirit, but there seemed
-to be a nameless and divine promise in the future. His
-steps had not taken hold of hell. He had been driven
-down the naked shingles of the desert, through the storms
-of sand, under the infernal heat and bitter cold, like a
-man scourged naked, with screaming furies to whip the
-air at his ears. And, lo! time had begun to ease his
-burden, soften the pain, dim the past, change his soul.</p>
-
-<p>The moment was one of uplift. “I have my task,” he
-cried, looking high to the stars. “Oh, stars—so serene
-and pitiless and inspiring—teach me to perform that task
-as you perform yours!”</p>
-
-<p>He would go on as he had begun, fighting the desert
-and its barrenness, its blasting heat, its evil influences,
-wandering over these wastelands that must be his home;
-and he would stake the physical prowess of him to yet
-harder, fiercer tasks of toil, driving his spirit to an intenser,
-whiter flame. If the desert could develop invincible
-energy of strength in a man, he would earn it. If
-there were a divinity in man, infinitely beyond the beasts
-of the desert and the apes of the past, a something in
-mysterious affinity with that mighty being he sensed out
-there in the darkness, then he would learn it with a
-magnified and all-embracing consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>Adam went to his bed on the warm sands complete in
-two characters—a sensing, watching, listening man like
-the savage in harmony with the nature of the elements<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-around him, and a feeling, absorbed, and meditating priest
-who had begun to divine the secrets beyond the dark-shadowed,
-starlit desert waste.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam’s first sight of Death Valley came at an early
-morning hour, as he turned a last curve in the yawning
-canyon he had descended.</p>
-
-<p>He stood in awe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, desolation!” he cried. And it seemed that, as the
-shock of the ghastliness beneath him passed, he remembered
-with flashing vividness all that had come to him in
-his long desert wanderings, which seemed now to cumulate
-its terrible silence, desolation, death, and decay in this
-forbidding valley.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered the origin of that name—Death Valley.
-In 1849, when the California gold frenzy had the world in
-its grip, seventy Mormon gold seekers had wandered into
-this red-walled, white-floored valley, where sixty-eight of
-them perished. The two that escaped gave this narrow
-sink so many hundred feet below sea level the name Death
-Valley! Many and many another emigrant and prospector
-and wanderer, by his death from horrible thirst and blasting
-heat and poison-dusted wind and destroying avalanche
-and blood-freezing cold, had added to the significance of
-that name and its dreadful fame. On one side the valley
-was shadowed by the ragged Funeral range; on the other
-by the red and gloomy Panamints. Furnace Creek, the
-hot stream that came down from the burning slopes; and
-Ash Meadow, the valley floor, gray and dead, like the
-bed of a Dead Sea; and the Devil’s Chair, a huge seat
-worn by the elements in the red mountain wall, where
-the death king of the valley watched over his fiends—these
-names were vivid in Adam’s mind along with others given
-by prospectors in uncouth or eloquent speech. “She’s a hummer
-in July,” said one; and another, “Salty lid of hell”; and
-still another, “Valley of the white shadow of death.”</p>
-
-<p>Death Valley was more than sixty miles long and from
-seven to twelve wide. No two prospectors had ever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-agreed on these dimensions, although all had been in perfect
-harmony as to its hellish qualities. Death was the
-guardian of the valley and the specter that patrolled its
-beat. Mineral wealth was the irresistible allurement which
-dared men to defy its terrors. Gold! Dismukes himself
-had claimed there were ledges of gold quartz, and Dismukes
-was practical and accurate. Many fabulous stories
-of gold hung on the lips of wandering prospectors. The
-forbidding red rocks held jewels in their hard confines—garnets,
-opals, turquoises; there were cliffs of marble and
-walls of onyx. The valley floor was a white crust where
-for miles and miles there was nothing but salt and borax.
-Beds of soda, of gypsum, of niter, of sulphur, abounded
-in the vaster fields of other minerals. It was a valley
-where nature had been prodigal of her treasures and terrible
-in her hold upon them. But few springs and streams
-flowed down into this scoriac sink, and of these all were
-heavily impregnated with minerals, all unpalatable, many
-sour and sulphuric, some hot, a few of them deadly poison.
-In the summer months the heat sometimes went to one
-hundred and forty-five degrees. The furnace winds of
-midnight were withering to flesh and blood. And sometimes
-the air carried invisible death in shape of poison
-gas or dust. In winter, sudden changes of temperature,
-whirling icy winds down upon a prospector who had gone
-to sleep in warmth, would freeze him to death. Avalanches
-rolled down the ragged slopes and cloudbursts
-carried destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Adam got his bearings, according to the map made by
-Dismukes, and set out from the mouth of the canyon to
-cross the valley. A long sandy slope dotted by dwarfed
-mesquites extended down to the bare, crinkly floor of the
-valley, from which the descent to a lower level was scarcely
-perceptible. When Adam’s burros early in the day manifested
-uneasiness and weariness there was indeed rough
-going. The sand had given way to a hard crust of salt
-or borax, and little dimples and cones made it difficult
-to place a foot on a level. Some places the crust was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-fairly hard; in others it cracked and crunched under foot.
-The color was a mixture of a dirty white and yellow. Far
-ahead Adam could see a dazzling white plain that resembled
-frost on a frozen river.</p>
-
-<p>Adam proceeded cautiously behind the burros. They
-did not like the travel, and, wary little beasts that they
-were, they stepped gingerly in places, as if trying their
-weight before trusting it upon the treacherous-looking
-crust. Adam felt the beat of the sun upon him, and the
-reflection of heat from the valley floor. He had been less
-oppressed upon hotter days than this. The sensations he
-began to have here were similar to those he had experienced
-in the Salton Sink, where he had gone below sea
-level. The oppression seemed to be a blood pressure, as
-if the density of the air closed tighter and heavier around
-his body.</p>
-
-<p>At last the burros halted. Adam looked up from the
-careful task of placing his feet to see that he had reached
-a perfectly smooth bed of salt, glistening as if it were
-powdered ice. This was the margin of the place that from
-afar had looked like a frozen stream. Stepping down
-upon it, Adam found that it trembled and heaved with his
-weight, but upheld him. There was absolutely no sign
-to tell whether the next yard of surface would hold him
-or not. Still, from what he had gone over he believed
-he could trust the rest. As he turned to retrace his steps
-he saw his tracks just as plainly in the salt as if they had
-been imprinted in snow. He led Jennie out, and found
-that, though her hoofs sank a little, she could make it by
-stepping quickly. She understood as well as he, and when
-released went on of her own accord, anxious to get the
-serious job over. Adam had to drive the other burro.
-The substance grew softer as Adam progressed, and in
-the middle of that glistening stream it became wet and
-sticky. The burros labored through this lowest level of
-the valley, which fortunately was narrow.</p>
-
-<p>On the other side of it extended a wide flat of salt and
-mud, very rough, upheaved as if it had boiled and baked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-to a crust, then cracked and sunk in places. Full of holes
-and pitfalls, and rising in hummocks gnarled and whorled
-like huge sea shells, it was an exceedingly toilsome and
-dangerous place to travel. The crust continually crumpled
-under the hoofs of the burros, and gave forth hollow
-sounds, as if a bottomless cavern ran under the valley
-floor. As Adam neared the other side he encountered thin
-streams of water that resembled acid. It was necessary to
-find narrow places in these and leap across. Beyond these
-ruts in the crust began an almost imperceptible rise of
-the valley floor, which in the course of a couple of miles
-led out of the broken, choppy sea of salt to a sand-and-gravel
-level. How relieved Adam was to reach that! He
-had been more concerned for the safety of the burros
-than for his own.</p>
-
-<p>It was now hot enough for Adam to imagine something
-of what a formidable place this valley would be in July
-or August. On all sides the mountains stood up dim and
-obscure and distant in a strange haze. Low down, the
-heat veils lifted in ripples, and any object at a distance
-seemed illusive. The last hour taxed Adam’s endurance,
-though he could have gone perhaps as far again across
-the lavalike crust. When he reached the slope that led
-up to the base of the red mountains he halted the burros
-for a rest. The drink he took then was significant, for
-it was the fullest he had taken in years. He was hot and
-wet; his eyes smarted and his feet burned.</p>
-
-<p>When Adam had rested he consulted the map, and
-found that he must travel up the slope and to the west to
-gain the black buttress of rock that was his objective point.
-And considering how dim it looked through the haze, he
-concluded he had better be starting. One moment, however,
-he gave to a look at the Funeral range which he had
-come through, and which now loomed above the valley,
-a magnificent and awe-inspiring upheaval of the earth.
-The lower and nearer heights were marked on Dismukes’
-map as the Calico Mountains, and indeed their many colors
-justified the name. Beyond and above them towered the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-Funerals, spiked and peaked, ragged as the edge of a saw,
-piercing the blue sky, a gloomy and black-zigzagged and
-drab-belted range of desolation and grandeur. Adam’s
-gaze slowly shifted westward to the gulf, a hazy void, a
-vast valley with streaked and ridged and canyoned slopes
-inclosing the abyss into which veils of rain seemed dropping.
-Broken clouds had appeared in the west, pierced by
-gold and red rays, somewhat dulled by the haze. Adam
-was amazed to realize the day was far spent. That scene
-up the valley of death was confounding. He gazed spellbound,
-and every second saw more and different aspects.
-How immense, unreal, weird!</p>
-
-<p>He got up from the stone seat that had almost burned
-through his clothes, and bent his steps westward, driving
-the wearying burros ahead of him. Three miles toward the
-black buttressed corner he wanted to gain before dark—so
-his experienced desert eyes calculated the distance. But
-this was Death Valley. No traveler of the desert had ever
-correctly measured distance in this valley of shadows and
-hazes and illusions. He was making three miles an hour.
-Yet at the end of an hour he seemed just as far away as
-ever. Another hour was full of deceits and misjudgments.
-But at the end of the third he reached the black wall, and
-the line that had seemed a corner was the mouth of a
-canyon.</p>
-
-<p>Adam halted, as if at the gateway of the unknown.
-The sun was setting behind the mountains that now overhung
-him, massive and mighty, a sheer, insurmountable
-world of rock which seemed to reach to the ruddy sky.
-Wonderful shadows were falling, purple and blue low
-down, rosy and gold above; and the canyon smoked with
-sunset haze.</p>
-
-<p>The map of Dismukes marked the canyon, and a spring
-of water just beyond its threshold, and also the shack
-where the strange man and woman lived under the long
-slant of weathered rock. Adam decided not to try to find
-the location that night, so he made dry camp.</p>
-
-<p>Darkness found him weary and oppressed. The day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-had seemed short, but the distance long. Tired and sleepy
-as he was, when he lay down in his bed he felt a striking
-dissimilarity of this place to any other he had known on
-the desert. How profound the silence! Had any sound
-ever pervaded it? All was gloom and shadow below,
-with black walls rising to star-fretted sky as blue as
-indigo. The valley seemed to be alive. It breathed, yet
-invisibly and silently. Indeed, there was a mighty being
-awake out there in the black void. Adam could not believe
-any man and woman lived up this canyon. Dismukes had
-dreamed. Had not Adam heard from many prospectors
-how no white woman could live in Death Valley? He had
-been there only a day, yet he felt that he could understand
-why it must be fatal to women. But it was not so because
-of heat and poison wind and cataclysms of nature, for
-women could endure those as well as men. But no woman
-could stand the alterations of terror and sublimity, of
-beauty and horror. That which was feminine in Adam
-shuddered at a solitude that seemed fitting to a burned-out
-world. He was the last of his race, at the end of its
-existence, the strongest finally brought to his doom, and
-to-morrow the earth would be sterile—thus Adam’s weary
-thoughts passed into dreams.</p>
-
-<p>He awakened somewhat later than usual. Over the
-Funeral range the sun was rising, a coalescing globule of
-molten fire, enormous and red, surrounded by a sky-broad
-yellow flare. This sunrise seemed strangely closer to the
-earth and to him than any sunrise he had ever watched.
-The valley was clear, still, empty, a void that made all
-objects therein look small and far away. After breakfast
-Adam set out to find his burros.</p>
-
-<p>This high-walled opening did not appear to be a canyon,
-but a space made by two mountain slopes running down
-to a wash where water flowed at some seasons. Beyond
-the corners there opened what seemed to be a gradually
-widening and sloping field, gray with rocks and sand and
-stunted brush, through the center of which straggled a
-line of gnarled mesquites, following the course of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-wash. Adam found his burros here, Jennie asleep as
-usual, and Jack contentedly grazing.</p>
-
-<p>The cracking of a rock rolling down a rough slope
-thrilled Adam. He remembered what Dismukes had said
-about the perilous location of the shack where the man
-and woman lived under the shadow of a weathering mountain.
-Adam turned to look across the space in the direction
-whence the sound had come.</p>
-
-<p>There loomed a mighty mountain slope, absolutely destitute
-of plants, a gray, drab million-faceted ascent of rocks.
-Adam strode toward it, gradually getting higher and
-nearer through the rock-strewn field. It had looked so
-close as to seem magnified. But it was a goodly distance.
-Presently he espied a rude shack. He halted. That could
-not be what he was searching for. Still, it must be.
-Adam had not expected the place to be so close to Death
-Valley. It was not a quarter of a mile distant from the
-valley and not a hundred feet higher than the lowest sink
-hole, which was to say that this crude, small structure lay
-in Death Valley and below sea level.</p>
-
-<p>Adam walked on, growing more curious and doubtful.
-Surely this hut had been built and abandoned by some
-prospector. Yet any prospector could have built a better
-abode than this. None but a fool or a knave would have
-selected that perilous location. The ground began to
-slope a little and become bare of brush, and was dotted
-here and there with huge bowlders that looked as if they
-had rolled down there recently. No sign of smoke, no
-sign of life, no sign of labor—absence of these strengthened
-Adam’s doubt of people living there. Suddenly he
-espied the deep track of a man’s foot in the sand. Adam
-knelt to study it. “Made yesterday,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>He rose with certainty. Dismukes had been accurate
-as to direction, though his distances had been faulty. Adam
-gazed beyond the shack, to right, and then left. He espied
-a patch of green mesquites and hummocks of grass. There
-was the water Dismukes had marked. Then Adam
-looked up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-A broad belt of huge bowlders lay beyond the shack,
-the edge of the talus, the beginning of the base of a
-mountain-side, wearing down, weathering away, cracking
-into millions of pieces, every one of which had both smooth
-and sharp surfaces. This belt was steep and fan shaped,
-spreading at the bottom. As it sloped up it grew steeper,
-and the rocks grew smaller. It had the flow of a glacier.
-It was an avalanche, perhaps sliding inch by inch and
-foot by foot, all the time. The curved base of the fan
-extended for a couple of miles, in the distance growing
-rounded and symmetrical in its lines. It led up to a
-stupendous mountain abutment, dull red in color, and so
-seamed and cracked and fissured that it had the crisscross
-appearance of a rock of net, or numberless stones of
-myriad shapes pieced together by some colossal hand, and
-now split and broken, ready to fall. Yet this rugged, bold,
-uneven surface of mountain wall shone in the sunlight.
-It looked as if it had been a solid mass of granite shattered
-by some cataclysm of nature. Above this perpendicular
-splintered ruin heaved up another slope of broken
-rocks, hanging there as if by magic, every one of the
-endless heaps of stones leaning ready to roll. Frost and
-heat had disintegrated this red mountain. What history
-of age was written there! How sinister that dull hue of
-red! No beauty shone here, though the sun gleamed on
-the millions of facets. The mountain of unstable rock
-towered dark and terrible and forbidding even in the
-broad light of day. What held that seamed and lined
-and sundered mass of rock together! For what was it
-waiting? Only time, and the law of the desert! Even
-as Adam gazed a weathered fragment loosened from the
-heights, rolled off the upper wall, pitched clear into the
-air, and cracked ringingly below, to bound and hurtle down
-the lower slope, clapping less and less until it ceased with
-a little hollow report. That was the story of the mountain.
-By atom and by mass it was in motion, working down to
-a level. Bowlders twice as large as the shack, weighing
-thousands of tons, had rolled down and far out on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-field. Any moment another might topple off the rampart
-and come hurtling down to find the shack in its path.
-Some day the whole slope of loose rock, standing almost
-on end, would slide down in avalanche.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” muttered Adam, darkly, “any man who made
-a woman live there was either crazy or meant her to have
-an awful death.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam strode on to the shack. It might afford shelter
-from sun, but not from rain or dust. Packsaddles and
-boxes were stacked on one side; empty cans lay scattered
-everywhere; a pile of mesquite, recently cut, stood in front
-of the aperture that evidently was a door; and on the
-sand lay blackened stones and blackened utensils, near
-the remains of a still smoldering fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, inside,” called Adam, as he halted at the door.
-No sound answered. He stooped to look in, and saw bare
-sand floor, a rude, low table made of box boards, flat
-stones for seats, utensils and dishes, shelves littered with
-cans and bags. A flimsy partition of poles and canvas,
-with a door, separated this room from another and larger
-one. Adam saw a narrow bed of blankets raised on poles,
-an old valise on the sandy floor, woman’s garments hanging
-on the brush walls. He called again, louder this time.
-He saw a flash of something gray through the torn canvas,
-then heard a low cry—a woman’s voice. Adam raised his
-head and stepped back.</p>
-
-<p>“Elliot!... You’ve come back!” came the voice,
-quick, low, and tremulous, betokening relief from dread.</p>
-
-<p>“No. It’s a stranger,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” The hurried exclamation was followed by soft
-footfalls. A woman in gray appeared in the doorway—a
-woman whose proportions were noble, but frail. She had
-a white face and large, deep eyes, strained and sad. “Oh—who
-are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ma’am, my name’s Wansfell. I’m a friend of Dismukes,
-the prospector who was here. I’m crossing Death
-Valley and I thought I’d call on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes? The little miner, huge, like a frog?” she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-queried, quickly, with dilating eyes. “I remember. He
-was kind, but— And you’re his friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, at your service, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank—God!” she cried, brokenly, and she leaned back
-against the door. “I’m in trouble. I’ve been alone—all—all
-night. My husband left yesterday. He took only a
-canteen. He said he’d be back for supper.... But—he
-didn’t come. Oh, something has happened to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Many things happen in the desert,” said Adam. “I’ll
-find your husband. I saw his tracks out here in the sand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, can you find him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ma’am, I can track a rabbit to its burrow. Don’t worry
-any more. I will track your husband and find him.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman suddenly seemed to be struck with Adam’s
-tone, or the appearance of him. It was as if she had not
-particularly noticed him at first. “Once he got lost—was
-gone two days. Another time he was overcome by heat—or
-something in the air.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been alone before?” queried Adam, quick to
-read the pain of the past in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Alone?... Many—many lonely nights,” she said.
-“He’s left me—alone—often—purposely—for me to torture
-my soul here in the blackness.... And those rolling
-rocks—cracking in the dead of night—and——” Then
-the flash of her died out, as if she had realized she was
-revealing a shameful secret to a stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“Ma’am, is your husband just right in his mind?” asked
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated, giving Adam the impression that she
-wished to have him think her husband irrational, but
-could not truthfully say so.</p>
-
-<p>“Men do strange things in the desert,” said Adam. “May
-I ask, ma’am, have you food and water?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. We’ve plenty. But Elliot makes me cook—and
-I never learned how. So we’ve fared poorly. But he eats
-little and I less!”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you tell me how he came to build your hut here
-where, sooner or later, it’ll be crushed by rolling stones?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-A tragic shadow darkened in the large, dark-blue eyes
-that Adam now realized were singularly beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>“I—He— This place was near the water. He cut
-the brush here—he didn’t see—wouldn’t believe the
-danger,” she faltered. She was telling a lie, and did not
-do it well. The fine, sensitive, delicate lips, curved and
-soft, sad with pain, had not been fashioned for falsehood.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I can make him see,” replied Adam. “I’ll go
-find him. Probably he’s lost. The heat is not strong
-enough to be dangerous. And he’s not been gone long.
-Don’t worry. My camp is just below. I’ll fetch him
-back to-day—or to-morrow at farthest.”</p>
-
-<p>She murmured some incoherent thanks. Adam was
-again aware of her penetrating glance, staring, wondering
-even in her trouble. He strode away with bowed head,
-searching the sand for the man’s tracks. Presently he
-struck them and saw that they led down toward the
-valley.</p>
-
-<p>To follow such a plain trail was child’s play for Adam’s
-desert sight, that had received its early training in the
-preservation of his life. He who had trailed lizards to
-their holes, and snakes to their rocks, to find them and
-eat or die—he was as keen as a wolf on the scent. This
-man’s trail led straight down to the open valley, out along
-the western bulge of slope, to a dry water hole.</p>
-
-<p>From there the footprints led down to the parapet of a
-wide bench, under which the white crust began its level
-monotony toward the other side of the valley. Different
-here was it from the place miles below where Adam had
-crossed. It was lower—the bottom of the bowl. Adam
-found difficulty in breathing, and had sensations like intermittent
-rushes of blood to his head. The leaden air
-weighed down, and, though his keen scent could not detect
-any odor, he knew there was impurity of some kind on the
-slow wind. It reminded him that this was Death Valley.
-He considered a moment. If the man’s tracks went on
-across the valley, Adam would return to camp for a
-canteen, then take up the trail again. But the tracks led<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-off westward once more, straggling and aimless. Adam’s
-stride made three of one of these steps. He did not care
-about the heat. That faint hint of gas, however, caused
-him concern. For miles he followed the straggling tracks,
-westward to a heave of valley slope that, according to the
-map of Dismukes, separated Death Valley from its mate
-adjoining—Lost Valley. On the left of this ridge the
-tracks wandered up the slope to the base of the mountain
-and followed it in wide scallops. The footmarks now
-showed the dragging of boots, and little by little they
-appeared fresher in the sand. This wanderer had not
-rested during the night.</p>
-
-<p>The tracks grew deeper, more dragging, wavering from
-side to side. Here the man had fallen. Adam saw the
-imprints of his hands and a smooth furrow where evidently
-he had dragged a canteen across the sand. Then
-came the telltale signs of where he had again fallen and
-had begun to crawl.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like the old story,” muttered Adam. “I’ll just
-about find him dying or dead.... Better so—for that
-woman who called him husband!... I wonder—I
-wonder.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s year of wandering had led him far from the
-haunts of men, along the lonely desert trails and roads
-where only a few solitary humans like himself dared the
-elements, or herded in sordid and hard camps; but, nevertheless,
-by some virtue growing out of his strife and
-adversity, he had come to sense something nameless, to
-feel the mighty beat of the heart of the desert, to hear a
-mourning music over the silent wastes—a still, sad music
-of humanity. It was there, even in the gray wastelands.</p>
-
-<p>He strode on with contracted eyes, peering through the
-hot sunlight. At last he espied a moving object. A huge
-land turtle toiling along! No, it was a man crawling on
-hands and knees.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam</span> ran with the strides of a giant. And he came
-up to a man, ragged and dirty, crawling wearily
-along, dragging a canteen through the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, hold on!” called Adam, loudly.</p>
-
-<p>The man halted, but did not lift his head. Adam bent
-down to peer at him.</p>
-
-<p>“What ails you?” queried Adam, sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” ejaculated the man, stupidly. Adam’s repeated
-question, accompanied by a shake, brought only a grunt.</p>
-
-<p>Adam lifted the man to his feet and, supporting him,
-began to lead him over the sand. His equilibrium had been
-upset, and, like all men overcome on the desert, he wanted to
-plunge off a straight line. Adam persevered, but the labor
-of holding him was greater than that of supporting him.</p>
-
-<p>At length Adam released the straining fellow, as much
-out of curiosity to see what he would do as from a realization
-that time could not be wasted in this manner. He
-did not fall, but swayed and staggered around in a circle,
-like an animal that had been struck on the head. The
-texture of his ragged garments, the cut of them, the look
-of the man, despite his soiled and unkempt appearance,
-marked him as one not commonly met with in the desert.</p>
-
-<p>The coppery sun stood straight overhead and poured
-down a strong and leaden heat. Adam calculated that they
-were miles from camp and would never reach it at this
-rate. He pondered. He must carry the man. Suiting
-action to thought, he picked him up and, throwing him
-over his shoulder, started to plod on. The weight was
-little to one of Adam’s strength, but the squirming and
-wrestling of the fellow to get down made Adam flounder
-in the sand.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_172" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 18em;">
- <img src="images/i_172.jpg" width="282" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">BUT AT LENGTH THE BURDEN OF A HEAVY WEIGHT, AND THE DRAGGING
- SAND, AND THE HOT SUN, BROUGHT ADAM TO A PASS WHERE
- REST WAS IMPERATIVE</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-“You poor devil!” muttered Adam, at last brought to
-a standstill. “Maybe I can’t save your life, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>With that he set the man down and, swinging a powerful
-blow, laid him stunned upon the sand. Whereupon it
-was easy to lift him and throw him over a shoulder like
-an empty sack. Not for a long distance over the sand
-did that task become prodigious. But at length the burden
-of a heavy weight and the dragging sand and the hot sun
-brought Adam to a pass where rest was imperative. He
-laid the unconscious man down while he recovered breath
-and strength. Then he picked him up and went on.</p>
-
-<p>After that he plodded slower, rested oftener, weakened
-more perceptibly. Meanwhile the hours passed, and
-when he reached the huge gateway in the red iron mountain
-wall the sun was gone and purple shadows were
-mustering in the valley. When he reached the more level
-field where the thick-strewn bowlders lay, all before his
-eyes seemed red. A million needles were stinging his
-nerves, running like spears of light into his darkened
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>The limit that he had put upon his endurance was to
-reach the shack. He did so, and he was nearly blind when
-the woman’s poignant call thrilled his throbbing ears. He
-saw her—a white shape through ruddy haze. Then he
-deposited his burden on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” the woman moaned. “He’s dead!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam shook his head. Pity, fear, and even terror rang
-in her poignant cry, but not love.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!... You’ve saved him, then.... He’s injured—there’s
-a great bruise—he breathes so heavily.”</p>
-
-<p>While Adam sat panting, unable to speak, the woman
-wiped her husband’s face and worked over him.</p>
-
-<p>“He came back once—and fell into a stupor like this,
-but not so deep. What can it be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Poison—air,” choked Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, this terrible Death Valley!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s sight cleared and he saw the woman, clad in
-a white robe over her gray dress, a garment clean and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-rich, falling in thick folds—strange to Adam’s sight, recalling
-the past. The afterglow of sunset shone down into the
-valley, lighting her face. Once she must have been beautiful.
-The perfect lines, the noble brow, the curved lips,
-were there, but her face was thin, strained, tragic. Only
-the eyes held beauty still.</p>
-
-<p>“You saved him?” she queried, with quick-drawn breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Found him—miles and miles—up the—valley—crawling
-on—his hands and knees,” panted Adam. “I had—to
-carry him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You carried him!” she exclaimed, incredulously. Then
-the large eyes blazed. “So that’s why you were so livid—why
-you fell?... Oh, you splendid man! You giant!...
-He’d have died out there—alone. I thank you with
-all my heart.”</p>
-
-<p>She reached a white worn hand to touch Adam’s with
-an exquisite eloquence of gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>“Get water—bathe him,” said Adam. “Have you
-ammonia or whisky?” And while he laboriously got to
-his knees the woman ran into the shack. He rose, feeling
-giddy and weak. All his muscles seemed beaten and
-bruised, and his heart pained. Soon the woman came
-hurrying out, with basin and towel and a little black satchel
-that evidently contained medicines. Adam helped her
-work over her husband, but, though they revived him,
-they could not bring him back to intelligent consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>“Help me carry him in,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the little shack it was almost too dark to see
-plainly.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you a light?” he added.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fetch a candle. You watch over him while I move
-my camp up here. You might change his shirt, if he’s
-got another. I’ll be back right away, and I’ll start a fire—get
-some supper for us.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>By the time Adam had packed and moved his effects
-darkness had settled down between the slopes of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-mountains. After he had unpacked near the shack, his
-first move was to light a candle and take it to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a light, ma’am,” he called.</p>
-
-<p>She glided silently out of the gloom, her garments gleaming
-ghostlike and her white face with its luminous eyes,
-dark and strange as midnight, looking like a woman’s face
-in tragic dreams. As she took the candle her hand touched
-Adam’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” she said. “Please don’t call me ma’am.
-My name is Magdalene Virey.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try to remember.... Has your husband come to
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He seems to have fallen into a stupor. Won’t
-you look at him?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam followed her inside and saw that she marked his
-lofty height. The shack had not been built for anyone
-of his stature.</p>
-
-<p>“How tall you are!” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>The candle did not throw a bright light, yet by its aid
-Adam made out the features of the man whose life he
-had saved. It seemed to Adam to be the face of a Lucifer
-whose fiendish passions were now restrained by sleep.
-Whoever this man was, he had suffered a broken heart
-and ruined life.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s asleep,” said Adam. “That’s not a trance or
-stupor. He’s worn out. I believe it’d be better not to
-wake him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think so?” she replied, with quick relief.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure. Perhaps if you watch him awhile you
-can tell.... I’ll get some supper and call you.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam’s habitual dexterity over camp tasks failed him
-this evening. Presently, however, the supper was ready,
-and he threw brush on the fire to make a light.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Virey,” he called at the door, “come and eat now.”</p>
-
-<p>When had the camp fire of his greeted such a vision, except
-in his vague dreams? Tall, white-gowned, slender, and
-graceful, with the poise of a woman aloof and proud and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-the sad face of a Madonna—what a woman to sit at
-Adam’s camp fire in Death Valley! The shadowed and
-thick light hid the ravages that had by day impaired her
-beauty. Adam placed a canvas pack for her to sit upon,
-and then he served her, with something that was not wholly
-unconscious satisfaction. Of all men, he of the desert
-could tell the signs of hunger; and the impression had
-come to him that she was half starved. The way she ate
-brought home to Adam with a pang the memorable days
-when he was starving. This woman sitting in the warm,
-enhancing glow of the camp fire had an exquisitely spiritual
-face. She had seemed all spirit. But self-preservation
-was the first instinct and the first law of human nature,
-or any nature.</p>
-
-<p>“When have I eaten so heartily!” she exclaimed at last.
-“But, oh! it all tasted so good.... Sir, you are a capital
-cook.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” replied Adam, much gratified.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you always fare so well?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’m bound to confess I somewhat outdid myself
-to-night. You see, I seldom have such opportunity to
-serve a woman.”</p>
-
-<p>She rested her elbows on her knees, with her hands under
-her chin, and looked at him with intense interest. In the
-night her eyes seemed very full and large, supernaturally
-bright and tragic. They were the eyes of a woman who
-still preserved in her something of inherent faith in mankind.
-Adam divined that she had scarcely looked at him
-before as an individual with a personality, and that some
-accent or word of his had struck her singularly.</p>
-
-<p>“It was that miner, <span class="locked">Dis—Dis——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes,” added Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It was he who sent you here. Are you a miner,
-too?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I care little for gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!... What are you, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just a wanderer. Wansfell, the Wanderer, they call
-me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-“They? Who are they?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I suppose they are the other wanderers. Men
-who tramp over the desert—men who seek gold or forgetfulness
-or peace or solitude—men who are driven—or
-who hide. These are few, but, taken by the years, they
-seem many.”</p>
-
-<p>“Men of the desert have passed by here, but none like
-you,” she replied, with gravity, and her eyes pierced him.
-“<em>Why</em> did you come?”</p>
-
-<p>“Years ago my life was ruined,” said Adam, slowly.
-“I chose to fight the desert. And in all the years the thing
-that helped me most was not to pass by anyone in trouble.
-The desert sees strange visitors. Life is naked here, like
-those stark mountain-sides.... Dismukes is my friend—he
-saved me from death once. He is a man who knows
-this wasteland. He told me about your being here. He
-said no white woman could live in Death Valley.... I
-wondered—if I might—at least advise you, turn you back—and
-so I came.”</p>
-
-<p>His earnestness deeply affected her.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir, your kind words warm a cold and forlorn heart,”
-she said. “But I cannot be turned back. It’s too late.”</p>
-
-<p>“No hour is ever too late.... Mrs. Virey, I’ll not
-distress you with advice or importunities. I know too well
-the need and the meaning of peace. But the fact of your
-being here—a woman of your evident quality—a woman
-of your sensitiveness and delicate health—why, it is a
-terrible thing! This is Death Valley. The month is
-April. Soon it will be May—then June. When midsummer
-comes you cannot survive here. I know nothing
-of <em>why</em> you are here—I don’t seek to know. But you
-cannot stay. It would be a miracle for your husband to
-find gold here, if that is what he seeks. Surely he has
-discovered that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Virey does not seek gold,” the woman said.</p>
-
-<p>“Does he know that a white woman absolutely cannot
-live here in Death Valley? Even the Indians abandon it
-in summer.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-“He knows. There are Shoshone Indians up on the
-mountains now. They pack supplies to us. They have
-warned him.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam could ask no more, yet how impossible not to
-feel an absorbing interest in this woman’s fate. As he
-sat with bowed head, watching the glowing and paling
-of the red embers, he felt her gaze upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, you must have a great heart—like your
-body,” she said, presently. “It is blessed to meet such a
-man. Your kindness, your interest, soften my harsh and
-bitter doubt of men. We are utter strangers. But there’s
-something in this desert that bridges time—that bids me
-open my lips to you ... a man who traveled this ghastly
-valley to serve me!... My husband, Virey, knows that
-Death Valley is a hell on earth. So do I. That is why
-he brought me ... that is why I came!”</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” breathed Adam, staring incredulously at
-her. Dismukes had prepared him for tragedy; the desert
-had shown him many dark and terrible calamities, misfortunes,
-mysteries; he had imagined he could no longer
-be thrown off his balance by amaze. But that a sad-eyed,
-sweet-voiced woman, whose every tone and gesture and
-look spoke of refinement and education, of a life infinitely
-removed from the wild ruggedness of the desert West—that
-she could intimate what seemed in one breath both
-murder and suicide—this staggered Adam’s credulity.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, as he stared at her, realizing the tremendous passion
-of will, of spirit, of something more than emanated
-from her, divining how in her case intellect and culture
-had been added to the eternal feminine of her nature, he
-knew she spoke the truth. Adam had met women on the
-desert, and all of them were riddles. Yet what a vast
-range between Margarita Arallanes and Magdalene Virey!</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t your husband leave—take you away from here?”
-asked Adam, slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—I have a way of forcing men to see things.
-I suppose <span class="locked">I——”</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-“Useless! We have traveled three thousand miles to
-get to Death Valley. Years ago Elliot Virey read about
-this awful place. He was always interested. He learned
-that it was the most arid, ghastly, desolate, and terrible
-place of death in all the world.... Then, when he got
-me to Sacramento—and to Placerville—he would talk
-with miners, prospectors, Indians—anyone who could tell
-him about Death Valley.... Virey had a reason for finding
-a hell on earth. We crossed the mountains, range after
-range—and here we are.... Sir, the hell of which we
-read—even in its bottommost pit—cannot be worse than
-Death Valley.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will let me take you home—at least out of the
-desert?” queried Adam, with passionate sharpness.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir, I thank you again,” she replied, her voice thrilling
-richly. “But no—no! You do not understand—you cannot—and
-it’s impossible to explain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Yes, some things are.... Suppose you let me
-move your camp higher up, out of this thick, dead air and
-heat—where there are trees and good water?”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is not a beautiful and a comfortable camp that
-Virey—that we want,” she said, bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then let me move your shack across the wash out of
-danger. This spot is the most forbidding I ever saw.
-That mountain above us is on the move. The whole
-cracked slope is sliding like a glacier. It is an avalanche
-waiting for a jar—a slip—something to start it. The
-rocks are rolling down all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have I not heard the rocks—cracking, ringing—in the
-dead of night!” she cried, shuddering. Her slender form
-seemed to draw within itself and the white, slim hands
-clenched her gown. “Rocks! How I’ve learned to hate
-them! These rolling rocks are living things. I’ve heard
-them slide and crack, roll and ring—hit the sand with a
-thump, and then with whistle and thud go by where I lay
-in the dark.... People who live as I have lived know
-nothing of the elements. I had no fear of the desert—nor
-of Death Valley. I dared it. I laughed to scorn the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-idea that any barren wild valley, any maelstrom of the
-sea, any Sodom of a city could be worse than the chaos of
-my soul.... But I didn’t know. I am human. I’m a
-woman. A woman is meant to bear children. Nothing
-else!... I learned that I was afraid of the dark—that
-such fear had been born in me. These rolling rocks got
-on my nerves. I wait—I listen for them. And I pray....
-Then the silence—that became so dreadful. It is
-insupportable. Worse than all is the loneliness.... Oh,
-this God-forsaken, lonely Death Valley! It will drive
-me mad.”</p>
-
-<p>As Adam had anticipated, no matter what strength of
-will, what sense of secrecy bound this woman’s lips, she
-had been victim to the sound of her own voice, which,
-liberated by his sympathy, had spoken, and a word, as it
-were, had led to a full, deep, passionate utterance.</p>
-
-<p>“True. All too terribly true,” replied Adam. “And
-for a woman—for you—these feelings will grow more
-intense.... I beg of you, at least let me move your camp
-back out of danger.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! Not a single foot!” she blazed, as if confronted
-with something beyond his words. After that she hid
-her face in her hands. A long silence ensued. Adam,
-watching her, saw when the tremble and heave of her
-breast subsided. At length she looked up again, apparently
-composed. “Perhaps I talked more than I should have.
-But no matter. It was necessary to tell you something.
-For you came here to help an unknown woman. Not to
-anyone else have I breathed a word of the true state of my
-feelings. My husband watches me like a hawk, but not yet
-does he know my fears. I’ll thank you, when you speak
-to him, if you stay here so long, not to tell him anything
-I’ve said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Virey, I’ll stay as long as you are here,” said
-Adam, simply.</p>
-
-<p>The simplicity of his speech, coupled with the tremendous
-suggestion in the fact of his physical presence, his
-strength and knowledge to serve her despite her bitter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-repudiation, seemed again to knock at the heart of her
-femininity. In the beginning of human life on the earth,
-and through its primal development, there was always a
-man to protect a woman. But subtly and inevitably there
-had been in Adam’s words an intimation that Magdalene
-Virey stood absolutely alone. More, for with spirit, if
-not with body, she was fighting Death Valley, and also
-some terrible relation her husband bore to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir—you would stay here—on a possible chance of
-serving me?” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Virey will not like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure, but I suspect it’ll not make any difference
-to me what he likes.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you are kind to me he will drive you away,” she
-went on, with agitation.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as he’s your husband he may prevent me from
-being kind, but he can’t drive me away.”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose I ask you to go?”</p>
-
-<p>“If that’s the greatest kindness I can do you—well, I’ll
-go.... But do you ask me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t know. I may be forced to—not by <em>him</em>,
-but by my pride,” she said, desperately. “Oh, I’m unstrung!
-I don’t know what to say.... After all, just
-the sound of a kind voice makes me a coward. O God!
-if people in the world only knew the value of kindness!
-I never did know.... This desert of horrors teaches the
-truth of life.... Once I had the world at my feet!...
-Now I break and bow at the sympathy of a stranger!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind your pride,” said Adam, in his slow, cool
-way. “I understand. I’ve a good deal of a woman in me.
-Whatever brought you to Death Valley, whatever nails you
-here, is nothing to me. Even if I learn it, what need that
-be to you? If you do not want me to stay to work for
-you, watch over your husband—why, let me stay for my
-own sake.”</p>
-
-<p>She rose and faced him, with soul-searching eyes. She
-could not escape her nature. Emotion governed her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-“Sir, you speak nobly,” she replied, with lips that trembled.
-“But I don’t understand you. Stay here—where I
-am—for your sake! Explain, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have my burden. Once it was even more terrible
-than yours. Through that I can feel as you feel now.
-I have lived the loneliness—the insupportable loneliness—of
-the desert—the silence, the heat, the hell. But my
-burden still weighs on my soul. If I might somehow help
-your husband, who is going wrong, blindly following some
-road of passion—change him or stop him, why that would
-ease my burden. If I might save you weariness, or
-physical pain, or hunger, or thirst, or terror—it would be
-doing more for myself than for you.... We are in Death
-Valley. You refuse to leave. We are, right here, two
-hundred feet below sea level. When the furnace heat
-comes—when the blasting midnight wind comes—it means
-either madness or death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stay—Sir Knight,” she said, with a hollow, ringing
-gayety. “Who shall say that chivalry is dead?... Stay!
-and know this. I fear no man. I scorn death.... But,
-ah, the woman of me! I hate dirt and vermin. I’m
-afraid of pain. I suffer agonies even before I’m hurt.
-I miss so unforgettably the luxuries of life. And lastly, I
-have a mortal terror of going mad. Spare me that and
-you will have my prayers in this world—and beyond....
-Good night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good night,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>She left him to the deepening gloom and the dying camp
-fire. Adam soon grew conscious of extreme fatigue in
-mind and body. Spreading his blankets on the sands, he
-stretched his weary, aching body without even an upward
-glance at the stars, and fell asleep.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Daylight again, as if by the opening of eyelids! The
-rose color was vying with the blue of the sky and a noble
-gold crowned the line of eastern range which Adam could
-see through the V-shaped split that opened into the valley.</p>
-
-<p>He pulled on his boots, and gave his face an unusual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-and detrimental luxury in the desert. Water was bad
-for exposed flesh in arid country. The usual spring and
-buoyancy of his physical being was lacking this day. Such
-overstrain as yesterday’s would require time to be remedied.
-So Adam moved slowly and with caution.</p>
-
-<p>First Adam went to the spring. He found a bubbling
-gush of velvet-looking water pouring out of a hole and
-running a few rods to sink into the sand. The color
-of it seemed inviting—so clear and soft and somehow
-rich. The music of its murmur, too, was melodious.
-Adam was a connoisseur of waters. What desert wanderer
-of years was not? Before he tasted this water,
-despite its promise, he knew it was not good. Yet it
-did not have exactly an unpleasant taste. Dismukes had
-said this water was all right, yet he seldom stayed long
-enough in one locality to learn the ill effects of the
-water. Adam knew he too could live on this water. But
-he was thinking of the delicate woman lost here in Death
-Valley with an idiot or a knave of a husband.</p>
-
-<p>The spring was located some two hundred yards or
-more from the shack and just out of line of the rock-strewn
-slope. Spreading like a fan, this weathered slant
-of stones extended its long, curved length in the opposite
-direction. Adam decided to pitch his permanent camp,
-or at least sleeping place, here on the grass. Here he
-erected a brush-and-canvas shelter to make shade, and
-deposited his effects under it. That done, he returned
-to the shack to cook breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>There appeared to be no life in the rude little misshapen
-hut. Had the man who built it ever been a boy?
-There were men so utterly helpless and useless out in
-the wilds, where existence depended upon labor of hands,
-that they seemed foreign to the descendants of Americans.
-Adam could not but wonder about the man lying in there,
-though he tried hard to confine his reflections to the
-woman. He did not like the situation. Of what avail
-the strong arm, the desert-taught fierceness to survive?
-If this man and woman had ever possessed instincts to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-live, to fight, to reproduce their kind, to be of use in the
-world, they had subverted them to the debasements of
-sophisticated and selfish existence. The woman loomed
-big to Adam, and he believed she had been dragged down
-by a weak and vicious man.</p>
-
-<p>Leisurely Adam attended to the preparation of breakfast,
-prolonging tasks that always passed swiftly through
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Sir Wansfell,” called a voice with
-something of mockery in it, yet rich and wistful—a low-pitched
-contralto voice full of music and pathos and a
-pervading bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>It stirred Adam’s blood, so sluggish this morning. It
-seemed to carry an echo from his distant past. Turning,
-he saw the woman, clad in gray, with a girdle of cord
-twisted around her slender waist. Soft and clean and
-fleecy, that gray garment, so out of place there, so utterly
-incongruous against the background of crude shack and
-wild slope, somehow fitted her voice as it did her fragile
-shape, somehow set her infinitely apart from the women
-Adam had met in his desert wanderings. She came from
-the great world outside, a delicate spark from the solid
-flint of class, a thoroughbred whom years before the desert
-might have saved.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Mrs. Virey,” returned Adam. “How
-are you—and did your husband awake?”</p>
-
-<p>“I slept better than for long,” she replied, “and I think
-I know why.... Yes, Virey came to. He’s conscious,
-and asked for water. But he’s weak—strange. I’d like
-you to look at him presently.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I will.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how are you after your tremendous exertions of
-yesterday?” she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Not so spry,” said Adam, with a smile. “But I’ll be
-myself in a day or so. I believe the air down in the valley
-affected me a little. My lungs are sore.... I think it
-would be more comfortable for you if we had breakfast
-in your kitchen. The sun is hot.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-“Indeed yes. So you mean to—to do this—this camp
-work for me—in spite <span class="locked">of——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I always oppose women,” he said. “And that
-is about once every two or three years. You see, women
-are scarce on the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Last night I was upset. I am sorry that I was ungracious.
-I thank you, and I am only too glad to accept
-your kind service,” she said, earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“That is well. Now, will you help me carry in the
-breakfast?”</p>
-
-<p>Unreality was not unusual to Adam. The desert had
-as many unrealities, illusions, and specters as it had natural
-and tangible things. But while he sat opposite to this
-fascinating woman, whose garments exuded some subtle
-fragrance of perfume, whose shadowed, beautiful face
-shone like a cameo against the drab wall of the brush shack,
-he was hard put to it to convince himself of actuality.
-She ate daintily, but she was hungry. The gray gown
-fell in graceful folds around the low stone seat. The
-rude table between them was a box, narrow and uneven.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I try to get Virey to eat?” she asked, presently.</p>
-
-<p>“That depends. On the desert, after a collapse, we
-are careful with food and water.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you look at him?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam followed her as she swept aside a flap of the
-canvas partition. This room was larger and lighter. It
-had an aperture for a window. Adam’s quick glance took
-this in, and then the two narrow beds of blankets raised
-on brush cots. Virey lay on the one farther from the
-door. His pallid brow and unshaven face appeared drawn
-into terrible lines, which, of course, Adam could not be
-sure were permanent or the result of the collapse in the
-valley. He inclined, however, to the conviction that Virey’s
-face was the distorted reflection of a tortured soul. Surely
-he had been handsome once. He had deep-set black eyes,
-a straight nose, and a mouth that betrayed him, despite
-its being half hidden under a mustache. Adam, keen and
-strung in that moment as he received his impressions of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-Virey, felt the woman’s intensity as if he had been studying
-her instead of her husband. How singular women
-were! How could it matter to her what opinion he formed
-of her husband? Adam knew he had been powerfully
-prejudiced against this man, but he had held in stern
-abeyance all judgment until he could look at him. For
-long years Adam had gazed into the face of the desert.
-Outward appearance could not deceive him. As the cactus
-revealed its ruthless nature, as the tiny inch-high flower
-bloomed in its perishable but imperative proof of beauty
-as well as life, as the long flowing sands of the desert
-betrayed the destructive design of the universe—so the
-face of any man was the image of his soul. And Adam
-recoiled instinctively, if not outwardly, at what he read
-in Virey’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re in pain?” queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” came the husky whisper, and Virey put a hand
-on his breast.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s sore here,” said Adam, feeling Virey. “You’ve
-breathed poisoned air down in the valley. It acts like
-ether.... You just lie quiet for a while. I’ll do the
-work around camp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” whispered Virey.</p>
-
-<p>The woman followed Adam outside and gazed earnestly
-up at him, unconscious of herself, with her face closer
-than it had ever been to him and full in the sunlight. It
-struck Adam that the difference between desert flowers
-and the faces of beautiful women was one of emotion.
-How much better to have the brief hour of an unconscious
-flower, wasting its fragrance on the desert air!</p>
-
-<p>“He’s ill, don’t you think?” queried the woman.</p>
-
-<p>“No. But he recovers slowly. A man must have a
-perfect heart and powerful lungs to battle against the many
-perils in this country. But Virey will get over this all
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never give up, do you?” she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Come to think of that, I guess I never do,” replied
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-“Such spirit is worthy of a better cause. You are
-doomed here to failure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not infallible, that’s certain. But you can
-never tell. The fact of my standing here is proof of the
-overcoming of almost impossible things. I can’t make
-Death Valley habitable for you, but I can lessen the hardships.
-How long have you been here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Several months. But it’s years to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who brought you down? How did you get here?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve had different guides. The last were Shoshone
-Indians, who accompanied us across a range of mountains,
-then a valley, and last over the Panamints. They left us
-here. I rode a horse. Virey walked the last stages of
-this journey to Death Valley—from which there will be
-no return. We turned horse and burros loose. I have
-not seen them since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are these Shoshones supposed to visit you occasionally?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Virey made a deal with them to come every full
-moon. We’ve had more supplies than we need. The
-trouble is that Virey has the inclination to eat, but I have
-not the skill to prepare food wholesomely under these
-rough conditions. So we almost starved.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, let me take charge of camp duties. You nurse
-your husband and don’t neglect yourself. It’s the least
-you can do. You’ll have hardship and suffering enough,
-even at best. You’ve suffered, I can see, but not physically.
-And you never knew what hardship meant until you got
-into the desert. If you <em>live</em>, these things will cure you of
-any trouble. They’ll hardly cure Virey, for he has retrograded.
-Most men in the desert follow the line of least
-resistance. They sink. But <em>you</em> will not.... And let
-me tell you. There are elemental pangs of hunger, of
-thirst, of pain that are blessings in disguise. You’ll learn
-what rest is and sleep and loneliness. People who live
-as you have lived are lopsided. What do they know of life
-close to the earth? Any other life is false. Cities, swarms
-of men and women, riches, luxury, poverty—these were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-not in nature’s scheme of life.... Mrs. Virey, if anything
-<em>can</em> change your soul it will be the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Sir Wansfell, so you have philosophy as well as
-chivalry,” she replied, with the faint accent that seemed
-to be mockery of herself. “Change my soul if you can,
-wanderer of the desert! I am a woman, and a woman is
-symbolical of change. Teach me to cook, to work, to
-grow strong, to endure, to fight, to look up at those dark
-hills whence cometh your strength.... I am here in
-Death Valley. I will never leave it in body. My bones
-will mingle with the sands and molder to dust.... But
-my soul—ah! that black gulf of doubt, of agony, of terror,
-of hate—change <em>that</em> if you can.”</p>
-
-<p>These tragic, eloquent words chained Adam to Death
-Valley as if they had been links of steel; and thus began
-his long sojourn there.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Work or action was always necessary to Adam. They
-had become second nature. He planned a brush shelter
-from the sun, a sort of outside room adjoining the shack,
-a stone fireplace and table and seats, a low stone wall to
-keep out blowing sand, and a thick, heavy stone fence
-between the shack and the slope of sliding rocks. When
-these tasks were finished there would be others, and
-always there would be the slopes to climb, the valley to
-explore. Idleness in Death Valley was a forerunner of
-madness. There must be a reserve fund of long work and
-exercise, so that when the blazing, leaden-hazed middays
-of August came, with idleness imperative, there would be
-both physical force and unclouded mind to endure them.
-The men who succumbed to madness in this valley were
-those who had not understood how to combat it.</p>
-
-<p>That day passed swiftly, and the twilight hour seemed
-to have less of gloom and forbidding intimations. That
-might well have been due to his eternal hope. Mrs. Virey
-showed less gravity and melancholy, and not once did she
-speak with bitterness or passion. She informed Adam
-that Virey had improved.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-Two more days slipped by, and on the third Virey got
-up and came forth into the sunlight. Adam happened to
-be at work near by. He saw Virey gaze around at the
-improvements that had been made and say something
-about them to his wife. He looked a man who should
-have been in the prime of life. Approaching with slow
-gait and haggard face, he addressed Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“You expect pay for this puttering around?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Adam, shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, when men are used to the desert, as I am, they
-lend a hand where it is needed. That’s not often.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I didn’t want any such work done round my camp.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, and I excuse you because you’re ignorant of
-desert ways and needs.”</p>
-
-<p>“The question of excuse for me is offensive.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam, rising abreast of the stone wall he was building,
-fixed his piercing eyes upon this man. Mrs. Virey stood
-a little to one side, but not out of range of Adam’s gaze.
-Did a mocking light show in her shadowy eyes? The
-doubt, the curiosity in her expression must have related
-to Adam. That slight, subtle something about her revealed
-to Adam the inevitableness of disappointment in
-store for him if he still entertained any hopes of amenable
-relations with Virey.</p>
-
-<p>“We all have to be excused sometimes,” said Adam,
-deliberately. “Now I had to excuse you on the score of
-ignorance of the desert. You chose this place as a camp.
-It happens to be the most dangerous spot I ever saw. Any
-moment a stone may roll down that slope to kill you.
-Any moment the whole avalanche may start. That slope
-is an avalanche.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s my business where I camp,” rejoined Virey.</p>
-
-<p>“Were you aware of the danger here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am indifferent to danger.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are not alone. You have a woman with you.”</p>
-
-<p>Manifestly, Virey had been speaking without weighing
-words and looking at Adam without really seeing him.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-The brooding shade passed out of his eyes, and in its
-place grew a light of interest that leaped to the crystal-cold
-clearness of a lens.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a prospector,” he asserted.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I pan a little gold dust once in a while for fun,
-because I happen across it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re no miner, then—nor hunter, nor teamster.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been a little of all you name, but I can’t be called
-any one of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might be one of the robbers that infest these
-hills.”</p>
-
-<p>“I might be, only I’m not,” declared Adam, dryly. The
-fire in his depths stirred restlessly, but he kept a cool,
-smothering control over it. He felt disposed to be lenient
-and kind toward this unfortunate man. If only the woman
-had not stood there with that half-veiled mocking shadow
-of doubt in her eyes!</p>
-
-<p>“You’re an educated man!” ejaculated Virey, incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“I might claim to be specially educated in the ways of
-the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the ways of women, are <em>they</em> mysteries to you?”
-queried Virey, with scorn. His interrogation seemed like
-a bitter doubt flung out of an immeasurable depth of
-passion.</p>
-
-<p>“I confess that they are,” replied Adam. “I’ve lived a
-lonely life. Few women have crossed my trail.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t realize your good fortune—if you tell the
-truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would not lie to any man,” returned Adam, bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>“Bah! Men are all liars, and women make them so....
-You’re hanging round my camp, making a bluff of
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>“I deny that. Heaving these stones is work. <em>You</em>
-lift a few of them in this hot sun.... And my packing
-you on my back for ten miles over the floor of Death
-Valley—was that a bluff?”</p>
-
-<p>“You saved my life!” exclaimed the man, stung to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-passion. There seemed to be contending tides within him—a
-fight of old habits of thought, fineness of feeling,
-against an all-absorbing and dominating malignancy.
-“Man, I can’t thank you for that.... You’ve done me
-no service.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want or expect thanks. I was thinking of the
-effort it cost me.”</p>
-
-<p>“As a man who was once a gentleman, I do thank you—which
-is a courtesy due my past. But now that you have
-put me in debt for a service I didn’t want, why do you
-linger here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish to help your wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! that’s frank of you. That frankness is something
-for which I really thank you. But you’ll pardon me if
-I’m inclined to doubt the idealistic nature of your motive
-to help her.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam pondered over this speech without reply. Words
-always came fluently when he was ready to speak. And
-he seemed more concerned over Virey’s caustic bitterness
-than over his meaning. Then, as he met the magnificent
-flash in Magdalene Virey’s eyes, he was inspired into
-revelation of Virey’s veiled hint and into a serenity he
-divined would be kindest to her pride.</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead and help her,” Virey went on. “You have
-my sincere felicitations. My charming wife is helpless
-enough. I never knew how helpless till we were thrown
-upon our own resources. She cannot even cook a potato.
-And as for baking bread in one of those miserable black
-ovens, stranger, if you eat some of it I will not be long
-annoyed by your attentions to her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll teach her,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>His practical response irritated Virey excessively. It
-was as if he wished to insult and inflame, and had not
-considered a literal application to his words.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you? What’s your name?” he queried, yielding
-to a roused curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell?” echoed Virey. The name struck a chord of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-memory—a discordant one. He bent forward a little, at
-a point between curiosity and excitement. “Wansfell?...
-I know that name. Are you the man who in this
-desert country is called Wansfell the Wanderer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m that Wansfell.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard a prospector tell about you,” went on Virey,
-his haggard face now quickened by thought. “It was at
-a camp near a gold mine over here somewhere—I forget
-where. But the prospector said he had seen you kill a
-man named Mc something—McKin—no, McKue. That’s
-the name.... Did he tell the truth?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m sorry to say. I killed Baldy McKue—or
-rather, to speak as I feel, I was the means by which the
-desert dealt McKue the death justly due him.”</p>
-
-<p>Virey now glowed with excitement, changing the man.</p>
-
-<p>“Somehow that story haunted me,” he said. “I never
-heard one like it.... This prospector told how you confronted
-McKue in the street of a mining camp. In front
-of a gambling hell, or maybe it was a hotel. You yelled
-like a demon at McKue. He turned white as a sheet.
-He jerked his gun, began to shoot. But you bore a
-charmed life. His bullets did not hit you, or, if they
-did, to no purpose. You leaped upon him. His gun flew
-one way, his hat another.... Then—then you killed him
-with your hands!... Is that true?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam nodded gloomily. The tale, told vividly by this
-seemingly galvanized Virey, was not pleasant. And the
-woman stood there, transfixed, with white face and tragic
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“My God! You killed McKue by sheer strength—with
-your bare hands!... I had not looked at your hands.
-I see them now.... So McKue was your enemy?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I never saw him before that day,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Virey slowly drew back wonderingly, yet with instinctive
-shrinking. Certain it was that his lips stiffened.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why did you kill him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He ill-treated a woman.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam turned away as he replied. He did not choose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-then to show in his eyes the leaping thought that had been
-born of the memory and of Virey’s strange reaction. But
-he heard him draw a quick, sharp breath and step back.
-Then a silence ensued. Adam gazed up at the endless
-slope, at the millions of rocks, all apparently resting lightly
-in their pockets, ready to plunge down.</p>
-
-<p>“So—so that was it,” spoke up Virey, evidently with
-effort. “I always wondered. Wild West sort of story,
-you know. Strange I should meet you.... Thanks for
-telling me. I gather it wasn’t pleasant for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s sickening to recall, but I have no regrets,” replied
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so. I understand. Man of the desert—ruthless—inhuman
-sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Inhuman?” queried Adam, and he looked at Virey, at
-last stung. Behind Virey’s pale, working face and averted
-eyes Adam read a conscience in tumult, a spirit for the
-moment terrorized. “Virey, you and I’d never agree on
-meanings of words.... I broke McKue’s arms and ribs
-and legs, and while I cracked them I told him what an
-inhuman dastard he had been—to ruin a girl, to beat her,
-to abandon her and her baby—to leave them to die. I
-told him how I had watched them die ... then I broke
-his neck!... McKue was the inhuman man—not I.”</p>
-
-<p>Virey turned away, swaying a little, and his white hand,
-like a woman’s, sought the stone wall for support, until
-he reached the shack, which he entered.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, Mrs. Virey, that story had to come up,”
-said Adam, confronting her with reluctance. But she
-surprised him again. He expected to find her sickened,
-shrinking from him as a bloody monster, perhaps half fainting;
-he found, however, that she seemed serene, controlling
-deep emotions which manifested themselves only in the
-marble whiteness of her cheek, the strained darkness of
-her eye.</p>
-
-<p>“The story was beautiful. I had not heard it,” she
-said, and the rich tremor of her voice thrilled Adam.
-“What woman would not revel in such a story?...<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-Wansfell the Wanderer. It should be Sir Wansfell,
-Knight of the Desert!... Don’t look at me so. Have
-you not learned that the grandest act on earth is when a
-man fights for the honor or love or happiness or life of a
-woman?... I am a woman. Many men have loved me.
-Virey’s love is so strong that it is hate. But no man
-ever yet thought of <em>me</em>—no man ever yet heard the little
-songs that echoed through my soul—no man ever fought
-to save <em>me</em>!... My friend, I dare speak as you speak,
-with the nakedness of the desert. And so I tell you that
-just now I watched my husband—I listened to the words
-which told his nature, as if that was new to me. I
-watched you stand there—I listened to you.... And
-so I dare to tell you—if you come to fight my battles I
-shall have added to my life of shocks and woes a trouble
-that will dwarf all the others ... the awakening of a
-woman who has been blind!... The facing of my soul—perhaps
-its salvation! A crowning agony—a glory come
-too late!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">At</span> sunset Adam cooked supper for the Vireys, satisfying
-his own needs after they had finished. Virey
-talked lightly, even joked about the first good meal he
-had sat down to on the desert. His wife, too, talked
-serenely, sometimes with the faintly subtle mockery, as
-if she had never intimated that a dividing spear threatened
-her heart. That was their way to hide the truth and
-emotion when they willed. But Adam was silent.</p>
-
-<p>Alone, out under the shadow of the towering gate to
-the valley, he strode to and fro, absorbed in a maze of
-thoughts that gradually cleared, as if by the light of the
-solemn stars and virtue of the speaking silence. He had
-chanced upon the strangest and most fatal situation in all
-his desert years. Yes, but was it by chance? Straight
-as an arrow he had come across the barrens to meet a
-wonderful woman who was going to love him, and a
-despicable man whom he was going to kill. That seemed
-the fatality which rang in his ears, shone in the accusing
-stars, hid in the heavy shadows. It was a matter of feeling.
-His intelligence could not grasp it. Had he been
-in Death Valley four days or four months? Was he walking
-in his sleep, victim of a nightmare? The desert, faithful
-always, answered him. This was nothing but the flux
-and reflux of human passion, contending tides between
-man and woman, the littleness, the curse, the terror, and
-yet the joy of life. Death Valley yawned at his feet,
-changeless and shadowy, awful in its locked solemnity of
-solitude, its voicelessness, its desolation that had been desolation
-in past ages. He could doubt nothing there. His
-thoughts seemed almost above human error. A spirit spoke
-for him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-Virey had dragged his wife to this lonely and dismal
-hell hole on earth to share his misery, to isolate her from
-men, to hide her glory of charm, to gloat over her loneliness,
-to revenge himself for a wrong, to feed his need of
-possession, his terrible love that had become hate, to watch
-the slow torture of her fading, wilting, drooping in this
-ghastly valley, to curse her living, to burn endlessly in
-torment because her soul would elude him forever, to
-drive her to death and die with her.</p>
-
-<p>Death Valley seemed a harmonious setting for this
-tragedy and a fitting grave for its actors. The worst in
-nature calling to the darkest in mankind! What a pity
-Virey could not divine his littleness—that he had been a
-crawling maggot in the peopled ulcer of the world—that
-in the great spaces where the sun beat down was a fiery
-cleansing!</p>
-
-<p>But Magdalene Virey was a riddle beyond solving.
-Nevertheless, Adam pondered every thought that would
-stay before his consciousness. Any woman was a riddle.
-Did not the image of Margarita Arrallanes flash up before
-him—that dusky-eyed, mindless, soulless little animal,
-victim of nature born in her? Adam’s thought halted with
-the seeming sacrilege of associating Magdalene Virey with
-memory of the Mexican girl. This Virey woman had complexity—she
-had mind, passion, nobility, soul. What had
-she done to earn her husband’s hate? She had never loved
-him—that was as fixed in Adam’s sight as the North
-Star. Nor had she loved another man, at least not with
-the passion and spirit of her wonderful womanhood.
-Adam divined that with the intensity of feeling which the
-desert loneliness and solitude had taught him. He could
-have felt the current of any woman’s great passion, whether
-it was in torrent, full charged and devastating, or at its
-lowering ebb. But, as inevitable as was life itself, there
-was the mysterious certainty that Magdalene Virey had
-terribly wronged her husband. How? Adam had repudiated
-any interest in what had driven them here; not
-until this moment had he permitted his doubt to insult<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-the woman. Yet how helpless he was! His heart was
-full of unutterable pity. He could never have loved
-Magdalene Virey as a man, but as a brother he was yearning
-to change her, save her. What else in life was worth
-living for, except only the dreams on the heights, the
-walks along the lonely trails? By his own agony he had
-a strange affinity for anyone in trouble, especially a woman,
-and how terribly he saw the tragedy of Magdalene Virey!
-And it was not only her death that he saw. Death in a
-land where death reigned was nothing. For her he hated
-the certainty of physical pain, the turgid pulse, the red-hot
-iron band at the temples, the bearing down of weighted
-air, the drying up of flesh and blood. More than all he
-hated the thought of death of her spirit while her body
-lived. There would be a bloodless murder long before her
-blood stained Virey’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>But this thought gave Adam pause. Was he not dealing
-with a personality beyond his power to divine? What did
-he know of this strange woman? He knew naught, but
-felt all. She was beautiful, compelling, secretive, aloof,
-and proud, magnificent as a living flame. She was mocking
-because knowledge of the world, of the frailty of
-women and falsity of men, had been as an open page.
-She had lived in sight of the crowded mart, the show
-places where men and women passed, knowing no more
-of earth than that it was a place for graves. She was
-bitter because she had drunk bitterness to the dregs. But
-the sudden up-flashing warmth of her, forced out of her
-reserve, came from a heart of golden fire. Adam constituted
-himself an omniscient judge, answerable only to
-his conscience. By all the gods he would be true to the
-truth of this woman!</p>
-
-<p>Never had she been forced into this desert of desolation.
-That thought of Adam’s seemed far back in the past.
-She had dared to come. Had Death Valley and the death
-it was famed for any terrors for her? By the side of
-her husband she had willingly come, unutterably despising
-him, infinitely brave where he was cowardly, scornfully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-and magnificently prepared to meet any punishment
-that might satisfy him. Adam saw how, in this, Magdalene
-Virey was answering to some strange need in itself. Let
-the blind, weak, egoist Virey demand the tortures of the
-damned! She would pay. But she was paying also a debt
-to herself. Adam’s final conception of Magdalene Virey
-was that she had been hideously wronged by life, by men;
-that in younger days of passionate revolt she had transgressed
-the selfish law of husbands; that in maturer years,
-with the storm and defeat and disillusion of womanhood,
-she had risen to the heights, she had been true to herself;
-and with mockery of the man who could so underestimate
-her, who dared believe he could make her a craven, whimpering,
-guilty wretch, she had faced the desert with him.
-She had seen the great love that was not love change to
-terrible hate. She had divined the hidden motive. She
-let him revel in his hellish secret joy. She welcomed Death
-Valley.</p>
-
-<p>Adam marveled at this unquenchable spirit, this sublime
-effrontery of a woman. And he hesitated to dare to turn
-that spirit from its superb indifference. But this vacillation
-in him was weak. What a wonderful experience it
-would be to embody in Magdalene Virey the instinct, the
-strife, the nature of the desert! With her mind, if he
-had the power to teach, she would grasp the lesson in a
-single day.</p>
-
-<p>And lastly, her unforgettable implication, “the crowning
-agony,” of what he might bring upon her. There could be
-only one interpretation of that—love. The idea thrilled
-him, but only with wonder and pity. It took possession
-of Adam’s imagination. Well, such love might come to
-pass! The desert storms bridged canyons with sand in
-one day. It was a place of violence. The elements waited
-not upon time or circumstance. The few women Adam
-had come in contact with on the desert had loved him.
-Even the one-eyed Mohave Jo, that hideous, unsexed,
-monstrous deformity of a woman, whom he had met and
-left groveling in the sand at his feet, shamed at last before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-a crowd of idle, gaping, vile men—even she had awakened
-to this strange madness of love. But Adam had not
-wanted that of any woman, since the poignant moment of
-his youth on the desert, when the dusky-eyed Margarita
-had murmured of love so fresh and sweet to him, “Ah,
-so long ago and far away!”</p>
-
-<p>Least of all did Adam want the love of Magdalene
-Virey. “If she were young and I were young! Or if she
-had never...!” Ah! even possibilities, like might-have-beens,
-were useless dreams. But the die was cast. Serve
-Magdalene Virey he would, and teach her the secret of
-the strength of the sand wastes and the lonely hills, and
-that the victory of life was not to yield. Fight for her,
-too, he would. In all the multiplicity of ways he had
-learned, he would fight the solitude and loneliness of
-Death Valley, the ghastliness so inimical to the creative
-life of a woman, the heat, the thirst, the starvation, the
-poison air, the furnace wind, storm and flood and avalanche.
-Just as naturally, if need be, if it fatefully fell
-out so, he would lay his slaying hands in all their ruthless
-might upon the man who had made her dare her doom.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>When, next morning at sunrise hour, Adam presented
-himself at the Virey camp, he was greeted by Mrs. Virey,
-seemingly a transformed woman. She wore a riding suit,
-the worn condition of which attested to the rough ride
-across the mountain. What remarkable difference it made
-in her appearance! It detracted from her height. And
-the slenderness of her, revealed rather than suggested by
-her gowns, showed much of grace and symmetry. She
-had braided her hair and let it hang. When the sun had
-tanned her white face and hands Magdalene Virey would
-really be transformed.</p>
-
-<p>Adam tried not to stare, but his effort was futile.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning,” she said, with a bright smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mrs. Virey, I—I hardly knew you!” he
-stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. I feel complimented. It is the first time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-you’ve looked at <em>me</em>. Shorn of my dignity—no, my
-worldliness, do I begin well, desert man?... No more
-stuffy dresses clogging my feet! No more veils to protect
-my face! Let the sun burn! I want to work. I
-want to help. I want to learn. If madness must be mine,
-let it be a madness to learn what in this God-forsaken land
-ever made you the man you are. There, Sir Wansfell,
-I have flung down the gage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” replied Adam, soberly.</p>
-
-<p>“And now,” she continued, “I am eager to work. If
-I blunder, be patient. If I am stupid, make me see. And
-if I faint in the sun or fall beside the trail, remember it
-is my poor body that fails, and not my will.”</p>
-
-<p>So, in the light of her keen interest, Adam found the
-humdrum mixing of dough and the baking of bread a
-pleasure and a lesson to him, rather than a task.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! how important are the homely things of life!” she
-said. “A poet said ‘we live too much in the world.’... I
-wonder did he mean just this. We grow away from or
-never learn the simple things. I remember my grandfather’s
-farm—the plowed fields, the green corn, the
-yellow wheat, the chickens in the garden, the mice in the
-barn, the smell of hay, the smell of burning leaves, the
-smell of the rich brown earth.... Wansfell, not for
-years have I remembered them. Something about you, the
-way you worked over that bread, like a nice old country
-lady, made me remember.... Oh, I wonder what I have
-missed!”</p>
-
-<p>“We all miss something. It can’t be helped. But there
-are compensations, and it’s never too late.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are a child, with all your bigness. You have the
-mind of a child.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s one of my few blessings.... Now you try
-your hand at mixing the second batch of dough.”</p>
-
-<p>She made a picture on her knees, with her sleeves rolled
-up, her beautiful hands white with flour, her face beginning
-to flush. Adam wanted to laugh at her absolute
-failure to mix dough, and at the same moment he had it in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-him to weep over the earnestness, the sadness, the pathetic
-meaning of her.</p>
-
-<p>Eventually they prepared the meal, and she carried
-Virey’s breakfast in to him. Then she returned to eat
-with Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall wash the dishes,” she announced.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he protested.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a clash. It ended with a compromise. And
-from that clash Adam realized he might dominate her in
-little things, but in a great conflict of wills she would be
-the stronger. It was a step in his own slow education.
-There was a constitutional difference between men and
-women.</p>
-
-<p>Upon Adam’s resumption of the work around the shack
-Mrs. Virey helped him as much as he would permit, which
-by midday was somewhat beyond her strength. Her face
-sunburned rosily and her hands showed the contact with
-dirt and her boots were dusty.</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t overdo it,” he advised. “Rest and sleep
-during the noon hours.”</p>
-
-<p>She retired within the shack and did not reappear till
-the middle of the afternoon. Meanwhile, Adam had
-worked at his tasks, trying at the same time to keep an
-eye on Virey, who wandered around aimlessly over the
-rock-strewn field, idling here and plodding there. Adam
-saw how Virey watched the shack; and when Magdalene
-came out again he saw her and grew as motionless as the
-stone where he leaned. Every thought of Virey’s must
-have been dominated by this woman’s presence, the meaning
-of her, the possibilities of her, the tragedy of her.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, how I slept!” she exclaimed. “Is it work that
-makes you sleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! I see my noble husband standing like Mephistopheles,
-smiling at grief.... What’s he doing over
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, unless it’s watching for you. He’s been
-around like that for hours.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-“Poor man!” she said, with both compassion and
-mockery. “Watching me? What loss of precious time—and
-so futile! It is a habit he contracted some years
-ago.... Wansfell, take me down to the opening in the
-mountain there, so that I can look into Death Valley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I ask Virey?” queried Adam, in slight uncertainty.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Let him watch or follow or do as he likes. I am
-here in Death Valley. It was his cherished plan to bury
-me here. I shall not leave until he takes me—which will
-be never. For the rest, he is nothing to me. We are as
-far apart as the poles.”</p>
-
-<p>On the way down the gentle slope Adam halted amid
-sun-blasted shrubs, scarcely recognizable as greasewood.
-Here he knelt in the gravel to pluck some flowers so tiny
-that only a trained eye could ever have espied them. One
-was a little pink flower with sage color and sage odor;
-another a white daisy, very frail, and without any visible
-leaves; and a third was a purple-red flower, half the size
-of the tiniest buttercup, and this had small dark-green
-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>“Flowers in Death Valley!” exclaimed Mrs. Virey, in
-utter amaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Flowers of a day! They sprang up yesterday;
-to-day they bloom, to-morrow they will die. I don’t know
-their names. To me their blossoming is one of the wonders
-of the desert. I think sometimes that it is a promise.
-A whole year the tiny seeds lie in the hot sands. Then
-comes a mysterious call and the green plant shoots its
-inch-long stalk to the sun. Another day beauty unfolds
-and there is fragrance on the desert air. Another day
-sees them whither and die.”</p>
-
-<p>“Beauty and fragrance indeed they have,” mused the
-woman. “Such tiny flowers to look and smell so sweet!
-I never saw their like. Flowers of a day!... They
-indeed give rise to thoughts too deep for tears!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam led his companion to the base of the mountain
-wall, and around the corner of the opening, so that they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-came suddenly and unexpectedly into full view of Death
-Valley. He did not look at her. He wanted to wait a
-little before doing that. The soft gasp which escaped
-her lips and the quick grasping of his hand were significant
-of the shock she sustained.</p>
-
-<p>Their position faced mostly down the valley. It seemed
-a vast level, gently sloping up to the borders where specks
-of mesquites dotted the sand. Dull gray and flat, these
-league-wide wastes of speckled sand bordered a dazzling-white
-sunlit belt, the winding bottom of the long bowl,
-the salty dead stream of Death Valley. Miles and miles
-below, two mountain ranges blended in a purple blaze, and
-endless slanting lines of slopes ran down to merge in the
-valley floor. The ranges sent down offshoots of mountains
-that slanted and lengthened into the valley. One bright-green
-oasis, that, lost in the vastness, was comparable to
-one of the tiny flowers Adam had plucked out of the sand,
-shone wonderfully and illusively out of the glare of gray
-and white. A dim, mystic scene!</p>
-
-<p>“O God!... It is my grave!” cried Magdalene Virey.</p>
-
-<p>“We all are destined for graves,” replied Adam, solemnly.
-“Could any grave elsewhere be so grand—so
-lonely—so peaceful?... Now let us walk out a little
-way, to the edge of that ridge, and sit there while the
-sun sets.”</p>
-
-<p>On this vantage point they were out some distance in
-the valley, so that they could see even the western end
-of the Panamint range, where a glaring sun had begun
-to change its color over the bold black peaks. A broad
-shadow lengthened across the valley and crept up the
-yellow foothills to the red Funeral Mountains. This
-shadow marvelously changed to purple, and as the radiance
-of light continued to shade, the purple deepened. Over
-all the valley at the western end appeared a haze the
-color of which was nameless. Adam felt the lessening
-heat of the sinking sun. Half that blaze was gone. It
-had been gold and was now silver. He swept his gaze
-around jealously, not to miss the transformations; and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-companion, silent and absorbed, instinctively turned with
-him. Across the valley the Funerals towered, ragged and
-sharp, with rosy crowns; and one, the only dome-shaped
-peak, showed its strata of gray and drab through the rose.
-Another peak, farther back, lifted a pink shaft into the
-blue sky. What a contrast to the lower hills and slopes,
-so beautifully pearl gray in tint! And now, almost the
-instant Adam had marked the exquisite colors, they began
-to fade. On that illimitable horizon line there were soon
-no bright tones left. Far to the south, peaks that had been
-dim now stood out clear and sharp against the sky. One,
-gold capped and radiant, shadowed as if a cloud had come
-between it and the sun. Adam turned again to the west,
-in time to see the last vestige of silver fire vanish. Sunset!</p>
-
-<p>A somber smoky sunset it was now, as if this Death
-Valley was the gateway of hell and its sinister shades were
-upflung from fire. Adam saw a vulture sail across the
-clear space of sky, breasting the wind. It lent life to the
-desolation.</p>
-
-<p>The desert day was done and the desert shades began
-to descend. The moment was tranquil and sad. It had
-little to do with the destiny of man—nothing except that
-by some inscrutable design of God or an accident of evolution
-man happened to be imprisoned where nature never
-intended man to be. Death Valley was only a ragged
-rent of the old earth, where men wandered wild, brooding,
-lost, or where others sought with folly and passion to dig
-forth golden treasure. The mysterious lights changed.
-A long pale radiance appeared over the western range
-and lengthened along its bold horizon. The only red color
-left was way to the south, and that shone dim. The air
-held a solemn stillness.</p>
-
-<p>“Magdalene Virey,” said Adam, “what you see there
-resembles death—it may be death—but it is peace. Does
-it not rest your troubled soul? A woman must be herself
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>She, whose words could pour out in such torrent of
-eloquence, was silent now. Adam looked at her then,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-into the shadowed eyes. What he saw there awed him.
-The abyss seen through those beautiful, unguarded
-windows of her soul was like the gray scored valley beneath,
-but lighting, quickening with thought, with hope,
-with life. Death Valley was a part of the earth dying,
-and it would become like a canyon on the burned-out moon;
-but this woman’s spirit seemed everlasting. If her soul
-had been a whited sepulcher, it was in the way of transfiguration.
-Adam experienced a singular exaltation in the
-moment, a gladness beyond his comprehension, a sense that
-the present strange communion there between this woman’s
-awakening and the terrible lessons of his life was creating
-for him a far-distant interest, baffling, but great in its
-inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>In the gathering twilight he led her back to camp, content
-that it seemed still impossible for her to speak. But
-the touch of her hand at parting was more eloquent than
-any words.</p>
-
-<p>Then alone, in his blankets, with gaze up at the inscrutable,
-promising stars, Adam gave himself over to insistent
-and crowding thoughts, back of which throbbed a dominating,
-divine hope in his power to save this woman’s life
-and soul, and perhaps even her happiness.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Next day Adam’s natural aggressiveness asserted itself,
-controlled now by an imperturbable spirit that nothing
-could daunt. He approached Virey relentlessly, though
-with kindness, even good nature, and he began to talk
-about Death Valley, the perilous nature of the camping
-spot, the blasting heat of midsummer and the horror of
-the midnight furnace winds, the possibility of the water
-drying up. Virey was cold, then impatient, then intolerant,
-and finally furious. First he was deaf to Adam’s persuasion,
-then he tried to get out of listening, then he
-repudiated all Adam had said, and finally he raved and
-cursed. Adam persisted in his arguments until Virey
-strode off.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Virey heard some of this clash. Apparently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-Adam’s idea of changing her husband amused her. But
-when Virey returned for supper he was glad enough to
-eat, and when Adam again launched his argument it appeared
-that Mrs. Virey lost the last little trace of mockery.
-She listened intently while Adam told her husband why he
-would have to take his wife away from Death Valley,
-before midsummer. Virey might as well have been stone
-deaf. It was not Virey, however, who interested the
-woman, but something about Adam that made her look
-and listen thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>Thus began a singular time for Adam, unmatched in
-all his desert experience. He gave his whole heart to the
-task of teaching Magdalene Virey and to the wearing down
-of Virey’s will. All the lighter tasks that his hands had
-learned he taught her. Then to climb to the heights, to
-pick the ledges for signs of gold or pan the sandy washes,
-to know the rocks and the few species of vegetation, to
-recognize the illusion of distance and color, to watch the
-sunsets and the stars became daily experiences. Hard as
-work was for her delicate hands and muscles, he urged
-her to their limit. During the first days she suffered
-sunburn, scalds, skinned fingers, bruised knees, and extreme
-fatigue. When she grew tanned and stronger he
-led her out on walks and climbs so hard that he had to
-help her back to camp. She learned the meaning of
-physical pain, and to endure it. She learned the blessing
-it was to eat when she was famished, to rest when she
-was utterly weary, to sleep when sleep was peace.</p>
-
-<p>Through these brief, full days Adam attacked Virey at
-every opportunity, which time came to be, at length, only
-during meals. Virey would leave camp, often to go up
-the slope of weathered rocks, a dangerous climb that
-manifestly fascinated him. Reaching a large rock that
-became his favorite place, he would perch there for long
-hours, watching, gazing down like a vulture waiting for
-time to strike its prey. All about him seemed to suggest
-a brooding wait. He slept during the midday hours and
-through the long nights. At dusk, which was usually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-bedtime for all, Adam often heard him talking to Mrs.
-Virey in a low, hard, passionate voice. Sometimes her
-melodious tones, with the mockery always present when
-she spoke to her husband, thrilled Adam, while at the same
-moment it filled him with despair. But Adam never despaired
-of driving Virey to leave the valley. The man was
-weak in all ways except that side which pertained to
-revenge. Notwithstanding the real and growing obstacle
-of this passion, Adam clung to his conviction that in the
-end Virey would collapse. When, however, one day the
-Indians came, and Virey sent them away with a large
-order for supplies, Adam gave vent to a grim thought,
-“Well, I can always kill him.”</p>
-
-<p>All the disgust and loathing Adam felt for this waster
-of life vanished in the presence of Magdalene Virey. If
-that long-passed sunset hour over Death Valley had awakened
-the woman, what had been the transformation of
-the weeks? Adam had no thoughts that adequately expressed
-his feeling for the change in her. It gave him
-further reverence for desert sun and heat and thirst and
-violence and solitude. It gave him strange new insight
-into the mystery of life. Was any healing of disease or
-agony impossible—any change of spirit—any renewal of
-life? Nothing in relation to human life was impossible.
-Magnificently the desert magnified and multiplied time,
-thought, effort, pain, health, hope—all that could be felt.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Adam that through the physical relation
-to the desert he was changing Magdalene Virey’s body and
-heart and soul. Brown her face and hands had grown;
-and slowly the graceful, thin lines of her slender body
-had begun to round out. She was gaining. If it had not
-been for her shadowed eyes, and the permanent sadness
-and mockery in the beautiful lips, she would have been like
-a girl of eighteen. Her voice, too, with its contralto richness,
-its mellow depth, its subtle shades of tone, proclaimed
-the woman. Adam at first had imagined her to be about
-thirty years old, but as time passed by, and she grew
-younger with renewed strength, he changed his mind.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-Looking at her to guess her age was like looking at the
-desert illusions. Absolute certainty he had, however, of
-the reward and result of her inflexible will, of splendid
-spirit, of sincere gladness. She had endured physical toil
-and pain to the limit of her frail strength, until she was
-no longer frail. This spirit revived what had probably
-been early childish love of natural things; and action and
-knowledge developed it until her heart was wholly absorbed
-in all that it was possible to do there in that lonesome
-fastness. With the genius and intuition of a woman
-she had grasped at the one solace left her—the possibility
-of learning Adam’s lesson of the desert. What had taken
-him years to acquire she learned from him or divined
-in days. She had a wonderful mind.</p>
-
-<p>Once, while they were resting upon a promontory that
-overhung the valley, Adam spoke to her. She did not
-hear him. Her eyes reflected the wonder and immensity
-of the waste beneath her. Indeed, she did not appear to
-be brooding or thinking. And when he spoke again,
-breaking in upon her abstraction, she was startled. He
-forgot what he had intended to say, substituting a query as
-to her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“How strange!” she murmured. “I didn’t have a
-thought. I forgot where I was. Your voice seemed to
-come from far off.”</p>
-
-<p>“I spoke to you before, but you didn’t hear,” said Adam.
-“You looked sort of, well—watchful, I’d call it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Watchful? Yes, I was. I feel I was, but I don’t
-remember. This is indeed a strange state for Magdalene
-Virey. It behooves her to cultivate it. But what kind
-of a state was it?... Wansfell, could it have been
-happiness?”</p>
-
-<p>She asked that in a whisper, serious, and with pathos,
-yet with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s always happiness for me to watch from the heights.
-Surely you are finding happy moments?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, many, thanks to you, my friend. But they are
-conscious happy moments, just sheer joy of movement,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-or sight of beauty, or a thrill of hope, or perhaps a vague
-dream of old, far-off, unhappy things. And it <em>is</em> happiness
-to remember them.... But this was different.
-It was unconscious. I tell you, Wansfell, I did not have
-a thought in my mind! I saw—I watched. Oh, how
-illusive it is!”</p>
-
-<p>“Try to recall it,” he suggested, much interested.</p>
-
-<p>“I try—I try,” she said, presently, “but the spell is
-broken.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, let me put a thought into your mind,” went
-on Adam. “Dismukes and I once had a long talk about
-the desert. Why does it fascinate all men? What is the
-secret? Dismukes didn’t rate himself high as a thinker.
-But he is a thinker. He knows the desert. To me he’s
-great. And he and I agreed that the commonly accepted
-idea of the desert’s lure is wrong. Men seek gold, solitude,
-forgetfulness. Some wander for the love of wandering.
-Others seek to hide from the world. Criminals are
-driven to the desert. Besides these, all travelers crossing
-the desert talk of its enchantments. They all have different
-reasons. Loneliness, peace, silence, beauty, wonder, sublimity—a
-thousand reasons! Indeed, they are all proofs
-of the strange call of the desert. But these men do not
-go deep enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you solved the secret?” she asked, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not yet,” he replied, a little sadly. “It eludes me.
-It’s like finding the water of the mirage.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like the secret of a woman’s heart, Wansfell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then if that is so—tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! no woman ever tells that secret.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you come to love the desert?”</p>
-
-<p>“You ask me that often,” she replied, in perplexity. “I
-don’t know. I—I reverence—I fear—I thrill. But love—I
-can’t say that I love the desert. Not yet. Love comes
-slowly and seldom to me. I loved my mother.... Once
-I loved a horse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you loved men?” he queried.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” she flashed, in sudden passion, and her eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-burned dark on his. “Do <em>you</em> imagine that of me?... I
-was eighteen when I—when they married me to Virey. I
-despised him. I learned to loathe him.... Wansfell, I
-never really loved any man. Once I was mad—driven!”</p>
-
-<p>How easily could Adam strike the chords of her emotion
-and rouse her to impassioned speech! His power to do
-this haunted him, and sometimes he could not resist it
-until wistfulness or trouble in her eyes made him ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>“Some day I’ll tell you how <em>I</em> was driven once—ruined,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Ruined! You? Why, Wansfell, you are a man!
-Sometimes I think you’re a god of the desert!... But
-tell me—what ruined you, as you mean it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, not now. I’m interested in your—what is it?—your
-lack of power to love.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lack! How little you know me! I am <em>all</em> power to
-love. I am a quivering mass of exquisitely delicate, sensitive
-nerves. I am a seething torrent, of hot blood. I
-am an empty heart, deep and terrible as this valley, hungry
-for love as it is hungry for precious rain or dew. I am an
-illimitable emotion, heaving like the tides of the sea.
-I am all love.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I—only a stupid blunderer,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“You use a knife relentlessly, sometimes.... Wansfell,
-listen.... I have a child—a lovely girl. She is
-fourteen years old—the sweetest.... Ah! Before she
-was born I did not love her—I did not <em>want</em> her. But
-afterward!... Wansfell, a mother’s love is divine. But
-I had more than that. All—all my heart went out to
-Ruth.... <em>Love!</em> Oh, my God! does any man know the
-torture of love?... Oh, <em>I</em> know! I had to leave her—I
-had to give her up ... and I’ll never—never see—her—again!”</p>
-
-<p>The woman bowed with hands to her face and all her
-slender body shook.</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me!” whispered Adam, huskily, in distress.
-It was all he could say for a moment. She had stunned
-him. Never had he imagined her as a mother. “Yet—yet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-I’m glad I know now. You should have told me. I am
-your friend. I’ve tried to be a—a brother. Tell me,
-Magdalene. You’ll be the—the less troubled. I will help
-you. I think I understand—just a little. You seemed to
-me only a very young woman—and you’re a mother!
-Always I say I’ll never be surprised again. Why, the
-future is all surprise!... And your little girl’s name is
-Ruth? Ruth Virey. What a pretty name!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam had rambled on, full of contrition, hating himself,
-trying somehow to convey sympathy. Perhaps his words,
-his touch on her bowed shoulder, helped her somewhat,
-for presently she sat up, flung back her hair, and turned
-a tear-stained face to him. How changed, how softened,
-how beautiful! Slowly her eyes were veiling an emotion,
-a glimpse of which uplifted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, I’m thirty-eight years old,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“No! I can’t believe that!” he ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well! I guess I’ll go back to figuring the desert.
-But speaking of age—you guess mine. I’ll bet you can’t
-come any nearer to mine.”</p>
-
-<p>Gravely she studied him, and in the look and action
-once more grew composed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a masculine Sphinx. Those terrible lines from
-cheek to jaw—they speak of agony, but not of age. But
-you’re gray at the temples. Wansfell, you are thirty-seven—perhaps
-forty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Magdalene Virey!” cried Adam, aghast. “Do I look
-so old? Alas for vanished youth!... I am only
-twenty-six.”</p>
-
-<p>It was her turn to be amazed. “We had better confine
-ourselves to other riddles than love and age. They are
-treacherous.... Come, let us be going.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> hour came when Magdalene Virey stirred Adam
-to his depths.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell,” she said, with a rare and wonderful tremor
-in her voice, “I love the silence, the loneliness, the serenity—even
-the tragedy of this valley of shadows. Ah! It is
-one place that will never be popular with men—where few
-women will ever come. Nature has set it apart for
-wanderers of the wastelands, men like you, unquenchable
-souls who endure, as you said, to fight, to strive, to seek,
-to find.... And surely for lost souls like me! Most
-men and all women must find death here, if they stay.
-But there is death in life. I’ve faced my soul here, in the
-black, lonely watches of the desert nights. And I would
-endure any agony to change that soul, to make it as high
-and clear and noble as the white cone of the mountain
-yonder.”</p>
-
-<p>Mysterious and inscrutable, the desert influence had
-worked upon Magdalene Virey. On the other hand, forces
-destructive to her physical being had attacked her. It was
-as if an invisible withering wind had blown upon a flower
-in the night. Adam saw this with distress. But she
-laughed at the truth of it—laughed without mockery.
-Something triumphant rang like a bell in her laugh. Always,
-in the subtlety of character she had brought with
-her and the mystery she had absorbed from the desert,
-she stayed beyond Adam’s understanding. It seemed that
-she liked to listen to his ceaseless importunities; but merciless
-to herself and aloof from Virey, she refused to leave
-Death Valley.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose I pack the burros and tuck you under my arm
-and take you, anyway?” he queried, stubbornly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-“I fancy I’d like you to tuck me under your arm,” she
-replied, with the low laugh that came readily now, “but
-if you did—it would be as far as you’d get.”</p>
-
-<p>“How so?” he demanded, curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I’d exercise the prerogative of the eternal feminine
-and command that time should stand still right
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>A sweetness and charm, perhaps of other days, a memory
-of power, haunted face and voice then.</p>
-
-<p>“Time—stand still?” echoed Adam, ponderingly. “Magdalene,
-you are beyond me.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it seems. I’m a little beyond myself sometimes.
-You will never see in me the woman who has been courted,
-loved, spoiled by men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I grasp that, I guess. But I don’t care to see you
-as such a woman. I might <span class="locked">not——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you might not respect me,” she interrupted.
-“Alas!... But, Wansfell, if I had met <em>you</em> when I was
-eighteen I would never have been courted and loved and
-ruined by men.... You don’t grasp that, either.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam had long ceased to curse his density. The simplicity
-of him antagonized her complexity. His had been
-the blessed victory over her bitterness, her mockery, her
-consciousness of despair. His had been the gladness of
-seeing her grow brown and strong and well, until these
-early June days had begun to weaken her. That fact had
-augmented his earnestness to get her to leave the valley.
-But she was adamant. And all his importunities and arguments
-and threats she parried with some subtle femininity
-of action or look or speech that left him bewildered.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The time came when only early in the mornings or late
-in the afternoons could they walk to their accustomed seat
-near the gateway of the valley and climb to the promontories.
-Nature moved on remorselessly with her seasons,
-and the sun had begun to assume its fiery authority during
-most of the daylight hours.</p>
-
-<p>One morning before sunrise they climbed, much against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-Adam’s advice, to a high point where Mrs. Virey loved to
-face the east at that hour. It was a hard climb, too hard
-for her to attempt in the heat and oppression that had
-come of late. Nevertheless, she prevailed upon Adam to
-take her, and she had just about strength enough to get
-there.</p>
-
-<p>They saw the east luminous and rosy, ethereal and
-beautiful, momentarily brightening with a rayed effulgence
-that spread from a golden center behind the dark bold
-domes of the Funeral Mountains. They saw the sun
-rise and change the luminous dawn to lurid day. One
-moment, and the beauty, the glory, the promise were as
-if they had never been. The light over Death Valley at
-that height was too fierce for the gaze of man.</p>
-
-<p>On the way down, at a narrow ledge, where loose stones
-made precarious footing, Adam cautioned his companion
-and offered to help her. Waving him on, she followed him
-with her lithe free step. Then she slipped off the more
-solid trail to a little declivity of loose rocks that began
-to slide with her toward a slope where, if she went over
-it, she must meet serious injury. She did not scream.
-Adam plunged after her and, reaching her with a long
-arm just as she was about to fall, he swung her up as
-if she had only the weight of a child. Then, holding
-her in his arms, he essayed to wade out of the little
-stream of sliding rocks. It was difficult only because he
-feared he might slip and fall with her. Presently he
-reached the solid ledge and was about to set her upon
-her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Time—stand still here!” she exclaimed, her voice full
-of the old mockery of herself, with an added regret for
-what might have been, but could never be, with pathos,
-with the eternal charm of woman who could never separate
-her personality, her consciousness of her sex, from
-their old relation to man.</p>
-
-<p>Adam halted his action as if suddenly chained, and he
-gazed down upon her, where she rested with her head on
-the bend of his left elbow. There was a smile on the brown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-face that had once been so pale. Her large eyes, wide
-open, exposed to the sky, seemed to reflect its dark blue
-color and something of its mystery of light. Adam saw
-wonder there, and reverence that must have been for him,
-but seemed incredible, and the shading of unutterable
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“Put me down,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you say, ‘Time—stand still here’?” he asked,
-as he placed her upon her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember the time when I told you how words
-and lines and verses of the poets I used to love come to
-mind so vividly out here? Sometimes I speak them, that
-is all.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand. All I ever read has come back to me
-here on the desert, as clear as the print on the page—seen
-so many years ago. I used to hate Sunday school when
-I was a boy. But now, often, words of the Bible come
-before my mind.... But are you telling me the whole
-truth? Why did you say, ‘Time—stand still here,’ when
-I held you in my arms?”</p>
-
-<p>“What a boy you are!” she murmured, and her eyes
-held a gladness for the sight of him. “Confess, now,
-wouldn’t that moment have been a beautiful one for time
-to stop—for life to stand still—for the world to be naught—for
-thought and memory to cease?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it would,” he replied, “but no more beautiful than
-this moment while you stand there so. When you look
-like that you make me hope.”</p>
-
-<p>“For what?” she queried, softly.</p>
-
-<p>“For you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, you are the only man I’ve ever known who
-could have held me in his arms and have been blind and
-dead to the nature of a woman.... Listen. You’ve done
-me the honor to say I have splendid thoughts and noble
-emotions. I hope I have. I know you have inspired
-many. I know this valley of death has changed my soul....
-But, Wansfell, I am a woman, and a woman is more
-than her high and lofty thoughts—her wandering inspirations.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-A woman is a creature of feeling, somehow
-doomed.... When I said, ‘Time—stand still here,’ I
-was false to the woman in me that you idealize. A
-thousand thoughts, emotions, memories, desires, sorrows,
-vanities prompted the words of which you have made me
-ashamed. But to spare myself a little, let me say that
-it would indeed be beautiful for me to have you take
-me up into your arms—and then for time to stand still
-forever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that—so—you’d feel safe, protected,
-at rest?” he asked, with emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and infinitely more. Wansfell it is a woman’s
-fate that the only safe and happy and desired place for
-her this side of the grave is in the arms of the man she
-loves. A real man—with strength and gentleness—for her
-and her alone!... It is a terrible thing in women, the
-need to be loved. As a baby I had that need—as a girl—and
-as a woman it became a passion. Looking back now,
-through the revelation that has come to me here in this
-valley of silence—when thought is clairvoyant and all-pervading—I
-can see how the need of love, the passion
-to be loved, is the strongest instinct in any woman. It <em>is</em>
-an instinct. She can no more change it than she can
-change the shape of her hand. Poor fated women! Education,
-freedom, career may blind them to their real nature.
-But it is a man, the right man, that means life to a
-woman. Otherwise the best in her dies.... That instinct
-in me—for which I confess shame—has been unsatisfied
-despite all the men who have loved me. When you
-saved me—perhaps from injury—and took me into your
-arms, the instinct over which I have no control flashed
-up. While it lasted, until you looked at me, I wanted that
-moment to last forever. I wanted to be held that way—in
-your great, strong arms—until the last trumpet sounded.
-I wanted you to see only me, feel only me, hold only me,
-live for only me, love <em>me</em> beyond all else on earth and in
-heaven!”</p>
-
-<p>As she paused, her slender brown hands at her heaving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-breast, her eyes strained as if peering through obscurity
-at a distant light, Adam could only stare at her in helpless
-fascination. In such moods as this she taught him
-as much of the mystery of life as he had taught her of
-the nature of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>“Now the instinct is gone,” she continued. “Chilled
-by your aloofness! I am looking at it with intelligence.
-And, Wansfell, I’m filled with pity for women. I pity
-myself, despite the fact that my mind is free. I can control
-my acts, if not my instincts and emotions. I am bound.
-I am a woman. I am a she-creature. I am little different
-from the fierce she-cats, the she-lions—any of the she-animals
-that you’ve told me fight to survive down on your
-wild Colorado Desert.... That seems to me the sex,
-the fate, the doom of women. Ah! no wonder they fight
-for men—spit and hiss and squall and scratch and rend!
-It’s a sad thing, seen from a woman’s mind. That great
-mass of women who cannot reason about their instincts,
-or understand the springs of their emotions—they are
-the happier. Too much knowledge is bad for my sex.
-Perhaps we are wrongly educated. <em>I</em> am the happier for
-what you have taught me. I can see myself now with
-pity instead of loathing. I am not to blame for what
-life has made me. There are no wicked women. They
-must be loved or they are lost.... My friend, the
-divinity in human life is seen best in some lost woman
-like me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Magdalene Virey,” protested Adam, “I can’t follow
-you.... But to say <em>you</em> are a lost woman—that I won’t
-listen to.”</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>was</em> a lost woman,” interrupted Mrs. Virey, her voice
-rising out of the strong, sweet melody. “I had my pride,
-and I defied the husband whose heart I broke and whose
-life I ruined. I scorned the punishment, the exile he
-meted out to me. That was because I was thoroughbred.
-But all the same I was lost. Lost to happiness, to hope,
-to effort, to repentance, to spiritual uplift. Death Valley
-will be my tomb, but there will be resurrection for me....<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-It is you, Wansfell, you have been my salvation....
-<em>You</em> have the power. It has come from your
-strife and agony on the desert. It is beyond riches, beyond
-honor. It is the divine in you that seeks and finds
-the divine in unfortunates who cross your wandering
-trail.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam, rendered mute, could only offer his hand; and in
-silence he led her down the slope.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>That afternoon, near the close of the hot hours, Adam
-lay in the shade of the brush shelter he had erected near
-the Virey shack. He was absorbed in watching a tribe
-of red ants, and his posture was so unusual that it gave
-pause to Virey, who had come down from the slope. The
-man approached and curiously gazed at Adam, to see what
-he was doing.</p>
-
-<p>“Looking for grains of gold?” inquired Virey, with
-sarcasm. “I’ll lend you my magnifying glass.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m watching these red ants,” replied Adam, without
-looking up.</p>
-
-<p>Virey bent over and, having seen, he slowly straightened
-up.</p>
-
-<p>“Go to the ant, thou sluggard!” he ejaculated, and this
-time without sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>“Virey, I’m no sluggard,” returned Adam. “It’s you
-who are that. I’m a worker.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, I was not meaning you,” said Virey. “There
-are things I hate you for, but laziness is certainly not
-included in them.... I never worked in my life. I had
-money left me. It was a curse. I thought I could buy
-everything. I bought a wife—the big-eyed woman to
-whom you devote your services—and your attentions....
-And I bought for myself the sweetness of the deadly
-nightshade flower—a statue of marble, chiseled in the
-beautiful curves of mocking love—a woman of chain
-lightning and hate.... If I had lived by industry, as
-live those red ants you’re watching, I might not now have
-one foot in my grave in Death Valley.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-Thus there were rare instances when Virey appeared a
-man with the human virtues of regret, of comprehension,
-of intolerance, but never a word issued from his lips that
-was not tinged with bitterness. Had the divinity in him
-been blasted forever? Or was it a submerged spark
-that could quicken only to a touch of the woman lost to
-him? Adam wondered. Sometimes a feeling of pity for
-Virey stole over him, but it never lasted long. Adam had
-more respect for these red ants than for some men, despite
-the alleged divinity. He abhorred the drones of life. The
-desert taught how useless were the idlers—how nature
-ruthlessly cut them off.</p>
-
-<p>The red ants had a hill some few paces from the shelter
-where Adam lay. One train of ants, empty handed, as
-it were, traveled rapidly from the ant hill toward the camp
-litter; and another train staggered under tremendous
-burdens in the other direction. At first Adam thought
-these last were carrying bits of bread, then he thought
-they were carrying grains of gravel, and then he discovered,
-by moving closer to watch, that they were carrying
-round black-and-white globules, several times as large
-as their own bodies. Presently he concluded that these
-round objects were ant eggs which the tribe was moving
-from one hill to another. It was exceedingly interesting
-to watch them. He recognized them as the species of
-desert ant that could bite almost as fiercely as a scorpion.
-Their labor was prodigious. The great difficulty appeared
-to be in keeping the eggs in their jaws. These burdens
-were continually falling out and rolling away. Some ants
-tried many times and in many ways to grasp the hard
-little globules. Then, when this was accomplished, came
-the work compared with which the labor of man seemed
-insignificant. After getting a start the loaded ants made
-fair progress over smooth, hard ground, but when they
-ran into a crust of earth or a pebble or a chip they began
-the toil of a giant. The ant never essayed to go round
-the obstacle. He surmounted it. He pushed and lifted
-and heaved, and sometimes backed over, dragging his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-precious burden behind him. Others would meet a little
-pitfall and, instead of circling it to get to the ant hill,
-they would roll down, over and over, with their eggs, until
-they reached the bottom. Then it was uphill work on the
-other side, indefatigible, ceaseless, patient, wonderful.</p>
-
-<p>Adam presently had to forego his little sentiment about
-the toil of the ants over their eggs. The black-and-white
-globules were seeds of maize. On the night before, Adam’s
-burro Jennie had persisted around camp until he gave her
-the last of some maize left in one of his packs. Jennie
-had spilled generous quantities of the maize in the sand,
-and the ants were carrying home the seeds.</p>
-
-<p>How powerful they were! How endowed with tireless
-endurance and a persistence beyond human understanding!
-The thing that struck Adam so singularly was that these
-ants did not recognize defeat. They could not give up.
-Failure was a state unknown to their instincts. And so
-they performed marvelous feats. What was the spirit
-that actuated them? The mighty life of nature was infinitely
-strong in them. It was the same as the tenacity
-of the lichen that lived on the desert rocks, or the eyesight
-of the condor that could see its prey from the invisible
-heights of the sky, or the age-long destructive
-movements of the mountain tops wearing down to the
-valleys.</p>
-
-<p>When Adam got up from his pleasant task and meditation
-he was surprised to find Mrs. Virey standing near
-with eyes intent on him. Then it became incumbent upon
-him to show her the toils of the red ants. She watched
-them attentively for a while.</p>
-
-<p>“Wonderful little creatures!” she exclaimed. “So this
-watching is one of the secrets of your desert knowledge.
-Wansfell, I can’t compare these ants to men. They are
-far superior. They have order, purpose. They are passionless,
-perfect organizations to carry on their lives. They
-will work and live—the descendants of this very tribe of
-ants—long after the race of men has disappeared off the
-face of the earth.... But wonderful as they are, and interesting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-as are their labors, I’d prefer to watch you chop
-wood, or, better, to climb the slope with your giant stride.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>That night, some time late, Adam was awakened by a
-gale that swooped up through the gateway from the valley.
-It blew away the cool mountain air which had settled down
-from the heights. It was a warmer wind than any Adam
-had ever before experienced at night. It worried him.
-Forerunner, it must be, of the midnight furnace winds
-that had added to the fame of Death Valley! It brought
-a strange, low, hollow roar, unlike any other sound in
-nature. It was a voice. Adam harkened to the warning.
-On the morrow he would again talk to Virey. Soon it
-might be too late to save Magdalene Virey. She had
-obstructed his will. She would not leave without her
-husband. She had bidden Adam stay there in Death
-Valley to serve her, but she seemed to have placed her
-husband beyond Adam’s reach. The ferocity in Adam had
-never found itself in relation to Virey. Adam had persuaded
-and argued with the persistence of the toiling ant,
-but to work his way with Virey seemed to demand the
-swoop of the desert hawk.</p>
-
-<p>This strange warm wind, on its first occurrence during
-Adam’s stay in the valley, rose to a gale and then gradually
-subsided until it moaned away mournfully. Its advent
-had robbed Adam of sleep; its going seemed to leave a
-deader silence, fraught with the meaning of its visit.</p>
-
-<p>Adam could sleep no more. This silence belied the blinking
-of the stars. It disproved the solidarity of the universe.
-Nothing lived, except his soul, that seemingly had departed
-from his body in a dream, and now with his
-vague thoughts and vaguer feelings wandered over the
-wastelands, a phantom in the night. Silence of utter
-solitude—most intense, dead, dreaming, waiting, sepulcher-like,
-awful! Where was the rustle of the wings of the
-bats? The air moved soundlessly, and it seemed to have
-the substance of shadows. A dead solitude—a terrible
-silence! A man and the earth! The wide spaces, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-wild places of the earth as it was in the beginning! Here
-could be the last lesson to a thinking man—the last development
-of a man into savage or god.</p>
-
-<p>There! Was that a throb of his heart or a ring in his
-ear? Crack of a stone, faint, far away, high on the heights,
-a lonely sound making real the lonely night. It relieved
-Adam. The tension of him relaxed. And he listened,
-hopefully, longing to hear another break in the silence
-that would be so insupportable.</p>
-
-<p>As he listened, the desert moon, oval in shape, orange
-hued and weird, sailed over the black brow of the mountain
-and illumined the valley in a radiance that did not
-seem of land or sea. The darkness of midnight gave
-way to orange shadows, mustering and shading, stranger
-than the fantastic shapes of dreams.</p>
-
-<p>Another ring of rock on rock, and sharp rattle, and
-roll on roll, assured Adam that the weathering gods of
-the mountain were not daunted by the silence and the
-loneliness of Death Valley. They were working as ever.
-Their task was to level the mountain down to the level of
-the sea. The stern, immutable purpose seemed to vibrate
-in the ringing cracks and in the hollow reports. These
-sounds in their evenness and perfect rhythm and lonely
-tone established once more in Adam’s disturbed consciousness
-the nature of the place. Death Valley! The rolling
-of rocks dispelled phantasms.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a low, grating roar. The avalanche of endless
-broken rocks had slipped an inch. It left an ominous
-silence. Adam stirred restlessly in his blankets. There
-was a woman in the lee of that tremendous sliding slope—a
-woman of delicate frame, of magnificent spirit, of a
-heart of living flame. Every hour she slept or lay wide
-eyed in the path of that impending cataclysm was one of
-exceeding peril. Adam chafed under the invisible bonds
-of her will. Because she chose to lie there, fearless, beyond
-the mind of man to comprehend, was that any reason
-why he should let her perish? Adam vowed that he
-would end this dread situation before another nightfall.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-Yet when he thought of Magdalene Virey his heart contracted.
-Only through the fierce spirit of the desert could
-he defy her and beat down the jailer who chained her
-there. But that fierce spirit of his seemed obstructed by
-hers, an aloof thing, greater than ferocity, beyond physical
-life.</p>
-
-<p>And so Adam lay sleepless, listening to the lonely fall
-of sliding rocks, the rattle and clash, and then the hollow
-settling. Then he listened to the silence.</p>
-
-<p>It was broken by a different note, louder, harsher—the
-rattle and bang of a stone displaced and falling from a
-momentum other than its own. It did not settle. Heavy
-and large, it cracked down to thud into the sand and bump
-out through the brush. Scarcely had it quieted when another
-was set in motion, and it brought a low, sliding
-crash of many small rocks. Adam sat up, turning his
-ear toward the slope. Another large stone banged down
-to the sands. Adam heard the whiz of it, evidently
-hurtling through the air between his camp and the Vireys’.
-If that stone had struck their shack!</p>
-
-<p>Adam got up and, pulling on his boots, walked out a
-little way from his camp. What an opaque orange gloom!
-Nevertheless, it had radiance. He could see almost as well
-as when the full moon soared in silver effulgence. More
-cracking and rolling of little rocks, and then the dislodgment
-of a heavy one, convinced Adam that a burro
-was climbing the slope or a panther had come down to
-prowl around camp. At any rate the displacement of
-stones jarred unnaturally on Adam’s sensitive ear.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrying across to the Virey shack, he approached the
-side farther from the slope and called through the brush
-wall, “Mrs. Virey!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. What do you want, Wansfell?” she replied,
-instantly. She had been wide awake.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you heard the sliding rocks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I have! All through that strange roar of
-wind—and later.”</p>
-
-<p>“You and Virey better get up and take your blankets<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-out a ways, where you will not be in danger. I think there’s
-a burro or a panther up on the slope. You know how
-loose the stones are—how at the slightest touch they come
-sliding and rolling. I’ll go up and scare the beast away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, you’re wrong,” came the reply, with that old
-mockery which always hurt Adam. “You should not insult
-a burro—not to speak of a panther.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” queried Adam, blankly.</p>
-
-<p>“It is another kind of an animal.”</p>
-
-<p>But for that subtle mockery of voice Adam would have
-been persuaded the woman was out of her head, or at
-least answering him in her sleep.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Virey, <span class="locked">please——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, it’s a sneaking coyote,” she called, piercingly,
-and then she actually uttered a low laugh.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was absolutely dumfounded. “Coyote!” he
-ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It’s my husband. It’s Virey. He found out the
-rolling rocks frightened me at night. So he climbs up
-there and rolls them.... Sees how close he can come to
-hitting the shack!... Oh, he’s done that often!”</p>
-
-<p>An instant Adam leaned there with his head bent to the
-brush wall, as if turned to stone. Then like a man stung he
-leaped up and bounded round the shack toward the slope.</p>
-
-<p>In the orange radiance on that strange, moon-blanched
-slope he dimly saw a moving object. It stood upright.
-Indeed, no burro or panther! Adam drew a deep and
-mighty breath for the yell that must jar the very stones
-from their sockets.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Hyar!</span>” he yelled in stentorian roar. Like thunder
-the great sound pealed up the slope. “<span class="smcap">Come down or I’ll
-wring your neck!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>Only the clapping, rolling, immeasurable echoes answered
-him. The last hollow clap and roll died away,
-leaving the silence deader than before.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam spent the remainder of that night pacing to and
-fro in the orange-hued shadows, fighting the fierce, grim<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-violence that at last had burst its barrier. Adam could
-have wrung the life out of this Virey with less compunction
-than he would have in stamping on the head of a
-venomous reptile. Yet it was as if a spirit kept in the
-shadow of his form, as he strode the bare shingle, gazing
-up at the solemn black mountains and at the wan
-stars.</p>
-
-<p>Adam went down to the gateway between the huge
-walls. A light was kindling over the far-away Funeral
-range, and soon a glorious star swept up, as if by magic,
-above the dark rim of the world. The morning star
-shining down into Death Valley! No dream—no illusion—no
-desert mirage! Like the Star of Bethlehem beckoning
-the Wise Men to the East, it seemed to blaze a radiant
-path for Adam down across the valley of dim, mystic
-shadows. What could be the meaning of such a wonderful
-light? Was that blue-white lilac-haloed star only another
-earth upon which the sun was shining? Adam lifted
-his drawn face to its light and wrestled with the baser
-side of his nature. He seemed to be dominated by the
-spirit that kept close to his side. Magdalene Virey kept
-vigil with him on that lonely beat. It was her agony which
-swayed and wore down his elemental passion. Would not
-he fail her if he killed this man? Virey’s brutality seemed
-not the great question at issue for him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll not kill him—yet!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Adam eased the terrible contention within him.</p>
-
-<p>When he returned to camp the sun had risen red and
-hot, with a thin, leaden haze dulling its brightness. No
-wind stirred. Not a sound broke the stillness. Magdalene
-Virey sat on the stone bench under the brush shelter, waiting
-for him. She rose as he drew near. Never had he
-seen her like this, smiling a welcome that was as true as
-her presence, yet facing him with darkened eyes and
-tremulous lips and fear. Adam read her. Not fear of
-him, but of what he might do!</p>
-
-<p>“Is Virey back yet?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He just returned. He’s inside—going to sleep.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-“I want to see him—to get something off my mind,”
-said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait—Adam!” she cried, and reached for him as he
-wheeled to go toward the shack.</p>
-
-<p>One glance at her brought Adam to a standstill, and
-then to a slow settling down upon the stone seat, where
-he bowed his head. Life had held few more poignant
-moments than this, in his pity for others. Yet he thrilled
-with admiration for this woman. She came close to him,
-leaned against him, and the quiver of her body showed she
-needed the support. She put a shaking hand on his
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“My friend—brother,” she whispered, “if you kill him—it
-will undo—all the good you’ve done—for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You told me once that the grandest act of a man was
-to fight for the happiness—the life of a woman,” he
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>“True! And haven’t you fought for my happiness, and
-my life, too? I would have died long ago. As for happiness—it
-has come out of my fight, my work, my effort
-to meet you on your heights—more happiness than I deserve—than
-I ever hoped to attain.... But if you kill
-Virey—all will have been in vain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Because it is I who ruined him,” she replied, in low,
-deep voice, significant of the force behind it. “As men
-go in the world he was a gentleman, a man of affairs,
-happy and carefree. When he met me his life changed.
-He worshiped me. It was not his fault that I could not
-love him. I hated him because they forced me to marry
-him. For years he idolized me.... Then—then came the
-shock—his despair, his agony. It made him mad. There
-is a very thin line between great love and great hate.”</p>
-
-<p>“What—what ruined him?” demanded Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Adam, it will be harder to confess than any other
-ordeal of my whole life. Because—because <em>you</em> are the
-one man I should have met years ago.... Do you understand?
-And I—who yearn for your respect—for your—Oh,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-spare me!... I who need your faith—your strange,
-incomprehensible faith in me—I, who hug to my hungry
-bosom the beautiful hopes you have in me—I must confess
-my shame to save my husband’s worthless life.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’ll not have you—you humiliating yourself to
-save him anything. I give my word. I’ll never kill Virey
-unless he harms you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! But he has harmed me. He has struck me....
-Wansfell! don’t leap like that. Listen. Virey will harm
-me, sooner or later. He is obsessed with his one idea—to
-see me suffer. That is why he has let you and me wander
-around together so much. He hoped in his narrow soul
-to see you come to love me, and me to love you—so
-through that I should fall <em>again</em>—to suffer more anguish—to
-offer more meat for his hellish revenge.... But, lo!
-I am uplifted—forever beyond his reach—never to be rent
-by his fiendish glee ... unless you kill him—which would
-stain my hands with his blood—bring back the doom of
-soul from which you rescued me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Magdalene, I swear I’ll never kill Virey unless he kills
-you,” declared Adam, as if forced beyond endurance.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I ask no more!” she whispered, in passionate gratitude.
-“My God! how I feared you—yet somehow gloried
-in your look!... And now listen, friend, brother—man
-who should have been my lover—I hurry to my abasement.
-I kill the she-thing in me and go on to my atonement. I
-fight the instincts of a woman. I sacrifice a possible paradise,
-for I am young and life is sweet.”</p>
-
-<p>She circled his head with her arm and drew it against
-her heaving breast. The throbs of that tortured heart
-beat, beat, beat all through Adam’s blood, to the core of
-his body.</p>
-
-<p>“My daughter Ruth was not Virey’s child,” she went
-on, her voice low, yet clear as a bell. “I was only nineteen—a fool—mad—driven.
-I thought I was in love, but it
-was only one of those insane spells that so often ruin
-women.... For years I kept the secret. Then I could
-not keep it any longer. At the height of Virey’s goodness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-to me, and his adoration, and his wonderful love for Ruth,
-I told him the truth. I <em>had</em> to tell it.... That killed his
-soul. He lived only to make me suffer. The sword he
-held over my head was the threat to tell my secret to Ruth.
-I could not bear that. A thousand deaths would have
-been preferable to that.... So in the frenzy of our
-trouble we started west for the desert. My father and
-Ruth followed us—caught up with us at Sacramento.
-Virey hated Ruth as passionately as he had loved her. I
-dared not risk him near her in one of his terrible moods.
-So I sent Ruth away with my father, somewhere to
-southern California. She did not know it was parting
-forever. But, O God in heaven—how I knew it!...
-Then, in my desperation, I dared Virey to do his worst. I
-had ruined him and I would pay to the last drop of blood
-in my bitter heart. We came to Death Valley, as I told
-you, because the terror and desolation seemed to Virey
-to be as close to a hell on earth as he could find to hide
-me. Here he began indeed to make me suffer—dirt and
-vermin and thirst and hunger and pain! Oh! the horror
-of it all comes back to me!... But even Death Valley
-cheated him. You came, Wansfell, and now—at last—I
-believe in God!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam wrapped a long arm around her trembling body
-and held her close. At last she had confessed her secret.
-It called to the unplumbed depths of him. And the cry
-in his heart was for the endless agony of woman. And
-it was a bitter cry of doubt. If Magdalene Virey had
-at last found faith in God, it was more than Adam had
-found, though she called him the instrument of her salvation.
-A fierce and terrible rage flamed in him for the
-ruin of her. Like a lion he longed to rise up to slay.
-Blood and death were the elements that equalized wrong.
-Yet through his helpless fury whispered a still voice into
-his consciousness—she had been miserable and now she
-was at peace; she had been lost and now she was saved.
-He could not get around that. His desert passion halted
-there. He must go on alone into the waste places and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-ponder over the wonder of this woman and what had
-transformed her. He must remember her soul-moving
-words and, away somewhere in the solitude and silence,
-learn if the love she intimated was a terrible truth. It
-could not be true now, yet the shaking of her slender
-form communicated itself to his, and there was inward
-tumult, strange, new, a convulsive birth of a sensation
-dead these many years—dead since that dusky-eyed Margarita
-Arallanes had tilted her black head to say, “Ah,
-so long ago and far away!”</p>
-
-<p>Memory surged up in Adam, moving him to speak
-aloud his own deeply hidden secret, by the revelation of
-which he might share the shame and remorse and agony
-of Magdalene Virey.</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you my story,” he said, and the words were
-as cruel blades at the closed portals of his heart. Huskily
-he began, halting often, breathing hard, while the clammy
-sweat beaded upon his brow. What was this life—these
-years that deceived with forgetfulness? His trouble was
-there as keen as on the day it culminated. He told Magdalene
-of his boyhood, of his love for his brother Guerd,
-and of their life in the old home, where all, even friendships
-of the girls, was for Guerd and nothing for him.
-As he progressed, Magdalene Virey’s own agony was forgotten.
-The quiver of her body changed to strung intensity,
-the heaving of her bosom was no longer the long-drawn
-breath to relieve oppression. Remorselessly as she
-had bared her great secret, Adam confessed his little,
-tawdry, miserable romance—his wild response to the lure
-of a vain Mexican girl, and his fall, and the words that
-had disillusioned him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, so long ago and far away!” echoed Magdalene
-Virey, all the richness of her wonderful voice gathering
-in a might of woman’s fury. “Oh, such a thing for a girl
-to say!... And Adam—<em>she</em>, this Margarita, was the only
-woman you ever loved—ever knew that way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And she was the cause of your ruin?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-“Indeed she was, poor child!”</p>
-
-<p>“The damned hussy!” cried Magdalene, passionately.
-“And you—only eighteen years old? How I hate her!...
-And what of the man who won her fickle heart?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam bowed as a tree in a storm. “He—he was my
-brother.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh <em>no</em>!” she burst out. “The boy you loved—the
-<em>brother</em>! Oh, it can’t be true!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was true.... And, Magdalene—I killed him.”</p>
-
-<p>Then with a gasp she enveloped him, in a fierce, protective
-frenzy of tenderness, arms around him, pressing
-his face to her breast, hanging over him as a mother over
-her child.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my God! Oh, my God! How terrible!...
-Your <em>brother</em>!... And I thought my secret, my sin, my
-burden so terrible! Oh, my heart bleeds for you....
-Wansfell, poor unhappy wanderer!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">July! At</span> last the endlessly long, increasingly hot June
-days brought the leaden-hazed month of July, when
-no sane man ever attempted to cross Death Valley while
-the sun was high.</p>
-
-<p>In all hours, even in the darkness, the bold, rugged slopes
-of the Panamints reflected sinister shades of red. And
-the valley was one of gray swirling shadows and waving
-veils of heat like transparent smoke. Beyond that vast,
-strange, dim valley rose the drab and ocher slopes of the
-Funeral Mountains, sweeping up to the bronze battlements
-and on to the lilac and purple peaks blurred in the leaden-hued
-haze that obscured the sky. The sun was sky-broad,
-an illimitable flare, with a lurid white heart into which
-no man could look.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam was compelled to curtail his activities. He did
-not suffer greatly from the heat, but he felt its weakening
-power. Ever his blood seemed at fever heat. Early in the
-mornings and late in the evenings he prepared simple meals,
-which, as the days dragged on, were less and ever less
-partaken of by his companions and himself. During the
-midday hours, through the terrible heat, he lay in the
-shade, sweltering and oppressed, in a stupor of sleep. The
-nights were the only relief from the immense and merciless
-glare, the bearing down of invisible bars of red-hot iron.
-Most of these long hours of darkness Adam lay awake
-or walked in the gloom or sat in the awful stillness, waiting
-for he knew not what. But that he waited for something
-he knew with augmenting dread.</p>
-
-<p>When the full blast of this summer heat came, Virey
-changed physically and mentally. He grew thin. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-walked with bowed shoulders. His tongue protruded
-slightly and he always panted. Every day he ate less and
-slept less than on the day before. He obeyed no demands
-from Adam and took no precautions. His sufferings
-would have been less and his strength would have been
-greater had he refrained from exposing himself to the
-sun. But he reveled in proofs of the nature of Death
-Valley.</p>
-
-<p>And if Virey had ever worn a mask in front of Adam
-he now dropped it. Indeed he ignored Adam, no longer
-with scorn or indifference, but as if unaware of his presence.
-Whenever Adam wanted to be heard by Virey,
-which desire diminished daily, he had to block his path,
-confront him forcefully. Virey was given over wholly
-to his obsession. His hate possessed him body and soul.
-And if it had ever been a primitive hate to destroy, it
-had been restrained, and therefore rendered infinitely cruel,
-by the slow, measured process of thought, of premeditation.</p>
-
-<p>Often when Adam absented himself from camp, Virey
-had a trick of climbing the weathered slope to roll down
-rocks. He seemed mad to do this. Yet when Adam returned
-he would come clambering down, wet and spent,
-a haggard, sweating wretch not yet quite beyond fear. In
-vain had Adam argued, pleaded, talked with him; in vain
-had been the strident scorn of a man and the curses of
-rage. Virey, however, had a dread of Adam’s huge hands.
-Something about them fascinated him. When one of
-these, clenched in an enormous fist, was shoved under his
-nose with a last threat, then Virey would retire sullenly
-to the shack. In every way that was possible he kept before
-Magdalene Virey the spectacle of his ruin and the consciousness
-that it was her doing. These midsummer days
-soon made him a gaunt, unshaven, hollow-eyed wretch.
-Miserable and unkempt he presented himself at meals,
-and sat there, a haggard ghost, to mouth a little food and
-to stare at his wife with accusing eyes. He reminded her
-of cool, shaded rooms, of exquisite linen and china, of
-dainty morsels, of carved-glass pitchers full of refreshing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-drink and clinking ice. Always he kept before her the
-heat, the squalor, the dirt, the horror of Death Valley.
-When he could present himself before her with his thin,
-torn garments clinging wet to his emaciated body, his
-nerves gone from useless exertions, his hands bloody and
-shaking as if with palsy, his tongue hanging out—when he
-could surprise her thus and see her shrink, then he experienced
-rapture. He seemed to cry out: Woman! behold
-the wreck of Virey!</p>
-
-<p>But if that was rapture for him, to gloat over the doom
-of her seemed his glory. Day by day Death Valley
-wrought by invisible lines and shades a havoc in Magdalene
-Virey’s beauty. To look at her was to have striking proof
-that Death Valley had never been intended for a woman,
-no matter how magnificent her spirit. The only spirit
-that could prevail here was the one which had lost its
-earthly habiliments. Like a cat playing with a mouse,
-Virey watched his wife. Like Mephistopheles gloating
-over the soul of a lost woman, Virey attended to the slow
-manifestations of his wife’s failing strength. He meant
-to squeeze every drop of blood out of her heart and still
-keep, if possible, life lingering in her. His most terrible
-bitterness seemed to consist of his failure to hide her
-utterly and forever from the gaze of any man save himself.
-Here he had hidden her in the most desolate place
-in the world, yet another man had come, and, like all the
-others, had been ready to lay down his life for her. Virey
-writhed under this circumstance over which he had no
-control. It was really the only truth about the whole
-situation that he was able to grasp. The terrible tragedy
-of his hate was that it was not hate, but love. Like a
-cannibal, he would have eaten his wife raw, not from
-hunger, but from his passion to consume her, incorporate
-her heart and blood and flesh into his, make her body his
-forever. Thought of her soul, her mind, her spirit, never
-occurred to Virey. So he never realized how she escaped
-him, never understood her mocking scorn.</p>
-
-<p>But through his thick and heat-hazed brain there must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-have pierced some divination of his failing powers to
-torture her. The time came when he ceased to confront
-her like a scarecrow, he ceased accusing her, he ceased to
-hold before her the past and its contrast with the present,
-he gave up his refinement of cruelty. This marked in
-Virey a further change, a greater abasement. He reverted
-to instinct. He retrograded to a savage in his hate, and
-that hate found its outlet altogether in primitive ways.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s keen eye saw all this, and the slow boil in his
-blood was not all owing to the torrid heat of Death Valley.
-His great hands, so efficient and ruthless, seemed fettered.
-A thousand times he had muttered to the silence of the
-night, to the solemn, hazed daylight, to the rocks that had
-souls, and to the invisible presence ever beside him: “How
-long must I stand this? How long—how long?”</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon as he awoke late from the sweltering
-siesta he heard Mrs. Virey scream. The cry startled him,
-because she had never done that before. He ran.</p>
-
-<p>Adam found her lying at the foot of the stone bench in
-a dead faint. The brown had left her skin. How white
-the wasted face! What dark shadows under the hollow
-eyes! His heart smote him remorselessly.</p>
-
-<p>As he knelt and was about to lift her head he espied a
-huge, black, hairy spider crawling out of the folds of
-her gray gown. It was a tarantula, one of the ugliest of
-the species. Adam flipped it off with his hand and killed
-it under his boot.</p>
-
-<p>Then with basin of water and wetted scarf he essayed
-to bring Mrs. Virey back to consciousness. She did not
-come to quickly, but at last she stirred, and opened her
-eyes with a flutter. She seemed to be awakening from a
-nightmare of fear, loathing, and horror. For that instant
-her sight did not take in Adam, but was a dark, humid,
-dilated vision of memory.</p>
-
-<p>“Magdalene, I killed the tarantula,” said he. “It can’t
-harm you now.... Wake up! Why, you’re stiff and
-you look like—like I don’t know what!... You fainted
-and I’ve had a time bringing you to.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-“Oh!” she cried. “It’s you.” And then she clung to
-him while he lifted her, steadying her upon her feet, and
-placed her on the stone bench. “So I fainted?... Ugh!
-That loathsome spider! Where is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I covered it with sand,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Would it have—bitten me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Not unless you grasped it.”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly she recovered and, letting go of him, leaned back
-in the seat. Crystal beads of sweat stood out upon her
-white brow. Her hair was wet. Her sensitive lips
-quivered.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a perfect horror of mice, bugs, snakes, spiders—anything
-that crawls,” she said. “I can’t restrain it. I
-inherited it from my mother.... And what has mind got
-to do with most of a woman’s feelings? Virey has finally
-found that out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Virey!... What do you mean?” rejoined Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I was leaning back here on the bench when suddenly I
-heard Virey slipping up behind me. I knew he was up
-to something. But I wouldn’t turn to see what. Then
-with two sticks he held the tarantula out over me—almost
-in my face. I screamed. I seemed to freeze inside. He
-dropped the tarantula in my lap.... Then all went black.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where—is he now?” asked Adam, finding it difficult
-to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s in the shack.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam made a giant stride in that direction, only to be
-caught and detained by her clinging hands. Earnestly she
-gazed up at him, with melancholy, searching eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He uttered a loud laugh, mirthless, a mere explosion of
-surcharged breath. “No!... I can’t get angry. I can’t
-be a man any more. This Death Valley and the sun—and
-you—have worked on my mind.... But I’ll tell you
-what—nothing can stop me from beating Virey—so he’ll
-never do that again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!... So I’ve worked on your mind? Then it’s
-the only great deed I ever did.... Wansfell, I told you
-Virey has threatened to shoot you. He’s meant to more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-than once, but when you have come he has been afraid.
-But he might.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish to heaven he’d try it,” responded Adam, and,
-loosing the woman’s hold upon his hands, he strode toward
-the shack.</p>
-
-<p>“Virey, come out!” he called, loudly, though without
-any particular feeling. There was no reply, and he repeated
-the call, this time louder. Still Virey remained silent.
-Waiting a moment longer, Adam finally spoke again, with
-deliberate, cold voice. “Virey, I don’t want to mess up
-that room, with all your wife’s belongings in there. So
-come outside.”</p>
-
-<p>At that Adam heard a quick, panting breath. Then
-Virey appeared—came to the door of the shack. Adam
-could not have told what the man’s distorted face resembled.
-He carried a gun, and his heart was ferocious if his
-will was weak.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you—lay one of your—bloody hands on me,”
-he panted.</p>
-
-<p>Adam took two long strides and halted before Virey,
-not six feet distant.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ve got your little gun, eh?” he queried, without
-any particular force. Adam had been compelled to
-smother all that mighty passion within him, or he could
-not have answered for his actions. “What are you going
-to do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you make a—move at me—I’ll kill you,” came the
-husky, panting response.</p>
-
-<p>“Virey, I’m going to beat you within an inch of your
-worthless life,” declared Adam, monotonously, as if he had
-learned this speech by rote. “But I’ve got to talk first.
-I’m full of a million things to call you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn you, I’ll not listen,” replied Virey, beginning to
-shake with excitement. The idea of using the gun had
-become an intent and was acting powerfully upon him.
-“You leave my—camp—you get out—of this valley!”</p>
-
-<p>“Virey, are you crazy?” queried Adam. The use of his
-voice had changed that deadlock of his feelings. He must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-not trust himself to bandy speech with Virey. The beating
-must be administered quickly or there would be something
-worse. Yet how desperately hard not to try to
-awaken conscience or sense in this man!</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m not crazy,” yelled Virey.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’re not crazy, then that trick of throwing a
-tarantula on your wife was damnable—mean—hellish—monstrous....
-My God! man, can’t you see what a
-coward you are? To torture her—as if you were a
-heathen! That delicate woman—all quivering nerves!
-To pick on a weakness, like that of a child! Virey, if
-you’re not crazy you’re the worst brute I’ve ever met on
-the desert. You’ve sunk lower than men whom the desert
-has made beasts. <span class="locked">You——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Beast I am—thanks to my delicate wife,” cried Virey,
-with exceeding bitter passion. “Delicate? Ha-ha! The
-last lover of Magdalene Virey can’t see she’s strong as
-steel—alive as red fire! How she clings to memory! How
-she has nine lives of a cat—and hangs on to them—just to
-remember!... And you—meddler! You desert rat of
-a preacher! Get out—or I’ll kill you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shoot and be damned!” flashed Adam, as with leap
-as swift as his voice he reached a sweeping arm.</p>
-
-<p>Virey’s face turned ashen. He raised the gun. Adam
-knocked it up just as it exploded. The powder burned his
-forehead, but the bullet sped high. Another blow sent
-the gun flying to the sand. Then Adam, fastening a
-powerful grip on Virey, clutching shirt and collar and
-throat at once, dragged him before the stone bench where
-Mrs. Virey sat, wide eyed and pale. Here Adam tripped
-the man and threw him heavily upon the sand. Before he
-could rise Adam straddled him, bearing him down. Then
-Adam’s big right hand swept and dug in the sand to
-uncover the dead tarantula.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! here’s your spider!” he shouted. And he rubbed
-the hairy, half-crushed tarantula in Virey’s face. The
-man screamed and wrestled. “Good! you open your mouth.
-Now we’ll see.... Eat it—eat it, damn your cowardly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-soul!” Then Adam essayed to thrust the spider between
-Virey’s open lips. He succeeded only partly. Virey let
-out a strangling, spitting yell, then closed his teeth as a
-vise. Adam smeared what was left of the crushed tarantula
-all over Virey’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Now get up,” he ordered, and, rising himself, he kicked
-Virey. Adam, in the liberation of his emotions by action,
-was now safe from himself. He would not kill Virey. He
-could even hold in his enormous strength. He could even
-think of the joy of violence that was rioting inside him,
-of the ruthless fierceness with which he could have rent
-this man limb from limb.</p>
-
-<p>Virey, hissing and panting in a frenzy, scrambled to
-his feet. Fight was in him now. He leaped at Adam,
-only to meet a blow that laid him on the sand. It had
-not stunned him. Up he sprang, bloody, livid, and was
-at Adam again. His frenzy lent him strength and in that
-moment he had no fear of man or devil. The desert rage
-was on him. He swung his fists, beat wildly at Adam,
-tore and clawed. Adam slapped him with great broad
-hands that clapped like boards, and then, when Virey
-lunged close, he closed his fist and smashed it into Virey’s
-face. The man of the cities went plowing in the sand.
-Then on his hands and knees he crawled like a dog, and,
-finding a stone, he jumped up to fling it. Adam dodged
-the missile. Wildly Virey clutched for more, throwing
-one after another. Adam caught one and threw it back,
-to crack hard on his opponent’s shin. Virey yelled no
-more. His rage took complete possession of him. Grasping
-up a large rock, he held it as a mace and rushed upon
-Adam to brain him. That action and intent to kill was
-the only big response he had made to this wild environment.
-He beat at Adam. He lunged up to meet his foe’s
-lofty head. He had no fear. But he was mad. No
-dawning came to him that he was being toyed with.
-Strong and furious at the moment, he might have succeeded
-in killing a lesser man. But before Adam he was
-powerless to do murder. Then the time came when Adam<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-knocked the rock out of his hand and began to beat him,
-blow on blow to face and body, with violence, but with
-checked strength, so that Virey staggered here and there,
-upheld by fists. At last, whipped out of rage and power to
-retaliate, Virey fell to the sands. Adam dragged him into
-the shack and left him prostrate and moaning, an abject
-beaten wretch who realized his condition.</p>
-
-<p>Most difficult of all for Adam then was to face Mrs.
-Virey. Yet the instant he did he realized that his ignorance
-of women was infinite.</p>
-
-<p>“Did the bullet—when he fired—did it hit you?” she
-queried, her large eyes, intense and glowing, wonderfully
-dark with emotion, flashing over him.</p>
-
-<p>“No—it missed—me,” panted Adam, as with heavy
-breaths he sank upon the stone bench.</p>
-
-<p>“I picked up the gun. I was afraid he’d find it. You’d
-better keep it now,” she said, and slipped it into his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“What a—dis—gusting—sight for you—to have—to
-watch!” exclaimed Adam, trying to speak and breathe at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>“It was frightful—terrible at first,” she returned. “But
-after the gun went flying—and you had stopped trying to
-make him eat the—the spider—uggh! how sickening!...
-After that it got to be— Well, Wansfell, it was the
-first time in the years I’ve known my husband that I respected
-him. He meant to kill you. It amazed me. I
-admired him.... And as for you—to see you tower over
-him—and parry his blows—and hit him when you liked—and
-knock him and drag him—oh, that roused a terrible
-something in me! I never felt so before in my whole
-life. I was some other woman. I watched the blood flow,
-I heard the thuds and heavy breaths, I actually smelled
-the heat of you, I was so close—and it all inflamed me,
-made me strung with savage excitement—I had almost
-said joy.... God knows, Wansfell, we have hidden natures
-within our breasts.”</p>
-
-<p>“If only it’s a lesson to him!” sighed Adam.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-“Then it were well done,” she replied, “but I doubt—I
-doubt. Virey is hopeless. Let us forget.... And now
-will you please help me search in the sand here for something
-I dropped. It fell from my lap when I fainted, I
-suppose. It’s a small ivory case with a miniature I think
-all the world of. Last and best of my treasures!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam raked in the sand along the base of the bench,
-and presently found the lost treasure. How passionately,
-with what eloquent cry of rapture, did she clutch it!</p>
-
-<p>“Look!” she exclaimed, with wonderful thrill in her
-voice, and held the little case open before Adam’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He saw a miniature painting of a girl’s face, oval, pure
-as a flower, with beautiful curls of dark bronze, and
-magnificent eyes. In these last Adam recognized the
-mother of this girl. The look of them, the pride and fire,
-if not the color, were the same as Magdalene Virey’s.</p>
-
-<p>“A sweet and lovely face,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Ruth!” she whispered. “My daughter—my only child—my
-baby that I abandoned to save her happiness!...
-Oh, mockery of life that I was given such a heart to love—that
-I was given such a perfect child!”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The midsummer midnight furnace winds began to blow.</p>
-
-<p>They did not blow every night or many nights consecutively;
-otherwise all life in the valley would soon have
-become extinct. Adam found the hot winds heretofore,
-that he had imagined were those for which the valley was
-famed, were really comfortable compared with these terrible
-furnace blasts. In trying to understand their nature,
-Adam concluded they were caused by a displacement of
-higher currents of cool air. Sometime during the middle
-of the night there began a downward current of cool air
-from the mountain heights; and this caused a disturbance
-of the vast area of hot air in the burning valley below
-sea level. The tremendous pressure drove the hot air to
-find an outlet so it could rise to let the cool air down, and
-thus there came gusts and gales of furnace winds, rushing
-down the valley, roaring up the canyons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-The camp of the Vireys, almost in the center of one of
-these outlets and scarcely a quarter of a mile from the
-main valley, lay open to the full fury of these winds.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The 1st of August was a hazy, blistering day in which
-the valley smoked. Veils of transparent black heat—shrouds
-of moving white transparent heat! The mountains’
-tops were invisible, as if obscured in thin, leaden-hued fog;
-their bases showed dull, sinister red through the haze.
-Nothing moved except the strange veils and the terrible
-heaven-wide sun that seemed to have burst. It was a
-day when, if a man touched an unshaded stone with his
-naked hand, he would be burned as by a hot iron. A
-solemn, silent, sulphurous, smoky, deadly day, inimical to
-life!</p>
-
-<p>But at last the sunset of red hell ended that day and
-merciful darkness intervened. The fore part of the night
-was hot, yet endurable, and a relief compared to the sunlit
-hours. Adam marked, however, or imagined, a singular,
-ominous, reddish hue of the dim stars, a vast still
-veil between him and the sky, a waiting hush. He walked
-out into the open, peering through the dimness, trying to
-comprehend. The color of the stars and heavens, and of
-the dull black slopes, and of the night itself, seemed that
-of a world burned out. Immense, dim, mysterious, empty,
-desolate! Had this Death Valley finally unhinged his
-mind? But he convinced himself that it was normal.
-The unreality, the terror, the forbidding hush of all the
-elements, the imminence of catastrophe—these were all
-actually present. Anything could happen here. Exaggeration
-of sense was impossible. This Death Valley was
-only a niche of the universe and the universe only a part
-of the infinite. He felt his intelligence and emotion, and
-at the same time the conviction that only a step away
-was death. The old wonder arose—was death the end?
-Not possible! Yet the cruelty, the impassivity of nature,
-letting the iron consequences fall—this seemed to crush
-him. For the sake of a woman who suffered agony of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-body and mind, Adam was at war with nature and the
-spirit of creation. Why? The eternal query had no
-answer. It never would be answered.</p>
-
-<p>As the hours wore away the air grew hotter, denser.
-Like a blanket it seemed to lie heavily on Adam. It was
-the hottest, stillest, most oppressive, strangest night of
-all his desert experience. Sleep was impossible. Rest
-was impossible. Inaction was impossible. Every breath
-seemed impossible of fulfillment. A pressure constricted
-Adam’s lungs. The slow, gentle walk that he drove himself
-to take, which it was impossible to keep from taking,
-brought out a hot flood of sweat on his body, and the drops
-burned as they trickled down his flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“If the winds blow to-night!” he muttered, in irresistible
-dread.</p>
-
-<p>Something told him they would blow. To-night they
-would blow harder and hotter than ever before. The day
-of leaden fire had promised that. Nature had her midnight
-change to make in the elements. Time would not
-stand still. The universe prevailed on its inscrutable
-course; the planets burned; the suns blazed upon their
-earths; and this ball of rock on which Adam clung, groaning
-with the other pygmies of his kind, whirled and hurtled
-through space, now dark and then light, now hot and then
-cold, slave to a blazing master ninety million miles away.
-It was all so inconceivable, inscrutable, unbelievable.</p>
-
-<p>There came a movement of air fanning his check, emphasizing
-the warmth. He smelled anew the dry alkali
-dust, the smoky odor, almost like brimstone. The hour
-was near midnight and the deathlike silence brooded no
-more. A low moan, as of a lost soul, moved somewhere
-on the still air. Weird, dismal, uncanny, it fitted the
-spectral shadows and shapes around him, and the night
-with its mystery. No human sound, though it resembled
-the mourn of humanity! A puff of hot wind struck Adam
-in the face, rushed by, rustling the dead and withered
-brush, passed on to lull and die away. It seemed to leave
-a slow movement in the still air, a soft, restless, uneasy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-shifting, as of an immense volume becoming unsettled.
-Adam knew. Behind that sudden birth of life of dead
-air pressed the furious blasts of hell—the midnight furnace
-wind of Death Valley.</p>
-
-<p>Adam listened. How strange, low, sad the moan! His
-keen ears, attuned to all varieties of desert sound, seemed
-to fill and expand. The moan swelled to a low roar, lulling
-now, then rising. Like no sound he had ever heard before,
-it had strange affinity with the abyss of shadows. Suddenly
-the air around Adam began a steady movement
-northward. Its density increased, or else the movement,
-or pressure behind, made it appear so. And it grew swift,
-until it rustled the brush. Down in the valley the roar
-swelled like the movement of a mighty storm through a
-forest. When the gale reached the gateway below Adam
-it gave a hollow bellow.</p>
-
-<p>The last of the warm, still air was pressed beyond Adam,
-apparently leaving a vacuum, for there did not appear
-to be air enough to breathe. The roar of wind sounded
-still quite distant, though now loud. Then the hot blast
-struck Adam—a burning, withering wind. It was as if
-he had suddenly faced an open furnace from which flames
-and sparks leaped out upon him. That he could breathe,
-that he lived a moment, seemed a marvel. Wind and roar
-filled the wide space between the slopes and rushed on,
-carrying sand and dust and even shadows with it. That
-blast softened in volume and had almost died away when
-another whooped up through the gateway, louder and
-stronger and hotter than its predecessor. It blew down
-Adam’s sun shelter of brush and carried the branches
-rustling away. Then stormed contending tides of winds
-until, what with burning blasts and whirling dust devils
-and air thick with powdered salt and alkali, life became
-indeed a torment for Adam, man of the desert as he was.</p>
-
-<p>In the face of these furnace winds, tenacity of life had
-new meaning for Adam. The struggle to breathe was
-the struggle of a dying man to live. But Adam found
-that he could survive. It took labor, greater even than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-toiling through a sandstorm, or across a sun-scorched
-waste to a distant water hole. And it was involuntary
-labor. His great lungs were not a bellows for him to open
-when he chose. They were compelled to work. But the
-process, in addition to the burn and sting, the incessant
-thirst, the dust-laden air, the hot skullbone like an iron
-lid that must fly off, and the strange, dim, red starlight,
-the somber red varying shadow, the weird rush and roar
-and lull—all these created heroic fortitude if a man was
-to endure. Adam understood why no human being could
-long exist in Death Valley.</p>
-
-<p>“She will not live through the night,” muttered Adam.
-“But if she does, I think I’ll take her away.”</p>
-
-<p>While in the unearthly starlit gloom, so dimly red,
-Adam slowly plodded across to the Virey camp, that idea
-grew in his mind. It had augmented before this hour,
-only to faint at the strength of her spirit, but to-night was
-different. It marked a climax. If Magdalene Virey
-showed any weakening, any change of spirit, Adam knew
-he would have reached the end of his endurance.</p>
-
-<p>She would be lying or sitting on the stone bench. It
-was not possible to breathe inside the shack. Terrible as
-were the furnace winds, they had to be breasted—they had
-to be fought for the very air of life. She had not the
-strength to walk up and down, to and fro, through those
-endless hours.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s keen eyes, peering through the red-tinged obscurity,
-made out the dark shape of Virey staggering
-along back and forth like an old man driven and bewildered,
-hounded by the death he feared. The sight gave
-Adam a moment of fierce satisfaction. Strong as was the
-influence of Magdalene Virey, it could not keep down hate
-for this selfish and fallen man. Selfish beyond all other
-frailty of human nature! The narrow mind obsessed with
-self—the I and me and mine—the miserable littleness that
-could not forgive, that could not understand! Adam had
-pity even in his hate.</p>
-
-<p>He found the woman on the bench, lying prone, a white,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-limp, fragile shape, motionless as stone. Sitting down, he
-bent over to look into her face. Her unfathomable eyes,
-wide and dark and strained, stirred his heart as never
-before. They were eyes to which sleep was a stranger—haunted
-eyes, like the strange midnight at which they gazed
-out, supernaturally bright, mirroring the dim stars, beautiful
-as the waking dreams never to come true—eyes of
-melancholy, of unutterable passion, of deathless spirit.
-They were the eyes of woman and of love.</p>
-
-<p>Adam took her wasted hand and held it while waiting
-for the wind to lull so that she could hear him speak. At
-length the hot blast moved on, like the receding of a fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Magdalene, I can’t stand this any longer,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean—these winds—of hell?” she panted, in a
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I mean your suffering. I might have stood your
-spiritual ordeal. Your remorse—your agony of loss of
-the daughter Ruth—your brave spirit defying Virey’s hate....
-But I can’t stand your physical torment. You’re
-wasting away. You’re withering—burning up. This hand
-is hot as fire—and dry as a leaf. You must drink more
-water.... Magdalene, lift your head.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—cannot,” she whispered, with wan smile. “No—strength
-left.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam lifted her head and gave her water to drink.
-Then as he laid her back another blast of wind came roaring
-through the strange opaque night. How it moaned
-and wailed around the huge bowlders and through the
-brush! It was a dance of wind fiends, hounding the lost
-spirits of this valley of horrors. Adam felt the slow, tight
-tide of his blood called stingingly to his skin and his extremities,
-and there it burned. It was not only his heart
-and his lungs that were oppressed, but the very life of his
-body seemed to be pressing to escape through the pores of
-his skin—pressed from inward by the terrible struggle to
-survive and pressed back from outside by the tremendous
-blast of wind! The wind roared by and lulled to a moan.
-The wave of invisible fire passed on. Out there in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-dim starlight Virey staggered back and forth under the
-too great burden of his fate. He made no sound. He
-was a specter. Beyond the gray level of gloom with its
-strange shadows rose the immense slope of loose stones,
-all shining with dim, pale-red glow, all seemingly alive,
-waiting for the slide of the avalanche. And on the instant
-a rock cracked with faint ring, rolled with little hollow
-reports, mockingly, full of terrible and latent power. It
-had ominous answer in a slight jar of the earth under
-Adam’s feet, perhaps an earthquake settling of the crust,
-and then the whole vast slope moved with a low, grating
-sound, neither roar nor crash, nor rattle. The avalanche
-had slipped a foot. Adam could have pealed out a cry
-of dread for this woman. What a ghastly fantasy the
-struggle for life in Death Valley! What mockery of
-wind and desert and avalanche!</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell—listen,” whispered the woman. “Do you
-hear—it passing on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Adam, bending lower to see her eyes.
-Did she mean that the roar of wind was dying away?</p>
-
-<p>“The stormy blast of hell—with restless fury—drives the
-spirits onward!” she said, her voice rising.</p>
-
-<p>“I know—I understand. But you mustn’t speak such
-thoughts. You must not give up to the wandering of your
-mind. You must fight,” implored Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“My friend—the fight is over—the victory is mine....
-I shall escape Virey. He possessed my body—poor weak
-thing of flesh!... but he wanted my love—my soul....
-My soul to kill! He’ll never have either.... Wansfell,
-I’ll not live—through the night.... I am dying now.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—no!” cried Adam, huskily. “You only imagine
-that. It’s only the oppression of these winds—and the
-terror of the night—this awful, unearthly valley of death.
-You’ll live. The winds will wear out soon. If only you
-fight you’ll live.... And to-morrow—Magdalene, so help
-me God—I’ll take you away!”</p>
-
-<p>He expected the inflexible and magnetic opposition of
-her will, the resistless power of her spirit to uplift and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-transform. And this time he was adamant. At last the
-desert force within him had arisen above all spiritual
-obstacles. The thing that called was life—life as it had
-been in the beginning of time. But no mockery or eloquence
-of refusal was forthcoming from Magdalene Virey.
-Instead, she placed the little ivory case, containing the
-miniature painting of her daughter Ruth, in Adam’s hand
-and softly pressed it there.</p>
-
-<p>“But—if I should die—I want you to have this picture
-of Ruth,” she said. “I’ve had to hide it from Virey—to
-gaze upon it in his absence. Take it, my friend, and keep
-it, and look at it until it draws you to her.... Wansfell,
-I’ll not bewilder you by mystic prophecies. But I tell you
-solemnly—with the clairvoyant truth given to a woman
-who feels the presence of death—that my daughter Ruth
-will cross your wanderer’s trail—come into your life—and
-love you.... Remember what I tell you. I see!...
-You are a young man still. She is a budding girl.
-You two will meet, perhaps in your own wastelands.
-Ruth is all of me—magnified a thousand times. More—she
-is as lovely as an unfolding rose at dawn. She will
-be a white, living flame.... It will be as if I had met
-you long ago—when I was a girl—and gave you what by
-the nature of life was yours.... Wansfell, you wakened
-my heart—saved my soul—taught me peace.... I wonder
-how you did it. You were just a man.... There’s a
-falseness of life—the scales fell from my eyes one by one.
-It is the heart, the flesh, the bursting stream of red blood
-that count with nature. All this strife, this travail, makes
-toward a perfection never to be attained. But effort and
-pain, agony of flesh, and victory over mind make strength,
-virility.... Nature loves barbarian women who nurse
-their children. I—with all my love—could not nurse my
-baby Ruth. It’s a mystery no longer. Death Valley and
-a primitive man have opened my eyes. Nature did not
-intend people to live in cities, but in forests, as lived the
-Aryans of India, or like the savages of Brazilian jungles.
-Like the desert beasts, self-sufficient, bringing forth few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-of their kind, but better, stronger species. The weak perish.
-So should the weak among men.... Ah! hear the
-roar! Another wind of death!... But I’ve said all....
-Wansfell, go find Ruth—find me in her—and—remember!”</p>
-
-<p>The rich voice, growing faint at the last, failed as
-another furnace blast came swooping up with its dust
-and heat. Adam bowed his head and endured. It passed
-and another came. The woman lay with closed eyes and
-limp body and nerveless hands. Hours passed and the
-terrible winds subsided. The shadow of a man that was
-Virey swaying to and fro, like a drunken specter, vanished
-in the shack. The woman slept. Adam watched by her
-side till dawn, and when the gray light came he could no
-more have been changed than could the night have been
-recalled. He would find the burros and pack them and
-saddle one for Magdalene Virey to ride; he would start
-to climb out of Death Valley and when another night fell
-he would have her safe on the cool mountain heights. If
-Virey tried to prevent this, it would mean the terrible end
-he merited. Adam gazed down upon the sleeping woman.
-How transparent, how frail a creature! She mystified
-Adam. She represented the creative force in life. She
-possessed that unintelligible and fatal thing in nature—the
-greatest, the most irresistible, the purest expression of
-truth, of what nature strove so desperately for—and it was
-beauty. Her youth, her error, her mocking acceptance of
-life, her magnificent spirit, her mother longing, her agony
-and her physical pangs, her awakening and repentance
-and victory—all were written on the pale face and with
-the indestructible charm of line and curve and classic
-feature constituted its infinite loveliness. She was a sleeping
-woman, yet she was close to the angels.</p>
-
-<p>Adam looked from her to the ivory case in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Her daughter Ruth—for me!” he said, wonderingly.
-“How strange if we met! If—if— But that’s impossible.
-She was wandering in mind.”</p>
-
-<p>He carried the little case to his camp, searched in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-pack for an old silk scarf, and, tearing this, he carefully
-wrapped the gift and deposited it inside the leather money
-belt he wore hidden round his waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Now to get ready to leave Death Valley!” he exclaimed,
-in grim exultance.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s burros seldom strayed far from camp. This
-morning, however, he did not find them near the spring
-nor down in the notches of the mountain wall. So he
-bent his steps in the other direction. At last, round a
-corner of slope, out of sight of camp, he espied them, and
-soon had them trotting ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p>He had traversed probably half the distance he had
-come when the burro Jennie halted to shoot up her long
-ears. Something moving had attracted her attention, but
-Adam could not see it. He drove her on. Again she
-stopped. Adam could now see the shack, and as he peered
-sharply there seemed to cross his vision a bounding gray
-object. He rubbed his eyes and muttered. Perhaps the
-heat had affected his sight. Then between him and the
-shack flashed a rough object, gray-white in color, and it
-had the bounding motion of a jack rabbit. But it could
-not have been a rabbit, because it was too large, and,
-besides, there were none in the valley. A wild cat, perhaps?
-Adam urged Jennie on, and it struck him that she
-was acting queerly. This burro never grew contrary without
-cause. When she squealed and sheered off to one
-side Adam knew something was amiss. That vague shock
-returned to his consciousness, stronger, more certain and
-bewildering. Halting so as to hear better, he held his
-breath and listened. Crack and roll of rock—slow sliding
-rattle—crack! The mystery of the bounding gray objects
-was solved. Virey had again taken to rolling rocks down
-the slope.</p>
-
-<p>Adam broke into a run. He was quite a distance from
-the shack, though now he could see it plainly. No person
-was in sight. More than once, as he looked, he saw rocks
-bound high above the brush and fall to puff up dust.
-Virey was industrious this morning, making up for lost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-time, taking sure advantage of Adam’s absence. Adam ran
-faster. He reached a point opposite the fanlike edge of
-the great slant of loose stones, and here he seemed to get
-into a zone of concatenated sounds. The wind, created by
-his run, filled his ears. And his sight, too, seemed not
-to be trusted. Did it not magnify a bounding rock and
-puff of dust into many rocks and puffs? Streaks were
-running low down in the brush, raising little dusty streams.
-He saw clumps of brush shake and bend. If something
-queer, such as had affected Jennie, did not possess his
-sight and mind, then it surely possessed Death Valley.
-For something was wrong.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Adam’s ears were deafened by a splitting
-shock. He plunged in his giant stride, slowed and halted.
-He heard the last of a sliding roar. The avalanche had
-slipped. But it had stopped. Bounding rocks hurtled in
-front of Adam, behind him, and puffs and streaks of
-dust were everywhere. He heard the whiz and thud
-of a rolling rock passing close behind him. As he gazed
-a large stone bounded from the ground and seemed to
-pass right through the shack. The shack collapsed. Adam’s
-heart leaped to his throat. He was riveted to the spot.
-Then, mercifully it seemed, a white form glided out from
-the sun shelter. It was the woman, still unharmed. The
-sight unclamped Adam’s voice and muscle.</p>
-
-<p>“Go across! Hurry!” yelled Adam, with all the power
-of his lungs. He measured the distance between him and
-her. Two hundred yards! Rocks were hurtling and
-pounding across that space.</p>
-
-<p>The woman heard him. She waved her white hand
-and it seemed she was waving him back out of peril.
-Then she pointed up the slope. Adam wheeled. What
-a thrilling sight! Rocks were streaking down, hurtling
-into the air, falling to crack powder from other rocks,
-that likewise were set in motion. Far up the long gray
-slope, with its million facets of stones shining in the sunlight,
-appeared Virey, working frantically. No longer did
-he seek to frighten his wife. He meant to kill her. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-insane genius had read the secret of the slope, and in an
-instant he would have the avalanche in motion. The
-cracking clamor increased. Adam opened his lips to yell
-a terrible threat up at Virey, but a whizzing bowlder, large
-as a bucket, flashing within a foot of his head, awakened
-him to his own peril. He saw other rocks bounding down
-in line with him, and, changing his position, stepping, leaping,
-dodging, he managed to evade them. He had no fear
-for himself, but terror for the woman, and for Virey deadly
-rage possessed his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Then a piercing split, as of rocks rent asunder, a
-rattling crash, and the lower half of the great gray
-slope was in motion. The avalanche! Adam leaped at
-the startling sound, and, bounding a few yards to a
-huge bowlder, high as his head and higher, he mounted
-it. There, unmindful of himself, he wheeled to look for
-Magdalene Virey. Too late to reach her! She faced that
-avalanche, arms spread aloft, every line of her body
-instinct with the magnificent spirit which had been her
-doom.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Run! Run! Run!</em>” shrieked Adam, wildly.</p>
-
-<p>Lost was his piercing shriek in the swallowing, gathering
-might of the crashing roar of the avalanche. A pall
-of dust, a gray tumbling mass, moved down ponderously,
-majestically, to hide from Adam’s sight the white form
-of Magdalene Virey. It spread to where Adam stood,
-enveloped him, and then, in boom and thunder and crash
-as of falling worlds, the bowlder was lifted and carried
-along with the avalanche.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam</span> was thrown prostrate. In the thick, smothering
-dust he all but lost his senses. Adam felt what
-seemed a stream of stones rolling over his feet. The
-thundering, deafening roar rolled on, spread and thinned
-to a rattling crash, deadened and ceased. Then from the
-hollows of the hills boomed a mighty echo, a lifting and
-throwing of measureless sound, that thumped from
-battlement to battlement and rumbled away like muttering
-thunder.</p>
-
-<p>The silence then was terrible by contrast. As horror
-relaxed its grim clutch Adam began to realize that miraculously
-he had been spared. In the hot, dusty pall he
-fought for breath like a drowning man. The heavy dust
-settled and the lighter drifted away.</p>
-
-<p>Adam clambered to his feet. The huge bowlder that
-had been his ship of safety appeared to be surrounded by
-a sea of small rocks, level with where he stood. The
-avalanche had spread a deep layer of rocks all over and
-beyond the space adjacent to the camp. Not a vestige of
-the shack remained. Magdalene Virey had been buried
-forever beneath a mass of stone. Adam’s great frame
-shuddered with the convulsions of his emotion. He bent
-and bowed under the inevitable. “Oh, too late! too late!...
-Yet I knew all the time!” was the mournful cry he
-sent out into the silence. Dazed, sick, horror-stricken,
-he bowed there above Magdalene Virey’s sepulcher and salt
-tears burned his eyes and splashed down upon the dusty
-stones. He suffered, dully at first, and then acutely, as
-his stunned consciousness began to recover. Tragic this
-situation had been from the beginning, and it could have
-had but one end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span>
-Suddenly he remembered Virey. The thought transformed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“He must have slid with the avalanche,” muttered Adam.
-“Buried under here somewhere. One sepulcher for him
-and wife!... So he wanted it—alive or dead!”</p>
-
-<p>The lower part of the great slope was now solid rock,
-dusty and earthy in places, in others the gray color of
-live granite. It led his eye upward, half a mile, to the
-wide, riblike ridge that marked the lower margin of
-another slope of weathered rocks. It shone in the hot
-sunlight. Dark veils of heat rose, resembling smoke
-against the sky. The very air seemed trembling, and over
-that mountain-side hovered the shadow of catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>A moving white object caught Adam’s roving sight.
-His desert eyes magnified that white object. A man! He
-was toiling over the loose stones.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Virey!</em>” burst out Adam, and with the explosion of
-the word all of the desert stormed in him and his nature
-was no different from the cataclysm that had shorn and
-scarred the slope.</p>
-
-<p>Like a wide-lunged primordial giant, Adam lifted his
-roar of rage toward the heights—a yell that clapped fierce
-echoes from the cliffs. Virey heard. He began to clamber
-faster over the rocks and sheered off toward the right,
-where, under the beetling, steep slopes, every rod was
-more fraught with peril.</p>
-
-<p>Adam bounded like a huge soft-footed cat over and up
-the hummocky spread of the avalanche. Virey’s only
-avenue of escape lay upward and to the left. Once Adam
-cut him off there, he was in a trap.</p>
-
-<p>To the right over the ridge small stones began to show,
-rolling and bouncing, then shooting like bullets off the
-bare slant below. Virey was out of Adam’s sight now,
-but evidently still headed in the fatal direction. Like a
-mountain sheep, surest-footed of beasts, Adam bounded
-from loose rock to sharp corner, across the wide holes,
-on and upward.</p>
-
-<p>Another low, vast slope spread out and sheered gradually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
-up before him, breaking its uniformity far to the right,
-and waving gracefully to steep slants of loose rock perilous
-to behold. Adam heard the faint cracking of stones. He
-hurried on, working away from the left, until he was
-climbing straight toward the splintered, toppling mass of
-mountain peak, a mile above him. All now, in every
-direction, was broken rock, round, sharp, flat, octagonal,
-every shape, but mostly round, showing how in the process
-of ages the rolling and grinding had worn off the edges.
-Here the heat smoked up. When Adam laid a hurried
-hand on a stone he did not leave it there long.</p>
-
-<p>At length he again espied Virey, far to the right and
-half a mile farther up, climbing like a weary beast on
-hands and feet. By choice or by mistake he had gone
-upward to the most hazardous zone of all that treacherous,
-unstable mountain-side. Even now the little dusty slides
-rolled from under him. Adam strode on. He made short
-cuts. He avoided the looser slides. He zigzagged the
-steeper places. He would attend to safe stepping stones
-for a few rods, then halt to lift his gaze toward that white-shirted
-man toiling up like a crippled ape. The mountain
-slope, though huge and wide under the glaring sun, seemed
-to lose something of its openness. The red battlements
-and ramparts of the heights were frowning down upon
-it, casting a shadow of menace, if not of shade. The
-terrible forces of nature became manifest. Here the
-thunderbolts boomed and the storms battled, and in past
-ages the earthquake and volcanic fire had fretted the once
-noble peak. It was ruined. It had disintegrated. Ready
-to spread its million cracks and crumble, it lowered
-gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>Red, sinister, bare, ghastly, this smoky slope under the
-pitiless sun was a fitting place for Wansfell to get his
-hands on Virey—murderer of a woman. Adam thought
-of it that way because he remembered how Virey had been
-fascinated at the story of Baldy McKue. But mostly
-Adam’s mind worked like the cunning instinct of a wolf
-to circumvent its prey. Thoughts were but flashes. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span>
-red tinge in Adam’s sight did not all come from the color
-or the rock. And it was when he halted to look or rest
-that he thought at all.</p>
-
-<p>But the time came when he halted for more than that.
-Placing his hands around his mouth, he expanded his
-deep lungs and burst into trumpetlike yell:</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Virey!</span>” The fugitive heard, turned from his toiling,
-slid to a seat on the precarious slope, and waited. “<span class="smcap">I’ll
-break your bones!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>A wild cry pealed down to ring in Adam’s ears. He
-had struck terror to the heart of the murderer. And Adam
-beat down his savage eagerness, so as to lengthen the
-time till Virey’s doom. Not thus did the desert in Adam
-speak, but what the desert had made him. Agony, blood,
-death! They were almost as old as the rocks. Other
-animate shapes, in another age, had met in strife there,
-under the silent, beetling peak. Life was the only uttermost
-precious thing. All else, all suffering, all possession,
-was nothing. To kill a man was elemental, as to save him
-was divine.</p>
-
-<p>Virey’s progress became a haunting and all-satisfying
-spectacle to behold, and Adam’s pursuit became studied,
-calculated, retarded—a thing as cruel as the poised beak of
-a vulture.</p>
-
-<p>Virey got halfway up a gray, desolate, weathered slant,
-immense in its spread, another fan-shaped, waiting avalanche.
-The red ragged heights loomed above; below hung
-a mountain-side as unstable as water, restrained, perhaps,
-by a mere pebble. Here Virey halted. Farther he could
-not climb. Like a spent and cornered rat he meant to
-show fight.</p>
-
-<p>Adam soon reached a point directly below Virey, some
-hundreds of yards—a long, hard climb. He paused to
-catch his breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Bad slope for me if he begins to roll stones!” muttered
-Adam, grimly.</p>
-
-<p>But neither rolling stones nor avalanches could stop
-Adam. The end of this tragedy was fixed. It had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
-set for all the years of Virey’s life and back into the
-past. The very stones cried out. Glaring sun, smoking
-heat, shining slope, and the nameless shadow—all were
-tinged with a hue inimical to Virey’s life. The lonely,
-solemn, silent desert day, at full noontide heat, bespoke
-the culmination of something Virey had long ago ordained.
-Far below, over the lower hills of the Panamints, yawned
-Death Valley, ghastly gray through the leaden haze, an
-abyss of ashes, iron walled and sun blasted, hateful and
-horrible as the portal of hell. High up and beyond, faintly
-red against an obscure space of sky, towered the Funerals,
-grand and desolate.</p>
-
-<p>Adam began to climb the weathered slope, taking a
-zigzag course. Sliding stones only slightly retarded his
-ascent. He stepped too quickly. Usually when a stone
-slipped his weight had left it.</p>
-
-<p>Virey set loose a bowlder. It slid, rolled, leaped, fell
-with a crack, and then took to hurtling bounds, starting a
-multitude of smaller stones. Adam kept keen eye on the
-bowlder and paid no attention to the others. Then he
-stepped aside out of its course. As it whizzed past him
-Virey slid another loose upon the slope. Adam climbed
-even as the rock bounded down, and a few strides took
-him to one side. Virey ran over, directly in line with
-Adam, and started another huge rock. Thus by keeping
-on a zigzag ascent Adam kept climbing most of the time,
-and managed to avoid the larger missiles. The smaller
-ones, however, could not all be avoided. And their contact
-was no slight matter. Virey tugged upon a large
-rock, deeply embedded, and rolled it down. Huge, bounding,
-crashing, it started a rattling slide that would have
-swept Adam to destruction had it caught him. But he
-leaped out of line just in the nick of time. Virey began
-to work harder, to set loose smaller stones and more of
-them, so that soon he had the slope a perilous ascent for
-Adam. They cracked and banged down, and the debris
-rattled after them. Adam swerved and leaped and ran.
-He smelled the brimstone powder and the granite dust.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
-Fortunately, no cloud of dust collected to obscure his
-watchful sight. He climbed on, swiftly when advantage
-offered, cautiously when he must take time to leap and
-dodge. Then a big rock started a multitude of small
-ones, and all clattered and spread. Adam dashed forward
-and backward. The heavier stones bounced high, and
-as many came at one time, he could not watch all. As
-he dodged one, another waved the hair of his head, and
-then another, striking his shoulder, knocked him down.
-The instant he lay there, other stones rolled over him.
-Adam scrambled up. Even pain could not change his
-fierce, cold implacability, but it accelerated his action. He
-played no longer with Virey. He yelled again what he
-meant to do with his hands, and he spread them aloft,
-great, clawlike members, the sight of which inflamed
-Virey to desperation. Frantically he plowed up the stones
-and rolled them, until he had a deluge plunging down the
-slope. But it was not written that Adam should be
-disabled. Narrow shaves he had, and exceeding risks he
-took, yet closer and closer he climbed. Only a hundred
-yards now separated the men. Adam could plainly see
-Virey’s ragged shirt, flying in shreds, his ashen face, his
-wet hair matted over his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly above the cracks and rattling clash rose a
-heavy, penetrating sound. Mighty rasp of a loose body
-against one of solidity! Startled to a halt, Adam gazed
-down at his feet. The rocks seemed to be heaving. Then
-a dreadful yell broke sharply. Virey! Adam flashed his
-gaze upward in time to see the whole slope move. And
-that move was accompanied by a rattling crash, growing
-louder and more prolonged. Virey stood stricken by mortal
-terror in the midst of an avalanche.</p>
-
-<p>Wheeling swiftly, Adam bounded away and down, his
-giant strides reaching farther and faster, his quivering
-body light and supple, his eye guiding his flying feet to
-surfaces that were safe. Behind, beyond, above him the
-mountain slope roared until sound no longer meant anything.
-His ears were useless. The slope under him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-heaved and waved. Running for his life, he was at the
-same time riding an avalanche. The accelerating motion
-under him was strange and terrifying. It endowed him
-with wings. His feet scarcely touched the stones and in
-a few seconds he had bounded off the moving section of
-slope.</p>
-
-<p>Then he halted to turn and see, irresistibly called to
-watch Virey go to what must soon be a just punishment.
-The avalanche, waving like swells of the sea, seemed slowing
-its motion. Thin dust clouds of powdered rock hung
-over it. Adam again became aware of sound—a long-drawn,
-rattling roar, decreasing, deadening, dying. Suddenly
-as the avalanche had started it halted. But it gave
-forth grating, ominous warnings. Only an upper layer
-of the loose rock had slid down, and the under layer appeared
-precisely like what the surface had been—rocks
-and rocks of all sizes, just as loose, just as ready to roll.</p>
-
-<p>Adam dared to stride back upon that exposed under
-layer, the better to see straight down the steep slope.
-Grim and grisly it shone beneath the gloomy sun. Perhaps
-the powdered dust created an obscurity high in the
-air, but low down all was clear.</p>
-
-<p>Virey could be plainly seen, embedded to his hips in
-the loose stones. Writhing, squirming, wrestling, he
-sought to free himself from that grip of granite. In
-vain! He was caught in a vise of his own making. Prisoner
-of the mountain-side that he had used to betray his
-wife! He had turned toward Adam, face upward. There
-seemed a change in him, but in the racking excitement of
-that moment Adam could not tell what.</p>
-
-<p>Then that desert instinct, like the bursting of a flood,
-moved Adam to the violence of strife, the ruthlessness
-of nature, the blood-spilling of men. Madness of hate
-seized him. The torrid heat of that desert sun boiled in
-his blood, the granite of the slope hardened in his heart,
-the red veils of smoky shadows colored his sight. Loneliness
-and solitude were terrible forces of nature—primitive
-as the beginnings of life. For years the contending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-strife of the desert had been his. For months desolation,
-death, decay of Death Valley!</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My turn!</span>” he yelled, in voice of thunder, and, bristling
-haired, supple, and long armed, with strength and
-laugh and face of a savage, he heaved a huge rock.</p>
-
-<p>It rolled, it cracked, it banged, it hurtled high, to crash
-and smash, and then, leaping aloft, instinct as if with
-mockery, it went over Virey’s head to go on down over
-the precipice, whence it sent up a sliding roar. Adam
-heaved another stone and watched it. Virey grew motionless
-as a statue. He could not dance and dodge away from
-rolling rocks as Adam had done. How strangely that
-second rock rolled! Starting in line with Virey, it swerved
-to the right, then hit the slope and swerved back in line,
-then, hitting again, swerved once more, missing the miserable
-victim by a small margin.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Aha there, Virey!</span>” yelled Adam, waving his hands.
-“<span class="smcap">All day and all night I’ll roll stones!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>Virey was mute. He was chained. He was helpless.
-He could not move or faint or die. Retribution had overtaken
-him. The nature of it was to be the nature of the
-slow torture and merciless death he had inflicted upon his
-wife. As he had chosen the most deadly and lonely and
-awful spot on earth to hide her and kill her, so the nature
-that he had embraced now chose to turn upon him. There
-was law here—law of the unknown forces in life and
-in the elements. At that very moment a vulture streaked
-down from the hazed heights and sailed, a black shadow
-of wide-spread wings, across the slope. What had given
-this grisly-omened bird sight and scent illimitable?</p>
-
-<p>Adam braced his brawny shoulder under the bulge of a
-rock weighing tons. Purple grew his face. His muscles
-split his shirt. His bones cracked. But there was a nameless
-joy in this exercise of his enormous strength. They
-were two men—one was weak, the other was strong.
-And nature could not abide both. The huge rock grated,
-groaned, stirred, moved—and turned over, slowly to roll,
-to crunch, to pound, and then to gather speed, growing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-a thing of power, ponderous, active, changing, at last to
-hurtle into the air, to plunge down with thunderous crash,
-then to roll straight as a bee line at Virey. But a few
-yards in front of him it rose aloft, with something of
-grace, airily, and, sailing over Virey’s head, it banged and
-boomed out of sight below. Long the echoes clapped,
-and at last the silence, the speaking silence of that place,
-closed on the slope. It awoke again to Adam’s rolling of
-a stone and another and another and then two together.
-All these rocks rolled differently. They were playthings
-of the god of the mountain. The mover of thunderbolts
-might have been aiming his colossal missiles at an invisible
-target. All these rolling stones seemed to head straight
-for Virey, but they were at the last instant deflected by
-chance. They hit the slope and passed wide or high.
-They were in league with the evil spirit that had dominated
-Virey. They were instruments of torture. They were
-of the nature of the desert. They belonged to Death
-Valley.</p>
-
-<p>Adam did not soon tire at his gigantic task. The rolling
-stones fascinated him. From dead things they leaped
-to life. How they hurtled through space! Some shot
-aloft a hundred feet. Others split, and rolled, like wheels,
-down and down, the halves passing on either side of the
-doomed Virey. A multitude of rocks Adam turned loose,
-and then another multitude. Into the heaving of every
-one went his intent to kill. But Virey bore a charmed
-life.</p>
-
-<p>A time came when Adam rolled his last stone. Like the
-very first one, it sped straight for Virey, and just as it
-appeared about to crush him it veered to one side. Adam
-stared grim and aghast. Could he never kill Virey as
-Virey had murdered his wife and tried to kill him?</p>
-
-<p>“She—said I’d—never kill—you!” panted Adam, and
-the doubt in him was a strange, struggling thing, soon
-beaten down by his insatiable rage. Then he took a stride
-downward, meaning to descend and finish Virey with his
-hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-As he stepped down the avalanche below grated with
-strange, harsh sound. It seemed to warn him. Halting,
-he gazed with clearer eyes. What was this change in
-Virey? Adam bent and peered. Had the man’s hair
-turned snow white?</p>
-
-<p>Adam made another and a longer stride downward.
-And that instant the slope trembled. Virey flung up his
-arms as if to ward off another rolling stone. A rending,
-as of the rock-bound fastness of the slope yielding its
-hold—then the avalanche, with Virey in the center, moved
-downward, slowly heaving like a swell of weighted waves,
-and started to roll with angry roar. It gathered a ponderous
-momentum. It would never stop again on that slope.
-A shining, red-tinged dust cloud shrouded Virey. And
-then the avalanche, spilling over the declivity below,
-shocked the whole mountain slope and lifted to the heavens
-a thick-crashing, rolling roar of thunder. Death Valley
-engulfed the hollow echo and boomed thunder across to
-the battlements of the Funeral Mountains. And when
-the last rumble wore away, silence and solitude reigned
-there, pervasive and peaceful, as they had in the ages
-before man, with his passions, had evolved to vex nature.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam’s</span> return to camp was as vague as one of his
-desert nightmares. But as thought gained something
-of ascendency over agitation he became aware of blood
-and dust and sweat caked with his clothes upon his person,
-proving the effect of his supreme exertions. He had
-heaved an endless number of rocks; he had heaved the
-mountain-side down upon Virey, all to no avail. A higher
-power had claimed him. And the spirit of Magdalene
-Virey, like her living presence, had inscrutably come between
-Adam and revenge.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>When Adam had packed his burros, twilight in the
-clefts of the hills had deepened to purple. He filled his
-canteens, and started the burros down toward the gateway.
-The place behind him was as silent as a grave. Adam
-did not look back. He felt the gray obscurity close over
-the scene.</p>
-
-<p>Down at the gateway he saw that the valley was still
-light with the afterglow of sunset. Diagonally and far
-across the ashen waste he descried the little dark patch
-which he knew to be an oasis, where the waters of Furnace
-Creek sank into the sands.</p>
-
-<p>The intense heat, the vast stillness, the strange radiation
-from the sand, the peculiar gray light of the valley, told
-Adam that the midnight furnace winds would blow long before
-he reached his destination. But he welcomed any physical
-ordeal. He saw how a great strife with the elements,
-a strain to the uttermost of his strength and his passion to
-fight, would save his faith, his hope, perhaps his mind.</p>
-
-<p>So gradual was the change from twilight to darkness
-that he would scarcely have noted it but for the dimming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-of the notched peak. Out there in the open valley it was
-not dark. It was really the color of moonlight on marble.
-Wan, opaque, mystic, it made distance false. The mountains
-seemed far away and the stars close. Like the bottom
-of the Dead Sea, drained of its bitter waters, was this
-Death Valley. Action, strong and steady use of muscle,
-always had served to drive subjective broodings and
-wonderings and imaginings from Adam’s mind. But not
-here, in this sink, at night! He seemed continually and
-immensely confronted with the unreality of a fact—a live
-man alone on the salt dead waste of Death Valley. Measureless
-and unbreakable solitude! The waste hole into
-which drained the bitter dregs of the desert!</p>
-
-<p>He plodded on, driving the burros ahead of him.
-Jennie was contrary. Every few steps she edged off a
-straight line, and the angle of her ears and head showed
-that she was watching her master. She did not want to
-cross the valley. Instinct taught her the wisdom of opposition.
-Many a burro had saved its master’s life by stubborn
-refusal to travel the wrong way. Adam was patient,
-even kind, but he relentlessly drove her on in the direction
-he had chosen.</p>
-
-<p>At length the ashen level plain changed its hue and its
-surface. The salt crust became hummocky and a dirty
-gray. The color caused false steps on his part, and the
-burros groped at fault, weary and discouraged. Adam
-would mount a slow heave, only to find it a hollow crust
-that broke with his weight. Some months before—or
-was it years?—when he had crossed the valley, far below
-this line, the layer of salt crust had been softer and under
-it ran murky waters, heavy as vitriol. Dry now as sun-baked
-clay! It made travel more difficult, although less
-dangerous. Adam broke through once. It reminded him
-that Dismukes had said the floor of Death Valley was
-“Forty feet from hell!” Not for a long while had he
-thought of Dismukes, yet this hazardous direction he was
-taking now appeared to be the outcome of long-made plans
-to meet the old prospector.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-Long hours and slow miles passed behind him. When
-the burros broke through Adam had a task for all his
-strength. Once he could not pull Jennie out of a pitfall
-without unpacking her. And the time came when he had
-the added task of leading the way and dragging the burros
-with ropes. Burros did not lead well on good ground,
-let alone over this scored and burst salt crust.</p>
-
-<p>The heat and oppressiveness and dense silence increased
-toward midnight; and then began a soft and steady movement
-of air down the valley. Adam felt a prickling of his
-skin and a drying of the sweat upon him. An immense
-and mournful moan breathed over the wasteland, like
-that of a mighty soul in travail. Adam got out of the
-hummocky zone upon the dry, crisp, white level of salt,
-soda, borax, alkali, where thin, pale sheets of powder
-moved with the silken rustle of seeping and shifting sands.
-Most fortunate was the fact that the rising wind was at
-his back. He strode on, again driving the burros ahead,
-holding straight for the dim notched peak. The rising
-wind changed the silence, the night, the stars, the valley—changed
-all in some unearthly manner. It seemed to
-muster all together, to move all, to insulate even the loneliness,
-and clothe them in transforming, drifting, shrouds
-of white, formless bodies impelled by nameless domination.
-Phantasmagoria of white winds, weird and wild! Midnight
-furnace blasts of Death Valley! Nature’s equilibrium—nature’s
-eternal and perfect balance of the elements!</p>
-
-<p>Out here in the open, the hollow roar that had swelled
-and lulled through the canyons was absent. An incessant
-moaning, now rising, now falling, attended the winds on
-their march down the valley. Other difference there was
-here, and it was in the more intense heat. And the blowing
-of white shrouds into the opaque gloom, the sweeping
-of sheets of powdery dust along the level floor, the
-thick air that bore taste of bitter salt and odor of poison
-gas—these indeed seemed not phenomena of normal earth.
-The wind increased to a gale. Then suddenly it lulled and
-died, leaving the valley to a pale, silent deadness; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-again, preceded by a mournful wail, it rose harder and
-fiercer till it was blowing seventy miles an hour. These
-winds were the blasts of fury. They held heated substance.
-The power behind them was the illimitable upper
-air, high as the sky and wide as the desert, relentlessly
-bearing down to drive way the day’s torrid heat.</p>
-
-<p>The gales accelerated Adam’s progress, so that sometimes
-he was almost running. Often he was thrown to his
-knees. And when the midnight storm reached its height
-the light of the stars failed, the outline of mountains faded
-in a white, whirling chaos, dim and moaning and terrible.
-Adam felt as if blood and flesh were burning up, drying
-out, shriveling and cracking. He lost his direction and
-clung to the burros, knowing their instinct to be surer
-guide than his. There came a time when pain left him,
-when sense of physical contacts and motions began to
-fade, when his brain seemed to reel. The burros dragged
-him on, and lower he swayed; oftener he plunged to his
-knees, plowing his big hands in the salt and lowering his
-face into the flying sheets of powder. He gasped and
-coughed and choked, and fought to breathe through his
-smothering scarf. And at last, as he fell exhausted, blind
-and almost asphyxiated, the hot gales died away. The
-change of air saved Adam from unconsciousness. He lay
-there, gradually recovering, until he gained feeling enough
-to know the burros were pulling on the rope which tied
-them and him together. They were squealing. They
-were trying to drag him, to warn him, to frighten him
-into the action that would save his life. Thus goaded,
-Adam essayed to get upon his feet, and the effort seemed
-a vague, interminable lifting of colossal weights, and a
-climbing up dragging stairs of sand. But for the burros
-he would have plunged in a circle.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed a black and horrible interval in which
-he seemed hauled across a pale shingle of naked earth,
-peopled with specters, a wandering, lost man, still alive
-but half dead, leashed to the spirits of burros he had
-driven to their death. Uphill, always uphill they pulled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-him, with his feet clogged by the clutching sands. A gray
-dawn broke, and his entrance into the light resembled
-climbing out of somber depths to the open world. Another
-drab wall of iron rock seemed to loom over him.
-The valley of the white shadows of death had been crossed.
-A green patch of mesquites and cottonwoods gleamed cool
-and dark out of the gray sands. The burros ran, with
-bobbing packs, straight to the water they had scented.
-Staggering on after them, Adam managed to remove their
-burdens; and that took the remnant of his strength. Yielding
-to a dead darkness of sense, he fell under the trees.</p>
-
-<p>When he came to the day had far advanced and the
-sun, sloping to the west, was sinking behind the Panamints.
-Adam stumbled up, his muscles numb, as if contracted
-and robbed of their elasticity. His thirst told
-the story of that day’s heat, which had parched him, even
-while he lay asleep in the shade. Hunger did not trouble
-him. Either he was weak from exertion or had suffered
-from breathing poisoned air or had lost something of his
-equilibrium. Whatever was wrong, it surely behooved
-him to get out of the lower part of the valley, up above
-sea level to a place where he could regain his strength.
-To that end he hunted for his burros. They were close
-by, and he soon packed them, though with much less than
-his usual dexterity. Then he started, following the course
-of the running water.</p>
-
-<p>This Furnace Creek ran down out of a deep-mouthed
-canyon, with yellow walls of gravel. The water looked
-like vinegar, and it was hot and had a bad taste. Yet it
-would sustain life of man and beast. Adam followed
-the lines of mesquites that marked its course up the
-gradually ascending floor of the canyon. He soon felt
-a loosening of the weight upon his lungs, and lessening
-of air pressure. Twilight caught him a couple of miles
-up the canyon, where a wide, long thicket of weeds and
-grass and mesquites marked the turning of Furnace Creek
-into the drab hills, and where springs and little streams
-trickled down from the <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arroyos</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-Up one of these <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arroyos</i>, in the midst of some gnarled
-mesquites, Adam made camp. Darkness soon set in, and
-he ate by the light of a camp fire. After he had partaken
-of food he discovered that he was hungry. Also, his eyelids
-drooped heavily. Despite these healthy reactions and
-a deeper interest in his surroundings, Adam knew he was
-not entirely well. He endeavored to sit up awhile, and
-tried to think. There were intervals when a deadlock
-occurred between thoughts. The old pleasure, the old
-watchful listening, the old intimate sense of loneliness,
-had gone from him. His mind did not seem to be on
-physical things at hand, or on the present moment. And
-when he actually discovered that all the time he looked
-down toward Death Valley he exclaimed, aghast: “I’m
-not here; I’m down there!”</p>
-
-<p>Gloomy and depressed, he rolled in his blankets. And
-he slept twelve hours. Next day he felt better in body,
-but no different in mind. He set to work making a comfortable
-camp in spite of the fact that he did not seem
-to want to stay there. Hard work and plenty of food
-improved his condition. His strength of limb soon rallied
-to rest and nourishment. But the strange state of mind
-persisted, and began to encroach upon every moment. It
-took effort of will to attend to any action. Dismukes
-must be in this locality somewhere, according to the little
-map, but, though Adam remembered this, and reflected
-how it accounted for his own presence there, he could
-not dwell seriously upon the fact. Dismukes seemed
-relegated to the vague future. There was an impondering
-present imperative something that haunted Adam, yet
-eluded his grasp. At night he walked under the stars
-and could not shake off the spell; and next day, when in
-an idle hour he found himself walking again and again
-down the gravel-bedded canyon toward Death Valley,
-then he divined that what he had attributed to absent-mindedness
-was a far more serious aberration.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery brought about a shock that quickened his
-mental processes. What ailed him? He was well and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-strong again. What was wrong with his mind? Where
-had gone the old dreaming content, the self-sufficient communion
-with all visible forms of nature, and the half-conscious
-affinity with all the invisible spirit of the
-wilderness? How strangely he had been warped out of
-his orbit! Something nameless and dreadful and calling
-had come between him and his consciousness. Why did he
-face the west, at dawn, in the solemn white-hot noon, at
-the red sunset hour, and in the silent lonely watches of
-the night? Why did not the stars of the east lure his
-dreamy gaze as those in the west? He made the astounding
-discovery that there were moments, and moments
-increasing in number, when he did not feel alone. Some
-one walked in his shadow at noontide. At twilight a
-spirit seemed in keeping with his wandering westward
-steps. The world and natural objects and old habits
-seemed far off. He found himself whispering vagrant
-fancies, the substance of which, once realized, was baffling
-and disheartening. And at last he divined that a longing
-to return to Death Valley consumed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! So that’s it!” he muttered, in consternation.
-“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>It came to Adam then—the secret of the mystery.
-Death Valley called him. All that it was, all that it contained,
-all he had lived there, sent out insidious and
-enchanting voices of terrible silent power. The long
-shadow of that valley of purple shadows still enveloped
-him. Death, desolation, and decay; the appalling nudity
-of the racked bowels of the earth; the abode of solitude
-and silence, where shrieked the furies of the midnight
-winds; the grave of Magdalene Virey—these haunted
-Adam and lured him back with resistless and insupportable
-claim.</p>
-
-<p>“Death Valley again—for me. I shall go mad,”
-soliloquized Adam.</p>
-
-<p>At last his mind was slowly being unhinged by the
-forces of the desert. Some places of the earth were
-too strong, too inhuman, too old, and too wasted for any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
-man. Adam realized his peril, and that the worst of his
-case consisted in an indifference which he did not want
-to combat. Unless something happened—a great, intervening,
-destructive agent to counteract the all-enfolding,
-trancelike spell of Death Valley—Adam would return to
-the valley of avalanches and there he would go mad.</p>
-
-<p>And the very instant he resigned himself, a cry pierced
-his dull ear. Sharply he sat up. The hour was near the
-middle of the forenoon. The day was hot and still.
-Adam’s pulses slowly quieted down. He had been mistaken.
-The water babbled by his camp, bees flew over
-with droning hum. Then as he relaxed he was again
-startled by a cry, faint and far off. It appeared to come
-from up the canyon, round the low yellow corner of wall.
-He listened intently, but the sound was not repeated.
-Was not the desert full of silent voices? About this cry
-there was a tangible reality that stirred Adam out of
-his dreams, his glooms.</p>
-
-<p>Adam went on, and climbed up the gravel bank on the
-left side, to a bare slope, and from that to the top of a
-ridge. His sluggish blood quickened. The old exploring
-instinct awoke. He had heard a distant cry. What next?
-There was something in the air.</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam gazed around him to a distance. Adam
-shuddered and thrilled at the beetling, rugged, broken
-walls that marked the gateway where so often he had
-stood with Magdalene Virey to watch the transformations
-of shadowed dawn and sunset in Death Valley.</p>
-
-<p>He descended to a level, and strode on, looking everywhere,
-halting now and then to listen, every moment gaining
-some hold on his old self. He went on and on, slow
-and sure, missing not a rod of ground, as if the very stones
-might speak to him. He welcomed his growing intensity of
-sensation, because it meant that he had either received a
-premonition or had reverted to his old self, or perhaps both.</p>
-
-<p>Adam plodded along this wide gravel wash, with the
-high bronze saw-toothed peaks of the Funerals on the
-left, and some yellow-clay dunes showing their tips over<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-the bank on the right. At length he came to a place that
-suggested a possible sloping of these colored clay dunes
-down into a basin or canyon. Climbing up the bank, he
-took a few steps across the narrow top, there to be halted
-as if he had been struck.</p>
-
-<p>He had been confronted by a tremendous amphitheater,
-a yellow gulf, a labyrinthine maze so astounding that he
-discredited his sight.</p>
-
-<p>Before him and on each side the earth was as bare as
-the bareness of rock—a mystic region of steps and slopes
-and slants, of channels and dunes and mounds, of cone-shaped
-and fan-shaped ridges, all of denuded crinkly clay
-with tiny tracery of erosion as graceful as the veins of
-a leaf, all merging their marvelous hues in a mosaic of
-golden amber, of cream yellow, of mauve, of bronze
-cinnamon. How bleak and ghastly, yet how beautiful in
-their stark purity of denudation! Endless was the number
-of smooth, scalloped, and ribbed surfaces, all curving
-with exquisite line and grace down into the dry channels
-under the dunes. At the base of the lower circle of the
-amphitheater the golds and yellows and russets were
-strongest, but along the wide wings moving away toward
-the abyss below were more vividly wonderful hues—a
-dark, beautiful mouse color on the left contrasting with
-a strange pearly cream on the other. These were striking
-bands of color sweeping the eye away as far as they extended,
-and jealously drawing it back again. Between
-these great corners of the curve climbed ridges of gray
-and heliotrope to meet streaks of green—the mineral green
-of copper, like the color of the sea in sunlight—and snowy
-traceries of white that were narrow veins of outcropping
-borax. High up above the rim of the amphitheater, along
-the battlements of the mountain, stood out a zigzag belt
-of rusty red, from which the iron stain had run downward
-to tinge the lower hues. Above all this wondrous
-coloration upheaved the bare breast of the mountain,
-growing darker with earthy browns until the bold ramparts
-of the peak, gray like rock, gleamed pale against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-the leaden-blue sky. Low down through the opening of
-the amphitheater gleamed a void, a distant bottom of the
-bowl, dim and purple and ghastly, with shining white
-streaks like silver streams—and this was Death Valley.</p>
-
-<p>And then Adam, with breast oppressed by feelings too
-deep for utterance, retracted his far-seeing gaze, once
-more to look over the whole amazing spectacle, from the
-crinkly buff clay under his feet to the dim white bottom
-of the valley. And at this keen instant he again heard a
-cry. Human it was, or else he had lost his mind, and all
-which he saw here was disordered imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Turning back, he ran in the direction whence he believed
-the sound had come, passing by some rods the point where
-he had climbed out of the wash. And at the apex of the
-great curve, toward which tended all the multitude of
-wrinkles of the denuded slopes, he found a trail coming
-up out of the amphitheater and leading down into the
-wash. The dust bore unmistakable signs of fresh moccasin
-tracks, of hobnailed boots, and of traces where water
-had been spilled. The boot impressions led down and the
-moccasin tracks up; and, as these latter were the fresher,
-Adam, after a pause of astonishment and a keen glance
-all around, began to follow them.</p>
-
-<p>The trail led across the wash and turned west toward
-where the walls commenced to take on the dignity of a
-canyon. Bunches of sage and greasewood began to dot
-the sand, and beyond showed the thickets of mesquite.
-Some prospector was packing water from the creek up
-the canyon and down into that amphitheater. Suddenly
-Adam thought of Dismukes. He examined the next hobnailed
-boot track he descried in the dust with minute care.
-The foot that had made it did not belong to Dismukes.
-Adam hurried on.</p>
-
-<p>He came upon a spot where the man he was trailing—surely
-an Indian—had fallen in the sand. A dark splotch,
-sticky and wet, had never been made by spilled water.
-Adam recognized blood when he touched it, but if he
-had not known it by the feel, he surely would have by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-the smell. Probably at that instant Adam became fully
-himself again. He was on the track of events, he sensed
-some human being in trouble; and the encroaching spell
-of Death Valley lost its power.</p>
-
-<p>The trail led into the mesquites, to a wet glade rank
-with sedge and dank with the damp odor of soapy water.</p>
-
-<p>A few more hurried strides brought Adam upon the
-body of an Indian, lying face down at the edge of the
-trickling little stream. His black matted hair was bloody.
-A ragged, torn, and stained shirt bore further evidence
-of violence. Adam turned him over, seeing at a glance
-that he had been terribly beaten about the head with a
-blunt instrument. He was gasping. Swiftly Adam
-scooped up water in his hat. He had heard that kind
-of a gasp before. Lifting the Indian’s head, Adam poured
-water into the open mouth. Then he bathed the blood-stained
-face.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian was of the tribe that had packed supplies
-for the Vireys. He was apparently fatally hurt. It was
-evident that he wanted to speak. And from the incoherent
-mixture of language which these Indians used in
-conversation with white men Adam gathered significant
-details of gold, of robbers, of something being driven
-round and round, grinding stone like maize.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Arrastra!</em>” queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian nodded and made a weak motion of his
-hand toward the trail that led to the yellow wilderness
-of clay, and then further gestures, which, with a few
-more gutturally whispered words, gave Adam the impression
-that a man of huge bulk, wide of shoulder, was
-working the old Spanish treadmill—<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arrastra</i>—grinding
-for gold. Then the Indian uttered, with a last flash
-of spirit, the warning he could not speak, and, falling
-back, he gasped and faded into unconsciousness.</p>
-
-<p>Adam stood up, thinking hard, muttering aloud some
-of his thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Arrastra!</em>... That was the way of Dismukes—to
-grind for gold.... He’s here—somewhere—down in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-that yellow hole.... Robbers have jumped his claim—probably
-are holding him—torturing him to tell of hidden
-gold ... and they beat this poor Indian to death.”</p>
-
-<p>There was necessity for quick thought and quick action.
-The Indian was not dead, but he soon would be. Adam
-could do nothing for him. It was imperative to decide
-whether to wait here for the return of the water carrier
-or at once follow the trail to the yellow clay slopes. Adam
-wore a gun, but it held only two unused shells, and there
-was no more ammunition in his pack. The Indian had no
-weapon. Perhaps the water carrier would be armed. If
-Dismukes were dead, there need be no rash hurry to
-avenge him; if he lived as prisoner a little time more or
-less would not greatly matter. Adam speedily decided
-to wait a reasonable time for the man who packed water,
-and, if he came, to kill him and then hurry up the trail.
-There was, in this way, less danger of being discovered,
-and, besides, one of the robbers dispatched would render
-the band just so much weaker. Adam especially favored
-this course because of the possibility of getting a weapon.</p>
-
-<p>“And more,” muttered Adam, “if he happens to be a
-tall man I can pretend to be him—packing water back.”</p>
-
-<p>Therefore Adam screened himself behind a thick clump
-of mesquite near the trail and waited in ambush like a
-panther ready to spring.</p>
-
-<p>As he crouched there, keen eyes up the canyon, ears
-like those of a listening deer, there flashed into Adam’s
-mind one of Magdalene Virey’s unforgetable remarks.
-“The power of the desert over me lies somewhere in
-my strange faculty of forgetting self. I watch, I hear,
-I feel, I smell, but I don’t think. Just a gleam—a fleeting
-moment—then the state of consciousness or lack of consciousness
-is gone! But in that moment lies the secret
-lure of the desert. Its power over men!”</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly as it had come the memory passed, and Adam
-became for fleeting moments at a time the embodiment
-of Magdalene Virey’s philosophy, all unconscious when
-thought was absent from feeling. The hour was approaching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
-midday and the wind began to rustle the mesquites
-and seep the sand. Adam smelled a dry dust
-somewhat tangy, and tasted the bitterness of it as he
-licked his lips. Flies had began to buzz around the dead
-Indian. Instinctively Adam gazed aloft, and, yes, there
-far above him circled a vulture, and above that another,
-sweeping down from the invisible depths of blue, magically
-ringing a flight around the heavens, with never a movement
-of wings. They sailed round and round, always
-down. Where did they come from? What power poised
-them so surely in the air?</p>
-
-<p>Adam waited. All at once his whole body vibrated
-with the leap of his heart. A tall, hulking man hove in
-sight, balancing a bar across his shoulders, from each end
-of which hung a large bucket. These buckets swung to
-and fro with the fellow’s steps. Like a lazy man, he
-advanced leisurely. Adam saw a little puff of smoke lift
-from the red, indistinct patch that was this water carrier’s
-face. He had cigarette or pipe. As he approached nearer
-and nearer, Adam received steadily growing and changing
-impressions of the man he was about to kill, until they
-fixed in the image of a long, loosely jointed body, a soiled
-shirt open at the neck, bare brown arms, and cruel red
-face. Just outside the mesquites, the robber halted to
-peer at the spot where the Indian had fallen, and then
-ahead as if he expected to see a body lying in the trail.</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! Ho! if thet durned Injin I beat didn’t crawl way
-down hyar! An’ his brains oozin’ out!” he ejaculated
-hoarsely, as he strode between the scratching mesquites,
-swinging the crossbar and buckets sidewise. “Takes a
-hell of a lot to kill some critters!”</p>
-
-<p>Like a released spring Adam shot up. His big hands
-flashed to cut off a startled yell.</p>
-
-<p>“Not so much!” he called, grimly, and next instant his
-giant frame strung to the expenditure of mighty effort.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>At noon the wind was blowing a gusty gale and the
-sun shone a deep, weird, magenta color through the pall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
-of yellow dust. The sky was not visible. Down on the
-ridges and in the washes dust sheets were whipped up at
-intervals. Clouds of flying sand rustled through the air,
-and sometimes the wind had force enough to carry grains
-of gravel. These intermittent blasts resembled the midnight
-furnace winds, except for the strange fact that they
-were not so hot, so withering. Every few minutes the
-canyon would be obscured in sweeping, curling streaks
-and sheets of dust. Then, as the gale roared away, the
-dust settled and the air again cleared. But high up, the
-dull, yellow pall hung, apparently motionless, with that
-weird sun, like a red-orange moon seen through haze,
-growing darker.</p>
-
-<p>The fury of the elements seemed to favor Adam. Heat
-and gale and obscurity could tend only to relax the vigilance
-of men. Adam counted upon surprising the gang.
-To his regret, he had found no weapon on the robber he
-had overcome. Wearing the man’s slouch sombrero pulled
-down, and carrying the water buckets suspended from the
-bar across his shoulders, Adam believed that in the thick
-of the duststorm he might approach near the gang, perhaps
-get right among them.</p>
-
-<p>When he got to the top of the amphitheater and found
-it a weird and terrible abyss of flying yellow shadows
-and full of shriek of wind and moan and roar, he decided
-he would go down as far as might seem advisable, then
-try to slip up on the robbers, wherever they were, and get
-a look at them and their surroundings before rushing to
-the attack.</p>
-
-<p>Down, and yet farther, Adam plodded, amazed at the
-depth of the pit, the bottom of which he had not seen.
-The plainly defined trail led him on, and in one place
-huge boot tracks, familiar to him, acted as a spur. The
-tracks were not many days old and had been made by
-Dismukes. Adam now expected to find his old friend
-dead or in some terrible situation. The place, the day,
-the heat, the wind—all presaged terror, violence, gold, and
-blood. No human beings would endure this nude and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
-ghastly and burning hell hole of flying dust for anything
-except gold.</p>
-
-<p>At last Adam got so far down, so deep into the yellow
-depths, that pall and roar of duststorm appeared above
-him. He walked in a strange yellow twilight. And here
-the sun showed a darker magenta. Fine siftings of dust
-floated and fell all around him, dry, choking, and, when
-they touched his face, like invisible sparks of fire.</p>
-
-<p>Interminably the yellow-walled wash wound this way
-and that, widening out to the dimensions of a canyon.
-At length Adam smelled smoke. He was close to a camp
-of some kind. Depositing the buckets in the trail, he
-sheered off and went up an intersecting wash.</p>
-
-<p>When out of sight of the trail, he climbed up a soft
-clay slope and, lying flat at the top, he peeped over.
-More yellow ridges like the ribs of a washboard! They
-seemed to run out on all sides, in a circling maze, soft
-and curved and colorful, and shaded by what seemed
-unnatural shadows. But they were almost level. Here
-indeed was the pit of the amphitheater. With slow, desert-trained
-gaze Adam swept the graceful dunes. All bare!
-The twilight of changing yellow shadow hindered sure
-sight at considerable distance, and the sweeping rush of
-wind above, and then a low hollow roar, made listening
-useless.</p>
-
-<p>At length Adam noticed how all the clay ridges or ends
-of slopes to his right ran about a hundred yards and then
-sheered down abruptly. Here, then, was the main canyon
-through which the trail ran. The line of it, a vague
-break in the yellow color, turned toward Adam’s left.
-Adam deliberated a moment. Would he go on or return
-to the trail? Then he rose, crossed the top of the clay
-ridge, plunged down its soft bank, leaped the sandy and
-gravelly wash at the bottom, and started up the next
-ridge. This was exactly like the one he had surmounted.
-Adam kept on, down and up, down and up, until the
-yellow twilight in front of him appeared separated by a
-lazy column of blue. Adam’s nostrils made sure of that.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
-It was smoke. Cautiously crawling now, down and up,
-Adam gained the ridge from behind which rose the smoke.
-Here he crouched against the soft clay, breathing hard
-from his exertions, listening and peering.</p>
-
-<p>The ridges about him began to show streaks of brown
-earth and ledges of rock. As he looked about he was
-startled by a rumbling, grating sound. It was continuous,
-but it had louder rumbles, almost bumps. The sound
-was rock grating on rock. Adam thought he knew what
-made it. With all his might he listened, pressing his ear
-down on the clay. The rumble kept on, but Adam could
-not hear any other sound until there came a lull in the
-wind above. Then he heard a squeaking creak—a sound
-of wood moved tight against wood; then sharp cracks,
-but of soft substances; then the ring of a shovel on stone;
-and at last harsh voices.</p>
-
-<p>So far, so good, thought Adam. Only a few yards of
-clay separated him from mining operations, and he must
-see how many men were there and what was the lay of
-the land, and how best he could proceed. The old animal
-instinct to rush animated him, requiring severe control.
-While waiting for the wind to begin again, Adam wondered
-if he was to see Dismukes. He did not expect to.</p>
-
-<p>The elements seemed to await Adam’s wishes. At that
-very moment the yellow light shaded a little dimmer and
-the sinister-hued sun cloaked its ruddy face. The gale
-above howled, and the circling winds, lower down, gathered
-up sheets of dust and swept them across the shrouded
-amphitheater. And a wave of intenser heat moved down
-into the pit.</p>
-
-<p>Adam sank his fingers into the soft clay and crawled
-up this last slope. The rattle of loosened clay and gravel
-rolling down was swallowed up in the roar of wind.
-Reaching the last foot of ascent, Adam cautiously peeped
-over. He saw a wider space, a sort of round pocket between
-two yellow ridges, that ran out and widened from
-a ledge of crumbling rock. He crawled a few inches
-farther, raised himself a little higher. Then he saw brush<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-roofs of structures, evidently erected for shade. The
-rumble began again. Higher Adam raised himself. Then
-he espied a coat hanging on a corner post of one of the
-structures. Dismukes’ coat! Adam could have picked
-it out of a thousand coats. Excitement now began to
-encroach upon his cool patience and determination. The
-gale seemed howling with rage at the truth here, still
-hidden from Adam’s eyes. Higher he raised himself.</p>
-
-<p>The brush-covered structure farther from him was a
-sun shelter, and under it lay piles of camp duffle. A camp
-fire smoked. Adam’s swift eyes caught the gleam of guns.
-The day was too torrid for these campers to pack guns.
-The nearer structure was large, octagonal shape, built of
-mesquite posts and brush. From under it came the rumble
-of rocks and the metallic clink of shovels, and then the
-creak and crack and the heavy voice.</p>
-
-<p>Still higher Adam pulled himself so that he might see
-under the brush shelter. A wide rent in the roof—a
-huge brown flash across this space—then lower down a
-movement of men to and fro—rumble of rocks, clink of
-shovel, thud of earth, creak and crack—a red undershirt—blue
-jeans—boots, and then passing, bending men nude
-to the waist—circle and sweep of long dark streak—then
-again the huge brown flash; it all bewildered Adam, so
-that one of his usually distinguishing glances failed to
-convey clear meaning of this scene. Then he looked and
-looked, and when he had looked a long, breathless moment
-he fell flat on the soft clay, digging his big hands deep,
-trembling and straining with the might of his passion to
-rush like a mad bull down upon the ruffians. It took another
-moment, that battling restraint. Then he raised to
-look with clearer, more calculating gaze.</p>
-
-<p>The brush roof was a shelter for an <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arrastra</i>. The
-octagonal shape of this sun shade filled the pocket that
-nestled between the slopes. Its back stood close to the
-ledge of crumbling rock from which the gold-bearing ore
-was being extracted. Its front faced the open gully.
-Under it an <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arrastra</i> was in operation. As many of these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-Spanish devices as Adam had seen, no one of them had
-ever resembled this.</p>
-
-<p>In the center of the octagon a round pit had been dug
-into the ground, and lined and floored with flat stones.
-An upright beam was set in the middle of this, and was
-fastened above to the roof. Crossbeams were attached
-to the upright, and from these crossbeams dragged huge
-rocks held by chains. A long pole, like the tongue of a
-wagon, extended from the upright and reached far out,
-at a height of about four feet from the ground. The
-principle of operation was to revolve the crossbeams and
-upright post, dragging the heavy rocks around and around
-the pit, thus crushing the ore. Adam knew that mercury
-was then used to absorb the gold from the crevices.</p>
-
-<p>The motive power sometimes was a horse, and usually
-it was a mule. But in this instance the motive power was
-furnished by a man. A huge, broad, squat man naked to
-the waist! He was bound to the end of the long bar or
-tongue, and as he pushed it round and round his body
-was bent almost double. What wonderful brawny arms
-on which the muscles rippled and strung like ropes! The
-breast of this giant was covered with grizzled hair. Like
-a tired ox he bowed his huge head, wagging it from side
-to side. As he heaved around he exposed his broad back—the
-huge brown flash that had mystified Adam—and this
-mighty muscled back showed streaks and spots of blood.</p>
-
-<p>A gaunt man, rawboned and dark, with a face like a
-ghoul, stood just outside the circle described by the long
-bar. He held a mesquite branch with forked and thorny
-end, which he used as a goad. Whenever the hairy, half-naked
-giant passed around this gaunt man would swing
-the whip. It cracked on the brown back—spattered the
-drops of blood.</p>
-
-<p>There were three other men shoveling, carrying, and
-dumping ore into the pit. One was slight of build and
-hard of face. A red-undershirted fellow looked tough
-and wiry, of middle age, a seasoned desert rat, villainous
-as a reptile. The third man had a small, closely cropped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-head like a bullet, and a jaw that stood out beyond his
-brow, a hard visage smeared with sweat and dust. His
-big, naked shoulders proclaimed him young.</p>
-
-<p>And the grizzled giant, whom the others were goading
-and working to death there in the terrible heat, was
-Adam’s old savior and friend, Dismukes.</p>
-
-<p>Cautiously Adam backed and slid down the clay slope,
-and hurried up and down another. When he had crossed
-several he turned to the left and ran down to the trail,
-and followed along that until he reached the spot where
-he had left the buckets of water.</p>
-
-<p>There he drank deeply, and tried to restrain his hurry.
-But he was not tired or out of breath. And his mind
-seemed at a deadlock. A weapon, a shovel, a sledge to
-crush their skulls! To keep between them and their guns!
-Thus Adam’s thoughts had riveted themselves on a few
-actions. There was, on the surface of his body, a cold,
-hard, tingling stretch of skin over rippling muscles; and
-deep internally, the mysterious and manifold life of blood
-and nerve and bone awoke and flamed under the instinct
-of the ages. Adam’s body then belonged to the past and to
-what the desert had made it.</p>
-
-<p>Swinging the crossbar over his shoulders and lifting
-the buckets, he took the trail down toward the camp!
-He bowed his head and his shoulders more than the weight
-of the buckets made necessary. The perverse gale blew
-more fiercely than ever, and the hollow roar resounded
-louder, and the yellow gloom of dust descended closer,
-and a weird, dim light streamed through the pall, down
-upon the moving shadows. All was somber, naked, earthy
-in this thickening, lowering pall. Odor of smoke and
-dust! A fiercely burning heat that had the weight of
-hotly pressing lead! Bellow and shriek and moan of gale
-that died away! It was the portal to an inferno, and
-Adam was a man descended in age-long successions from
-simian beasts, and he strode in the image of God, with
-love his motive, rage his passion, and the wild years of
-the desert at his back, driving him on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-He rounded the last corner. There was the camp, fifty
-yards away. He now could almost straddle the only
-avenue of escape.</p>
-
-<p>The wind lulled. A yellow shadow drifted away from
-the sun, and again it shone with sinister magenta hue.
-All the air seemed to wait, as if the appalling forces of
-nature, aghast at the strange lives of men, had halted
-to watch.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar’s Bill with the water!” yelled the red-shirted man.</p>
-
-<p>Work and action ceased. The giant Dismukes looked,
-then heaved erect with head poised like that of a hawk.</p>
-
-<p>“Aw, Bill, you son-of-a-gun!” called another robber, in
-welcome. “We damn near died, waitin’ fer thet water!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! Ho!... Bill, ye musta run ag’in’ another
-Injun.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam walked on, shortening himself a little more, quickening
-his stride. When he reached and passed the shelter
-under which lay packs and coats and guns he suddenly
-quivered, as if released from dragging restraint.</p>
-
-<p>The robber of slight frame and hard face had walked
-out from under the shelter. He alone had been silent.
-He had peered keenly, bending a little.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, is thet you, Bill?” he queried, with hard voice
-which suited his face.</p>
-
-<p>The gaunt robber cracked his whip. “Fellars, air we
-locoed by this hyar dust? Damn the deceivin’ light!...
-Too big fer Bill—er I’m blind with heat!”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>It ain’t Bill!</em>” screeched the little man, and he bounded
-toward where lay the guns.</p>
-
-<p>Adam dropped the buckets. Down they thudded with
-a splash. Two of his great leaps intercepted the little
-man, who veered aside, dodged, and then tried to run by.
-Adam, with a lunge and a swing, hit him squarely on
-the side of the head. The blow rang soddenly. Its
-tremendous power propelled the man off his feet, turning
-him sidewise as he went through the air, and carried him
-with terrific force against one of the shelter posts, round
-which his limp body seemed to wrap itself. Crash! the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-post gave way, letting the roof sag. Then the smitten
-man rolled to lodge against a pack, and lay inert.</p>
-
-<p>Whirling swiftly, Adam drew his gun, and paused a
-second, ready to rush.</p>
-
-<p>The robbers stood stock-still.</p>
-
-<p>“My Gawd!” hoarsely yelled the red-shirted one.
-“Who’s thet?... Did you see him soak Robbins?”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes let out a stentorian roar of joy, of hate, of
-triumph. Like a chained elephant he plunged to escape.
-Failing that, he surged down to yell: “Aha, you bloody
-claim jumpers! Now you’re done! It’s Wansfell!”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Wansfell!</em>” flashed the gaunt-faced villain, and that
-gaunt face turned ashen. “Grab a shovel! Run fer
-a gun!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the red-shirted robber swung aloft his shovel and
-rushed at Adam, bawling fierce curses. Adam shot him
-through. The man seemed blocked, as if by heavy impact,
-then, more fiercely, he rushed again. Adam’s second and
-last shot, fired at point-blank, staggered him. But the
-shovel descended on Adam’s head, a hard blow, fortunately
-from the flat side. Clubbing his gun, Adam beat down
-the man, who went falling with his shovel under the
-shelter. Both of the other men charged Adam and the
-three met at the opening. They leaped so swiftly upon
-him and were so heavy bodied that they bore him to the
-ground. Adam’s grim intention was to hang on to both
-of them so neither could run to get a weapon. To that
-end he locked a hold on each. Then began a whirling,
-wrestling, thudding battle. To make sure of them Adam
-had handicapped himself. He could not swing his malletlike
-fists and he had not been fortunate enough to grip
-their throats. So, rolling over and over with them, he
-took the rain of blows, swinging them back, heaving his
-weight upon them. Foot by foot he won his way farther
-and farther from where the guns lay. If one yelling
-robber surged half erect, Adam swung the other to trip
-him. And once inside the wide doorway of that octagon
-structure, Adam rose with the struggling men, an iron<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-hand clutching each, and, swinging them wide apart, by
-giant effort he brought them back into solid and staggering
-impact. He had hoped to bring their heads together.
-But only their bodies collided and the force of the collision
-broke Adam’s hold on one. The young man of
-hulking frame went down, right on the shovel, and, quick
-to grasp it, he bounded up, fierce and strong. But as he
-swung aloft the weapon, Adam let go of the gaunt-faced
-man and hit him, knocking him against the other. They
-staggered back, almost falling.</p>
-
-<p>Swift on that advantage, Adam swung a fist to the
-bulging jaw of the man with the shovel. As if struck
-by a catapult, he went down over the wooden beam and
-the shovel flew far. Then Adam blocked the doorway.
-The other fellow charged him, only to be knocked back.
-As he reeled, his comrade, panting loud, straddled the
-long beam. Just then Dismukes with quick wits heaved forward
-on the beam, to which he was bound, and the claim
-jumper went sprawling in the dirt. Dismukes celebrated
-his entrance into the fray with another stentorian yell.</p>
-
-<p>Adam awoke now to a different and more intense sense
-of the fight. He had his antagonists cornered. They
-could never get by him to secure a gun. And the fierce
-zest of violent strife, the ruthless law of the desert, the
-survival of the strongest, the blood lust, would have made
-him refuse any weapon save his hands. He stood on his
-feet and his hands were enough. Like a wolf he snapped
-his teeth, then locked his jaw. As he swung and battled
-and threw these foes backward a strange, wild joy accelerated
-his actions. When he struck, the sodden blow
-felt good. He avoided no return blows. He breasted
-them. The smell of sweat and blood, the heat of panting
-breaths in his face, the feel of hot, rippling muscle, all
-tended to make him the fiercer. His sight stayed keen,
-though tinged with red. He saw the beady, evil eyes of
-the big robber, like hot green fire, and the bruised and
-bleeding face with its snarling mouth; and as he saw, he
-struck out hard with savage thrill. He saw the gaunt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-and sallow visage of the other, bloody mouthed, with
-malignant gaze of frenzied hate, of glinting intent to kill,
-and as he saw he beat him down.</p>
-
-<p>Then into his pulsing senses burst a terrible yell from
-Dismukes. The gaunt-faced man had fallen into the pit
-of the <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arrastra</i>, and Dismukes had suddenly started ahead,
-shoving the beam over him. The big rocks dragging by
-chains from the crossbeam began to pound around on
-the ore. Jar and rumble! Then a piercing scream issued
-from the man who had been caught under the rocks, who
-was being dragged around the <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arrastra</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Adam saw, even as he knocked back another rush of
-the other man.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Grindin’ gold, Wansfell!</span>” roared Dismukes.
-“<span class="smcap">More ore, pard!... We’re grindin’ gold!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>The huge prospector bent to his task. Supreme was
-his tremendous effort. Strength of ten men! Blood
-gushed from the cuts on his brawny back. Faster he
-shoved until he was running. And as he came around,
-the ferocity of his bristling face and the swelling of the
-great chest with its mats of hair seemed to prove him
-half man, half beast, a gorilla in a death grapple.</p>
-
-<p>Again the big robber lunged up, to lower his head and
-charge at Adam. He was past yelling. He did not seek
-to escape. He would have given his life to kill.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">More ore, pard Wansfell!</span>” yelled Dismukes, as
-with whistling breath he shoved round the terrible mill
-of rumbling rocks. A horrible, long-drawn cry issued
-from under them.</p>
-
-<p>Then the sweep of the long beam caught the man who
-was charging Adam. Down to his knees it forced him,
-and, catching under his chin, was dragging him, when
-the upright post gave way with a crash. The released
-beam, under the tremendous momentum of Dismukes’
-massive weight and strength, seemed to flash across the
-half circle, lifting and carrying the man. A low wall of
-rock caught his body, and the beam, swinging free from its
-fastening, cracked his head as if it had been a ripe melon.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Sunset</span> of that momentous and tragic day found
-Adam and Dismukes camped beyond the mouth of a
-wide pass that bisected the Funeral range.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dry camp, but water from a pure spring some
-miles down had been packed out. Greasewood grew
-abundantly on the wide flat, and there were bunches of
-dry gray sage.</p>
-
-<p>Adam felt well-nigh exhausted, and he would have
-been gloomy and silent but for his comrade. Dismukes
-might never have been harnessed to the beam of an
-<i xml:lang="es" lang="es">arrastra</i> and driven like a mule, and his awful treadmill
-toil in the terrible heat under the lacerating lash was as
-if it had never been. Dismukes was elated, he was exultant,
-he was strangely young again.</p>
-
-<p>Always, to Adam, this giant prospector, Dismukes, had
-been beyond understanding. But now he was enigmatic.
-He transcended his old self. In the excitement following
-his rescue he had not mentioned the fact that Adam had
-saved his life. Adam thought greatly of this squaring
-of his old debt. But Dismukes seemed not to consider
-it. He never mentioned that but for Adam’s intervention
-he would have been goaded like a mule, kicked and flayed
-and driven in the stifling heat, until he fell down to die.
-All Dismukes thought of was the gold he had mined,
-the gold the claim jumpers had mined—the bags of heavy
-gold that were his, and the possession of which ended
-forever his life-long toil for a fortune. A hundred times
-that afternoon, as the men had packed and climbed out of
-the valley, Dismukes had tried to force upon Adam a half
-of the gold, a quarter of it, a share. But Adam refused.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, for Lord’s sake?” Dismukes at last exploded,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-his great ox eyes rolling. “It’s gold. Most of it I mined
-before those devils came. It’s clean an’ honest. You
-deserve a share. An’ the half of it will more than make
-up the sum I’ve slaved an’ saved to get. Why, man—why
-won’t you take it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, friend, I guess the only reason I’ve got is that
-it’s too heavy to pack,” replied Adam. He smiled as he
-spoke, but the fact was he had no other reason for refusal.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes stared with wide eyes and open mouth.
-Adam, apparently, was beyond his comprehension just
-the same as Dismukes was beyond Adam’s. Finally he
-swore his astonishment, grunted his disapproval, and then,
-resigning himself to Adam’s strange apathy, he straightway
-glowed again.</p>
-
-<p>Adam, despite his amusement and something of sadness,
-could not help but respond in a measure to the
-intense rapture of his friend. Dismukes’ great work had
-ended. His long quest for the Golden Fleece had been
-rewarded. His thirty-five years of wandering and enduring
-and toiling were over, and life had suddenly loomed
-beautiful and enchanting. The dream of boyhood had
-come true. The fortune had been made. And now to
-look forward to ease, rest, travel, joy—all that he had
-slaved for. Marvelous past—magnificent prospect of
-future!</p>
-
-<p>Adam listened kindly, and went slowly, with tired limbs,
-about the camp tasks; and now he gazed at Dismukes,
-and again had an eye for his surroundings. Often he
-gazed up at the exceedingly high, blunt break in the
-Funeral range. What cataclysm of nature had made that
-rent? It was a zigzagged saw-toothed wall, with strata
-slanted at an angle of forty-five degrees. Zigzag veins
-of black and red bronze ran through the vast drab mass.</p>
-
-<p>The long purple shadows that Adam loved had begun
-to fall. Several huge bats with white heads darted in
-irregular flight over the camp. Adam’s hands, and his
-jaw, too, were swollen and painful as a result of the fight,
-and he served himself and ate with difficulty. And as for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-speech, he had little chance for that. Dismukes’ words
-flowed like a desert flood. The man was bewitched. He
-would consume moments in eloquent description of what
-he was going to do, then suddenly switch to an irrelevant
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Once, years ago, I was lost on the desert,” he said,
-reminiscently. “First an’ only time I ever got lost for
-sure. Got out of grub. Began to starve. Was goin’ to
-kill an’ eat my burro, when he up an’ run off. Finally
-got out of water. That’s the last straw, you know....
-I walked all day an’ all night an’ all day, only to find
-myself more lost than ever. I thought I had been travelin’
-toward the west to some place I’d heard of water an’
-a ranch. Then I made sure I’d gone the wrong way.
-Staggerin’ an’ fallin’ an’ crawlin’ till near daylight, at
-last I gave up an’ stretched out to die. Me! I gave up—was
-glad to die.... I can remember the look of the pale
-stars—the gray mornin’ light—the awful silence an’ loneliness.
-Yes, I wanted to die quick.... An’ all at once
-I heard a rooster crow!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! You’d lain down to die near a ranch. That
-was funny,” declared Adam. Life did play queer pranks
-on men.</p>
-
-<p>“Funny! Say, pard Wansfell, there’s nothin’ funny
-about death. An’ as for life, I never dreamed how
-glorious it is, until I heard that rooster crow. I’ll buy a
-farm of green an’ grassy an’ shady land somewhere in
-the East—land with runnin’ water everywhere—an’ I’ll
-raise a thousand roosters just to hear them crow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you meant to travel,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. But I’ll settle down sometime, I suppose,” replied
-Dismukes, reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Friend, will you marry?” inquired Adam, gravely.
-How intensely interesting was this man about to go out
-into the world!</p>
-
-<p>“Marry!—What?” ejaculated the prospector.</p>
-
-<p>“A woman, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” rolled out Dismukes. The thought had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-startled him. His great ox eyes reflected changes of
-amazing thought, shadows of old emotions long submerged.
-“That’s somethin’ I never <em>did</em> think of. Me
-marry a woman!... No woman would ever have me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, you’re not so old. And you’ll be rich.
-When you wear off the desert roughness you can find a
-wife. The world is full of good women who need
-husbands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, you ain’t serious?” queried Dismukes,
-puzzled and stirred. He ran a broad hand through his
-shock of grizzled hair. His eyes were beautiful then.
-“I never had wife or sweetheart.... No girl ever looked
-at me—when I was a boy. An’ these years on the desert,
-women have been scarce, an’ not one was ever anythin’
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, when you get among a lot of pretty girls, just
-squeeze one for me,” said Adam, with the smile that
-was sad.</p>
-
-<p>Plain it was how Adam’s attempt at pleasantry, despite
-its undercurrent, had opened up a vista of bewildering
-and entrancing prospects for Dismukes. This prospector
-had grown grizzled on the desert; his long years had been
-years of loneliness; and now the forgotten dreams and
-desires of youth thronged thick and sweet in his imagination.
-Adam left him to that engrossing fancy, hoping it
-would keep him content and silent for a while.</p>
-
-<p>A golden flare brightened over the Panamint range,
-silhouetting the long, tapering lines of the peaks. Far
-to the west, when the sun had set, floated gray and silver-edged
-clouds, and under them a whorl of rosy, dusky,
-ruddy haze. All the slopes below were beginning to be
-enshrouded in purple, and even while Adam watched they
-grew cold and dark. The heat veils were still rising,
-but they were from the ridges of dark-brown and pale-gray
-earth far this side of the mountains. Death Valley
-was hidden, and for that Adam was glad. The winds
-had ceased, the clouds of dust had long settled. It was a
-bold and desolate scene, of wide scope and tremendous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-dimensions, a big country. The afterglow of sunset transformed
-the clouds. Then the golden flare faded fast,
-the clouds paled, the purple gloom deepened. Vast black
-ridges of mountains stood out like ragged islands in a
-desolate sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell,” spoke up Dismukes, “you need your hair
-cut.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. But I’m glad it was long to-day when I got
-hit with the shovel.”</p>
-
-<p>“You sure did come near gettin’ it cut then,” replied
-Dismukes, with a hard laugh. “I’ll tell you what your
-long hair reminds me of. Years ago I met a big fellow
-on the desert. Six feet three he was, an’ ’most as big as
-you. An’ a darn good pard on the trail. Well, he wore
-his hair very long. It hid his ears. An’ in the hottest
-weather he never let me cut it. Well, the funny part
-all came out one day. Not so funny for him, to think
-of it!... We met men on the trail. They shot him an’
-were nigh on to doin’ for me.... My big pardner was
-a horse thief. He’d had his ears cut off for stealin’
-horses. An’ so he wore his hair long like yours to hide
-the fact he had no ears.”</p>
-
-<p>“Friend Dismukes, <em>I</em> have ears, if my long hair is
-worrying you,” replied Adam. “And if I had not had
-mighty keen ears you’d still be grinding gold for your
-claim jumpers.”</p>
-
-<p>At dusk, while the big bats darted overhead with soft
-swishing of wings, and the camp fire burned down to red
-and glowing embers, Dismukes talked and talked. And
-always he returned to the subject of gold and of his future.</p>
-
-<p>“Pard, I wish you were goin’ with me,” he said, and
-the slow, sweeping gesture of the great horny hand had
-something of sublimity. He waved it away toward the
-east, and it signified the far places across the desert.
-“I’m rich. The years of lonely hell an’ never-endin’ toil
-are over. No more sour dough! No more thirst an’
-heat an’ dust! No more hoardin’ of gold! The time has
-come for me to spend. I’ll bank my gold an’ draw my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-checks. At Frisco I’ll boil the alkali out of my carcass,
-an’, shaved an’ clipped an’ dressed, I’ll take again the
-name of my youth an’ fare forth for adventure. I’ll
-pay for the years of hard grub. I’ll eat the best an’
-drink wine—wine—the sweetest an’ oldest of wine!
-Wine in thin glasses.... I’ll wear silk next my skin
-an’ sleep on feathers. I’ll travel like a prince. I can
-see the big niggers roll their eyes. ‘Yas, sah, yas sah,
-the best for you, sah!’ An’ I’ll tip them in gold....
-I’ll go to my old home. Some of my people will be
-livin’. An’ when they see me they’ll see their ship come
-in. They’ll be rich. I’ll not forget the friends of my
-youth. That little village will have a church or a park
-as my gift. I’ll travel. I’ll see the sights an’ the cities.
-New York! Ha! if I like that place, I’ll buy it! I’ll see
-all there is to see, buy all there is to buy. I’ll be merry,
-I’ll be joyful. I’ll live. I’ll make up for all the lost
-years. But I’ll never forget the poor an’ the miserable.
-I can spend an’ give a hundred dollars a day for the rest
-of my life. I’ll cross the ocean. London! I’ve met
-Englishmen in the Southwest. Queer, cold sort of men!
-I’ll see how they live. I’ll go all over England. Then
-Paris! Never was I drunk, but I’ll get drunk in Paris.
-I want to see the wonderful hotels an’ shops an’ theaters.
-I’ll look at the beautiful French actresses. I’ll go to hear
-the prima donnas sing. I’ll throw gold double-eagles on
-the stage. An’ I’ll take a fly at Monte Carlo. An’ travel
-on an’ on. To Rome, that great city where the thrones
-of the emperors still stand. I’ll go spend a long hour
-high up in the ruins of the Coliseum. An’ dreamin’ of
-the days of the Cæsars—seein’ the gladiators in the arena—I’ll
-think of you, Wansfell. For there never lived on
-the old earth a greater fighter than you!... Egypt, the
-land of sun an’ sand! I’ll see the grand Sahara. An’
-I’ll travel on an’ on, all over the world. When I’ve seen
-it I’ll come back to my native land. An’ then, that green
-farm, with wooded hills an’ runnin’ streams! It must be
-near a city. Horses I’ll have an’ a man to drive, an’ a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-house of comfort.... Mebbe there’ll come a woman
-into my life. Mebbe children! The thought you planted
-in me, pard, somehow makes me yearn. After all, every
-man should have a son. I see that now. What blunders
-we make! But I’m rich, I’m not so old, I’ll drink life
-to the very lees.... I see the lights, I hear the voices
-of laughter an’ music, I feel the comfortin’ walls of a
-home. A roof over my head! An’ a bed as soft as
-downy feathers!... Mebbe, O my pard, mebbe the
-sweet smile of a woman—the touch of a lovin’ hand—the
-good-night kiss of a child!... My God! how the
-thoughts of life can burn an’ thrill!”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Twenty miles a day, resting several hours through the
-fierce noon heat, the travelers made down across the
-Mohave Desert. To them, who had conquered the terrible
-elements and desolation of Death Valley, this waste
-of the Mohave presented comparatively little to contend
-with. Still, hardened and daring as they were, they did
-not incur unnecessary risks.</p>
-
-<p>The time was September, at the end of a fierce, dry
-summer. Cloudless sky, fervid and quivering air, burning
-downward rays of sun and rising veils of reflected
-heat from sand and rock—these were not to be trifled
-with. Dismukes’ little thermometer registered one hundred
-and thirty degrees in the shade; that is, whenever
-there was any shade to rest in. They did not burden themselves
-with the worry of knowing the degrees of heat
-while they were on the march.</p>
-
-<p>Water holes well known to Dismukes, though out of
-the beaten track, were found to be dry; and so the
-travelers had to go out of a direct line to replenish their
-supply. Under that burning sun even Dismukes and
-Adam suffered terribly after several hours without water.
-A very fine penetrating alkali dust irritated throat and
-nostrils and augmented the pain of thirst. Once they
-went a whole day without water, and at sundown reached
-a well kept by a man who made a living by selling water<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-to prospectors and freighters and drivers of borax wagons.
-His prices were exorbitant. On this occasion, surlily
-surveying the parched travelers and the thirsty burros,
-he said his well was almost dry and he would not sell
-any water. Dismukes had told Adam that the well-owner
-bore him a grudge. They expostulated and pleaded with
-him to no avail. Adam went to the well and, lifting a trap-door,
-he peered down, to see quite a goodly supply of
-water. Then he returned to the little shack where the
-bushy-whiskered hoarder of precious water sat on a box
-with a rifle across his knees. Adam always appeared mild
-and serene, except when he was angry, at which time a
-man would have had to be blind not to see his mood.
-The well-owner probably expected Adam to plead again.
-But he reckoned falsely. Adam jerked the rifle from him
-and with a single movement of his hands he broke off
-the stock. Then he laid those big, hard hands on the
-man, who seemed to shrink under them.</p>
-
-<p>“Friend, you’ve plenty of water. It’s a live well.
-You can spare enough to save us. We’ll double your
-pay. Come.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam loosened his right hand and doubled up the enormous
-malletlike fist and swung it back. The well-owner
-suddenly changed his front and became animated, and
-the travelers got all the water they needed. But they did
-not annoy him further by pitching camp near his place.</p>
-
-<p>This country was crisscrossed by trails, and, arid desert
-though it was, every few miles showed an abandoned
-mine, or a prospector working a claim, or a shack containing
-a desert dweller. Adam and Dismukes were
-approaching the highway that bisected the Mohave Desert.
-It grew to be more of a sandy country, and anywhere
-in sand, water was always scarce. Another of Dismukes’
-water holes was dry. It had not been visited for months.
-The one wanderer who had stopped there lay there half
-buried in the sand, a shrunken mummy of a man, with a
-dark and horrible mockery in the eyeless sockets of his
-skull. His skin was drawn like light-brown parchment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
-over his face. Adam looked, and then again, and gave a
-sudden start. He turned the sun-dried visage more to
-the light. He recognized that face, set in its iron mask
-of death, with its grin that would grin forever until
-the brown skull went to dust.</p>
-
-<p>“Regan!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“You know him?” queried Dismukes.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He was an Irishman I knew years ago. A
-talky, cheerful fellow. Hard drinker. He loved the
-desert, but drink kept him in the mining camps. The
-last time I saw him was at Tecopah, after you left.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor devil! He died of thirst. I know that cast of
-face.... Let’s give him decent burial.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Poor Regan! He was the man who named me
-Wansfell. Why he called me that I never knew—never
-will know.”</p>
-
-<p>Deep in the sand they buried the remains of Regan
-and erected a rude cross to mark his lonely grave.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes led Adam off the well-beaten trail one day,
-up a narrow sandy wash to a closed pocket that smelled
-old and musty. Here a green spring bubbled from under
-a bank of sand. Water clear as crystal, slightly green
-in tinge, sparkled and murmured. A whitish sediment
-bordered the tiny stream of running water.</p>
-
-<p>“Arsenic!” exclaimed Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. An’ here’s where I found a whole caravan of
-people dead. It was six years ago. Place hasn’t changed
-much. Guess it’s filled up a little with blowin’ sand....
-Aha! Look here!”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes put the toe of his boot against a round white
-object protruding from the sand. It was a bleached skull.</p>
-
-<p>“Men mad with desert thirst never stop to read,” replied
-Adam, sadly.</p>
-
-<p>In silence Adam and Dismukes gazed down at the
-glistening white skull. Ghastly as it was, it yet had
-beauty. Once it had been full of thought, of emotion; and
-now it was tenanted by desert sand.</p>
-
-<p>Adam and Dismukes spent half a day at that arsenic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
-spring, under the burning sun, suffering the thirst they
-dared not slake there, and they erected a rude cross that
-would stand for many and many a day. Deep in the
-crosspiece Adam cut the words: “<span class="smcap">Death! Arsenic
-spring! Don’t drink! Good water five miles. Follow
-dry stream bed.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes appeared to get deep satisfaction and even
-happiness out of this accomplished task. It was a monument
-to the end of his desert experience. Good will
-toward his fellow men!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>At last the day came when Adam watched Dismukes
-drive his burros out on the lonely trail, striding along
-with his rolling gait, a huge, short, broad-backed man, like
-a misshapen giant. What a stride he had! The thousands
-of desert miles it had mastered had not yet taken its force
-and spring. It was the stride of one who imagined he
-left nothing of life behind and saw its most calling
-adventures to the fore. He had tired of the desert. He
-had used it. He had glutted it of the riches he craved.
-And now he was heading down the trail toward the glittering
-haunts of men and the green pastures. Adam watched
-him with grief and yet with gladness, and still with something
-of awe. Dismukes’ going forever was incomprehensible.
-Adam felt what he could not analyze. The
-rolling voice of Dismukes, sonorous and splendid, still
-rang in Adam’s ears: “Pard, we’re square!... Good-by!”
-Adam understood now why a noble Indian, unspoiled
-by white men, reverenced a debt which involved
-life. The paying of that debt was all of unity and
-brotherhood there existed in the world. If it was great
-to feel gratitude for the saving of his life, it was far
-greater to remember he had saved the life of his savior.
-Adam, deeply agitated, watched Dismukes stride down
-the barren trail, behind his bobbing burros, watched him
-stride on into the lonely, glaring desert, so solemn and
-limitless and mysterious, until he vanished in the gray
-monotony.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> the following March came, Adam had been
-a week plodding southward over the yucca plateaus
-of the Mohave.</p>
-
-<p>The desert had changed its face. Left behind were the
-rare calico-veined ranges of mountains, the royal-purple
-porphyries, the wonderful white granites, the green-blue
-coppers, the yellow sulphurs, and the ruddy red irons.
-This desert had color, but not so vivid, not so striking.
-And it had become more hospitable to the survival of plant
-life. The sandy floor was no longer monotonously gray.</p>
-
-<p>Adam loved the grotesque yucca trees. They were
-really trees that afforded shade and firewood, and they
-brought back no bittersweet memories like the <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">palo verdes</i>.
-The yuccas were fresh and green, renewed in the spring
-from the dusty gray sunburnt trees they had been in the
-autumn. Many of them bore great cone-shaped buds
-about to open, and on others had blossomed large white
-flowers with streaks of pink. A yucca forest presented
-a strange sight. These desert trees were deformed, weird,
-bristling, shaggy trunked, with grotesque shapes like
-specters in torture.</p>
-
-<p>Adam traveled leisurely, although a nameless and invisible
-hand seemed to beckon him from the beyond.
-His wandering steps were again guided, and something
-awaited him far down toward the Rio Colorado. He
-was completing a vast circle of the desert, and he could
-not resist that call, that wandering quest down toward
-the place which had given the color and direction to his
-life. But the way must be long, and as there were the
-thorns and rocks for his feet, so must there be bruises
-to his spirit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-At night on the moon-blanched desert, under the weird,
-spectral-armed yuccas, Adam had revelation of the clearness
-of teaching that was to become his. The years had
-been preparing him. When would come his supreme
-trial? What would it be? And there came a whisper
-out of the lonely darkness, on the cool night wind, that
-some day he would go back to find the grave of his
-brother and to meet the punishment that was his due.
-Then all that was physical, all that was fierce, enduring,
-natural, thrust the thought from him. But though the
-savage desert life in him burned strong and resistless, yet
-he began to hear a new, a different, a higher voice of
-conscience. He imagined he stifled it with fiercely repudiating
-gestures, but all the wonderful strength of
-his brawny hands, magnified a thousand times, could not
-thrust a thought from him.</p>
-
-<p>Toward sunset one day Adam was down on the level
-desert floor, plodding along a sandy trail around the
-western wall of San Jacinto. The first <i>bisnagi</i> cacti he
-saw seemed to greet him as old friends. They were small,
-only a foot or so high, and sparsely scattered over the
-long rocky slope that led to the base of the mountain
-wall. The tops of these cacti were as pink as wild
-roses. Adam was sweeping his gaze along to see how
-far they grew out on the desert when he discovered that
-his burro Jennie had espied moving objects.</p>
-
-<p>Coming toward Adam, still a goodly distance off, were
-two men and two burros, one of which appeared to have
-a rider. Presently they appeared to see Adam, for they
-halted, burros and all, for a moment. It struck Adam
-that when they started on again they sheered a little off
-a straight following of the trail. Whereupon Adam, too,
-sheered a little off, so as to pass near them. When they
-got fairly close he saw two rough-looking men, one driving
-a packed burro, and the other leading a burro upon
-which was a ragged slip of a girl. The sunlight caught
-a brown flash of her face. When nearly abreast, Adam
-hailed them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-“Howdy, stranger!” they replied, halting. “Come from
-inside?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I’m down from the Mohave,” replied Adam.
-“How’s the water? Reckon you came by the cottonwoods?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope. There ain’t none there,” replied one of the
-men, shortly. “Plenty an’ fine water down the trail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. Where you headed for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Riverside. My gal hyar is sick an’ pinin’ fer home.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam had been aware of the rather sharp scrutiny
-of these travelers and that they had exchanged whispers.
-Such procedures were natural on the desert, only in this
-case they struck Adam as peculiar. Then he shifted his
-gaze to the girl on the burro. He could not see her face,
-as it was bowed. Apparently she was weeping. She made
-a coarse, drab little figure. But her hair shone in the
-light of the setting sun—rather short and curly, a rich
-dark brown with glints of gold.</p>
-
-<p>Adam replied to the curt good-by of the men, and after
-another glance at them, as they went on, he faced ahead
-to his own course. Then he heard low sharp words,
-“<em>Shet up!</em>” Wheeling, he was in time to see one of
-these men roughly shake the girl, and speak further words
-too low for Adam to distinguish. Adam’s natural conclusion
-was that the father had impatiently admonished
-the child for crying. Something made Adam hesitate and
-wonder; and presently, as he proceeded on his way, the
-same subtle something turned him round to watch the
-receding figures. Again he caught a gleam of sunlight
-from that girl’s glossy head.</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! Somehow I don’t like the looks of those
-fellows,” muttered Adam. He was annoyed with himself,
-first for being so inquisitive, and secondly for not having
-gone over to take a closer look at them. Shaking his
-head, dissatisfied with himself, Adam trudged on.</p>
-
-<p>“They said no water at the cottonwoods,” went on
-Adam. “No water when the peak is still white with snow.
-Either they lied or didn’t know.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-Adam turned again to gaze after the little party. He
-had nothing tangible upon which to hang suspicions. He
-went on, then wheeled about once more, realizing that
-the farther on he traveled the stronger grew his desire
-to look back. Suddenly the feeling cleared of its vagueness—no
-longer curiosity. It had been his thoughts that
-had inhibited him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go back,” said Adam. Tying his burros to greasewood
-bushes near the trail, he started to stride back over
-the ground he had covered. After a while he caught a
-glimmer of firelight through the darkness. They had
-made dry camp hardly five miles beyond the place where
-Adam had passed them.</p>
-
-<p>It developed that these travelers had gone off the trail
-to camp in a wide, deep wash. Adam lost sight of the
-camp-fire glimmer, and had to hunt round until he came
-to the edge of the wash. A good-sized fire of greasewood
-and sage had been started, so that it would burn down to
-hot embers for cooking purposes. As Adam stalked out
-of the gloom into the camp he saw both men busy with
-preparations for the meal. The girl sat in a disconsolate
-attitude. She espied Adam before either of the men
-heard him. Adam saw her quiver and start erect. Not
-fright, indeed, was it that animated her. Suddenly one
-of the men rose, with his hand going to his hip.</p>
-
-<p>“Who goes thar?” he demanded, warningly.</p>
-
-<p>Adam halted inside the circle of light. “Say, I lost my
-coat. Must have fallen off my pack. Did you fellows
-find it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, we didn’t find no coat,” replied the man, slowly.
-He straightened up, with his hand dropping to his side.
-The other fellow was on his knees mixing dough in a pan.</p>
-
-<p>Adam advanced with natural manner, but his eyes,
-hidden under the shadow of his wide hat brim, took
-swift stock of that camp.</p>
-
-<p>“Pshaw! I was sure hoping you’d found it,” he said,
-as he reached the fire. “I had a time locating your camp.
-Funny you’d come way off the trail, down in here.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-“Funny or not, stranger, it’s our bizness,” gruffly replied
-the man standing. He peered keenly at Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” replied Adam, with slow and apparent good
-nature. He was close to the man now, as close as he
-ever needed to get to any man who might make a threatening
-move. And he looked past him at the girl. She had
-a pale little face, too small for a pair of wonderful dark
-eyes that seemed full of woe and terror. She held out
-thin brown hands to Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon you’d better go an’ hunt fer yer coat,” returned
-the man, significantly.</p>
-
-<p>In one stride Adam loomed over him, his leisurely,
-casual manner suddenly transformed to an attitude of
-menace. He stood fully a foot and a half over this
-stockily built man, who also suddenly underwent a change.
-He stiffened. Warily he peered up, just a second behind
-Adam in decision. His mind worked too slowly to get
-the advantage in this situation.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, I’m curious about this girl you’ve got with you,”
-said Adam, deliberately.</p>
-
-<p>The man gave a start. “Aw, you are, hey?” he rasped
-out. “Wal, see hyar, stranger, curious fellars sometimes
-die sudden, with their boots on.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s force gathered for swift action. Keeping a
-sharp gaze riveted on this man, he addressed the girl:
-“Little girl, what’s wrong? Are <span class="locked">you——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Shet up! If you blab out I’ll slit your tongue,”
-yelled the fellow, whirling fiercely. No father ever spoke
-that way to his child. And no child ever showed such
-terror of her father.</p>
-
-<p>“Girl, don’t be afraid. Speak!” called Adam, in a
-voice that rang.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, save me—save me!” she cried, wildly.</p>
-
-<p>Then the man, hissing like a snake, was reaching for his
-gun when Adam struck him. He fell clear across the fire
-and, rolling over some packs, lay still. The other one,
-cursing, started to crawl, to reach with flour-whitened
-hand for a gun lying in a belt upon the sand. Adam<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-kicked the gun away and pounced upon the man.
-Fiercely he yelled and struggled. Adam bore him down,
-burrowing his face in the sand. Then placing a ponderous
-knee on the back of the man’s neck, he knelt there, holding
-him down.</p>
-
-<p>“Girl, throw me that piece of rope,” said Adam,
-pointing.</p>
-
-<p>She shakily got up, her bare feet sinking in the sand,
-and, picking up the rope, she threw it to Adam. In short
-order he bound the man’s arms behind his back.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, little girl, you can tell me what’s wrong,” said
-Adam, rising.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they took me away—from mother!” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother? Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s at the cottonwoods. We live there.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam could not see her plainly. The fire had burned
-down. He threw on more greasewood and some sage,
-that flared up with sparkling smoke. Then he drew the
-girl to the light. What a thin arm she had! And in the
-small face and staring eyes he read more than the fear
-that seemed now losing its intensity. Starvation! No
-man so quick as Adam to see that!</p>
-
-<p>“You live there? Then he lied about the water?” asked
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes—he lied.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are these men?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. They camped at the water. I—I was
-out—gathering firewood. One of them—the one you hit—grabbed
-me—carried me off. He put his hand—on my
-mouth. Then the other man came—with the burros....
-My mother’s sick. She didn’t know what happened.
-She’ll be terribly frightened.... Oh, please take me—home!”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I will,” replied Adam, heartily. “Don’t worry
-any more. Come now. Walk right behind me.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam led the way out of camp without another glance
-at the two men, one of whom was groaning. The girl<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-kept close at Adam’s heels. Away from the circle of
-camp-fire glow, he could see the gray aisles of clean sand
-between the clumps of greasewood, and he wound in and
-out between these until he found the trail. Suddenly he
-remembered the girl had no shoes.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll stick your feet full of cactus,” he said. “You
-should have on your shoes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no shoes,” she replied. “But cactus doesn’t
-hurt me—except the <i>cholla</i>. Do you know <i>cholla</i>? Even
-the Indians think <i>cholla</i> bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I do, little girl. Let me carry you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can walk.”</p>
-
-<p>So they set off on the starlit trail, and here she walked
-beside him. Adam noted that she was taller than he
-would have taken her to be, her small head coming up
-to his elbow. She had the free stride of an Indian. He
-gazed out across the level gray and drab desert. Whatever
-way he directed his wandering steps over this land
-of waste, he was always gravitating toward new adventure.
-For him the lonely reaches and rock-ribbed canyons were
-sure to harbor, sooner or later, some humanity that drew
-him like a magnet. Everywhere the desert had its evil,
-its suffering, its youth and age. The heat of Adam’s
-anger subsided with the thought that somehow he had
-let the ruffians off easily; and the presence of this girl,
-a mere child, apparently, for all her height, brought home
-to him the mystery, the sorrow, the marvel of life on the
-desert. A sick woman with a child living in the lonely
-shadow of San Jacinto! Adam felt in this girl’s presence,
-as he had seen starvation in her face, a cruelty
-of life, of fate. But how infinitely grateful he felt for the
-random wandering steps which had led him down that
-trail!</p>
-
-<p>All at once a slim, rough little hand slipped into his.
-Instinctively Adam closed his own great hand over it.
-That touch gave him such a thrill as he had never before
-felt in all his life. It seemed to link his strength and this
-child’s trust. The rough little fingers and calloused little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-palm might have belonged to a hard-laboring boy, but
-the touch was feminine. Adam, desert trained by years
-that had dominated even the habits ingrained in his youth,
-and answering mostly to instinct, received here an unintelligible
-shock that stirred to the touch of a trusting hand,
-but was nothing physical. His body, his mind, his soul
-seemed but an exhaustive instrument of creation over
-which the desert played masterfully.</p>
-
-<p>“It was lucky you happened along,” said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Adam, as if startled.</p>
-
-<p>“They were bad men. And, oh, I was so glad to see
-them—at first. It’s so lonely. No one ever comes except
-the Indians—and they come to <em>beg</em> things to eat—never to
-<em>give</em>. I thought those white men were prospectors and
-would give me a little flour or coffee—or something
-mother would like. We’ve had so little to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“That so? Well, I have a full pack,” replied Adam.
-“Plenty of flour, coffee, sugar, bacon, canned milk, dried
-fruit.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’ll give us some?” she asked, eagerly, in a
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“All you need.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’re good—good as those men were bad!” she
-exclaimed, with a throb of joy. “Mother has just starved
-herself for me. You see, the Indian who packed supplies
-to us hasn’t come for long. Nobody has come—except
-those bad men. And our food gave out little by little.
-Mother starved herself for me.... Oh, I couldn’t make
-her eat. She’d say she didn’t want what I’d cook. Then
-I’d have to eat it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t your mother able to get about?” asked Adam,
-turning to peer down into the dark little face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no! She’s dying of consumption,” was the low,
-sad reply.</p>
-
-<p>“And your father?” asked Adam, a little huskily.</p>
-
-<p>“He died two years ago. I guess it’s two, for the peak
-has been white twice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Died?—here in the desert?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
-“Yes. We buried him by the running water where he
-loved to sit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me—how did your parents and you come to be
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“They both had consumption long before I was born,”
-replied the girl. “Father had it—but mother didn’t—when
-they were married. That was back in Iowa.
-Mother caught it from him. And they both were going
-to die. They had tried every way to get well, but the
-doctors said they couldn’t.... So father and mother
-started West in a prairie schooner. I was born in it,
-somewhere in Kansas. They tried place after place,
-trying to find a climate that would cure them. I remember
-as far back as Arizona. But father never improved
-till we got to this valley. Here he was getting strong
-again. Then my uncle came and he found gold
-over in the mountains. That made father mad to get
-rich—to have gold for me. He worked too hard—and
-then he died. Mother has been slowly failing ever
-since.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a sad story, little girl,” replied Adam. “The
-desert is full of sad stories.... But your uncle—what
-became of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He went off prospecting for gold. But he came back
-several times. And the last was just before father died.
-Then he said he would come back again for me some
-day and take me out of the desert. Mother lives on
-that hope. But I don’t want him to come. All I pray for is
-that she gets well. I would never leave her.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ve lived all your life on the desert?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Mother says I never slept under a real roof.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how old are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nearly fourteen.”</p>
-
-<p>“So old as that? Well! I thought you were younger.
-And, little girl—may I ask how you learned to talk so—as
-if you had been to school?”</p>
-
-<p>“My mother was a school-teacher. She taught me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
-“It’s Eugenie Linwood. But I don’t like Eugenie.
-Father and mother always called me Genie.... What’s
-your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine is Wansfell.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the biggest man I ever saw. I thought the
-Yuma Indians were giants, but you’re bigger. My poor
-father was not big or strong.”</p>
-
-<p>Presently Adam saw the dark-gray forms of his burros
-along the trail. Jennie appeared to be more contrary than
-usual, and kicked spitefully at Adam as he untied her.
-And as Adam drove her ahead with the other burro she
-often lagged to take a nip at the sage. During the several
-miles farther down the trail Adam was hard put to it
-to keep her going steadily. The girl began to tire, a
-circumstance which Adam had expected. She refused to
-be assisted, or to be put on one of the burros. The trail
-began to circle round the black bulge of the mountain,
-finally running into the shadow, where objects were hard
-to see. The murmur of flowing water soon reached
-Adam’s ears—most welcome and beautiful sound to
-desert man. And then big cottonwoods loomed up, and
-beyond them the gleam of starlight on stately palm trees.
-Adam, peering low down through the shadows, distinguished
-a thatch-roofed hut.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll not tell mother about the bad men,” whispered
-the girl. “It’ll only scare her.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Genie,” said Adam, and he permitted himself
-to be led to a door of the hut. Dark as pitch was
-it inside.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, are you awake?” called Genie.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, child, where have you been?” rejoined a voice,
-faint and weak, with a note of relief. “I woke up in the
-dark.... I called. You didn’t come.”</p>
-
-<p>Then followed a cough that had a shuddering significance
-for Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, I’m sorry. I—I met a man on the trail. A
-Mr. Wansfell. We talked. And he came with me. He
-has a new pack of good things to eat. And, oh, mother!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
-he’s—he’s different from those men who were here; he’ll
-help us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Madam, I’ll be happy to do anything I can for you
-and your little girl,” said Adam, in his deep, kindly tones.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir, your voice startled me,” replied the woman, with
-a gasp. “But it’s a voice I trust. The looks of men
-in this hard country deceive me sometimes—but never
-their voices.... Sir, if you will help us in our extremity,
-you will have the gratitude of a dying woman—of a
-mother.”</p>
-
-<p>The darkness was intense inside the hut, and Adam,
-leaning at the door, could see nothing. The girl touched
-his arm timidly, almost appealingly, as Adam hesitated
-over his reply.</p>
-
-<p>“You can—trust me,” he said, presently. “My name
-is Wansfell. I’m just a desert wanderer. If I may—I’ll
-stay here—look after your little girl till her uncle comes.”</p>
-
-<p>“At last—God has answered my—prayer!” exclaimed
-the woman, pantingly.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam unpacked his burros a half dozen rods from the
-hut, under a spreading cottonwood and near the juncture
-of two little streams of water that flowed down out of
-the gloom, one on each side of the great corner of mountain.
-And Adam’s big hands made short shift of camp
-well made, with upright poles and thatch, covered by a
-thatched roof of palm leaves. The girl came out and
-watched him, and Adam had never seen hungrier eyes
-even in an Indian.</p>
-
-<p>“It’d be fun to watch you—you’re so quick—if I
-wasn’t starved,” said Genie.</p>
-
-<p>What a slender, almost flat slip of a girl. Her dress
-was in tatters, showing bare brown flesh in places. The
-pinched little face further stirred Adam’s pity. And
-there waved over him a strange pride in his immense
-strength, his wonderful hands, his desert knowledge that
-now could be put to the greatest good ever offered him
-in his wanderings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span>
-“Genie, when you’re starved you must eat very slowly—and
-only a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. I’ve known all about people starving and
-thirsting. But I’m not that badly off. I’ve had a <em>little</em>
-to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest Injun?” he queried.</p>
-
-<p>She had never heard that expression, so he changed it
-to another of like meaning.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t lie,” she replied, with direct simplicity that
-indeed reminded Adam of an Indian.</p>
-
-<p>Never had Adam prepared so good a camp dinner in
-such short time. And then, hungry as Genie was, she
-insisted that her mother should be served first. She took
-a lighted candle Adam gave her and led the way into the
-hut, while he followed, carrying food and drink that he
-believed best for a woman so weak and starved. The hut
-had two rooms, the first being a kitchen with stone floor
-and well furnished with camp utensils. The second room
-contained two rude cots made of poles and palm leaves,
-upon one of which Adam saw a pale shadow of a woman
-whose eyes verified the tragic words she had spoken.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the way Adam stooped as he entered, his lofty
-head brushed the palm-leafed roof. Genie laughed when
-he bumped against a crossbeam.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, he’s the tallest man!” exclaimed the girl.
-“He could never live in our hut.... Now sit up, mother
-dear.... Doesn’t it all smell good. Oooooo! The
-Indian fairy has come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, will you hold the candle so I can see the face
-of this kind man?” asked the woman, when she had been
-propped up in bed.</p>
-
-<p>The girl complied, with another little laugh. Adam had
-not before been subjected to a scrutiny like the one he
-bore then. It seemed to come from beyond this place
-and time.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir, you are a man such as I have never seen,” she
-said, at length.</p>
-
-<p>Plain it was to Adam that the sincerity, or whatever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
-she saw in him, meant more to her than the precious food
-of which she stood in such dire need. Her hair was
-straggly and gray, her brow lined by pain and care, her
-burning eyes were sunk deep in dark hollows, and the
-rest of her features seemed mere pale shadows.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad for your confidence,” he said. “But never
-mind me. Try to eat some now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, there’s plenty,” added Genie, with soft eagerness.
-“You can’t fib to me about <em>this</em>. Oh, smell that
-soup! And there’s rice—clean white rice with sugar
-and milk!”</p>
-
-<p>“Child, if there’s plenty, go and eat.... Thank you,
-sir, I can help myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam followed Genie out, and presently the look of
-her, as she sat on the sand, in ravenous bewilderment
-of what to eat first, brought back poignantly to him the
-starvation days of his earlier experience. How blessed
-to appreciate food! Indeed, Genie would have made a
-little glutton of herself had not Adam wisely obviated
-that danger for her.</p>
-
-<p>Later, when she and her mother were asleep, he strolled
-under the cottonwoods along the murmuring stream where
-the bright stars shone reflected in the dark water. The
-place had the fragrance of spring, of fresh snow water,
-of green growths and blossoming flowers. Frogs were
-trilling from the gloom, a sweet, melodious music seldom
-heard by Adam. A faint, soft night breeze rustled in the
-palm leaves. The ragged mountain-side rose precipitously,
-a slanted mass of huge rocks, their shining surfaces alternating
-with the dark blank spaces. Above spread the
-sky, a wonderful deep blue, velvety, intense, from which
-blazed magnificent white stars, and countless trains and
-groups of smaller stars.</p>
-
-<p>Rest and thought came to him then. Destiny had dealt
-him many parts to play on the desert. So many violent,
-harsh, and bitter tasks! But this was to be different.
-Not upon evil days had he fallen! Nor had his wandering
-steps here taken hold of hell! The fragrance under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-the shadow of this looming mountain was the fragrance
-of an oasis. And in that silent shadow slept a child who
-would soon be an orphan. Adam had his chance to live
-awhile in one of the desert’s fruitful and blossoming
-spots. Only a desert man could appreciate the rest, the
-ease, the joy, the contrast of that opportunity. He could
-befriend an unfortunate child. But as refreshing and
-splendid as were these things, they were as naught compared
-to the blessing that would be breathed upon his
-head by a dying mother. Adam, lifting up his face
-to the starlight, felt that all his intense and passionate
-soul could only faintly divine what the agony of that
-mother had been, what now would be her relief. She
-knew. Her prayer had been answered. And Adam
-pondered and pondered over the meaning of her prayer
-and the significance of his wandering steps. He seemed
-to feel the low beat of a mighty heart, the encompassing
-embrace of a mighty and invisible spirit.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Daylight</span> showed to Adam the cottonwood oasis
-as he had it pictured in memory, except for the
-palm-thatched hut.</p>
-
-<p>He was hard at camp duties when Genie came out.
-The sun was rising, silver and ruddy and gold, and it
-shone upon her, played around her glossy head as she
-knelt on the grass beside the running water. While she
-bathed there, splashing diamond drops of water in the
-sunshine, she seemed all brightness and youth. But in
-the merciless light of day her face was too small, too
-thin, too pinched to have any comeliness. Her shining
-hair caught all the beauty of the morning. In one light
-it was auburn and in another a dark brown, and in any
-light it had glints and gleams of gold. It waved and
-curled rebelliously, a rich, thick, rippling mass falling
-to her shoulders. When, presently, she came over to
-Adam, to greet him and offer to help, then he had his
-first look at her eyes by day. Gazing into them, Adam
-hardly saw the small, unattractive, starved face. Like
-her hair, her eyes shone dark brown, and the lighter
-gleams were amber. The expression was of a straightforward
-soul, unconscious of unutterable sadness, gazing
-out at incomprehensible life, that should have been beautiful
-for her, but was not.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Genie,” said Adam, cheerily. “Of
-course you can help me. There’s heaps of work. And
-when you help me with that I’ll play with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Play!” she murmured, dreamily. She had never had
-a playmate.</p>
-
-<p>Thus began the business of the day for Adam. When
-breakfast was over and done with he set to work to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-improve that camp, and especially with an eye to the
-comfort of the invalid. Adam knew the wonderful curative
-qualities of desert air, if it was wholly trusted and
-lived in. On the shady side of the hut he erected a wide
-porch with palm-thatched roof that cut off the glare of
-the sky. With his own canvases, and others he found
-at the camp, he put up curtains that could be rolled up
-or let down as occasion required. Then he constructed
-two beds, one at each end of the porch, and instead of
-palm leaves he used thick layers of fragrant sage and
-greasewood. Mrs. Linwood, with the aid of Genie,
-managed to get out to her new quarters. Her pleasure
-at the change showed in her wan face. The porch was
-shady, cool, fragrant. She could look right out upon the
-clean, brown, beautiful streams where they met, and at
-the camp fire where Adam and Genie would be engaged,
-and at night she could see it blaze and glow, and burn
-down red. The low-branching cottonwoods were full
-of humming birds and singing birds, and always the
-innumerable bees. The clean white sand, the mesquites
-bursting into green, the nodding flowers in the grassy
-nooks under the great iron-rusted stones, the rugged, upheaved
-slope of mountain, and to the east an open vista
-between the trees where the desert stretched away gray
-and speckled and monotonous, down to the dim mountains
-over which the sun would rise; these could not but be
-pleasant and helpful. Love of life could not be separated
-from such things.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Linwood, sleeping outdoors is the most wonderful
-experience,” said Adam, earnestly. “You feel the
-night wind. The darkness folds around you. You look
-up through the leaves to the dark-blue sky and shining
-stars. You smell the dry sand and the fresh water and
-the flowers and the spicy desert plants. Every breath
-you draw is new, untainted. Living outdoors, by day
-and night, is the secret of my strength.”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas! We always feared the chill night air,” sighed
-Mrs. Linwood. “Life teaches so many lessons—too late.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span>
-“It is never too late,” returned Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Then he set himself to further tasks, and soon that day
-was ended. Other days like it passed swiftly, and each
-one brought more hope of prolonging Mrs. Linwood’s
-life. Adam feared she could not live, yet he worked
-and hoped for a miracle. Mrs. Linwood improved in
-some mysterious way that seemed of spirit rather than
-of flesh. As day after day went by and Adam talked with
-her, an hour here, an hour there, she manifestly grew
-stronger. But was it not only in mind? The sadness of
-her changed. The unhappiness of her vanished. The
-tragic cast and pallor of her face remained the same,
-but the spirit that shone from her eyes and trembled in
-her voice was one of love, gratitude, hope. Adam came
-at length to understand that the improvement was only
-a result of the inception of faith she had in him. With
-terrible tenacity she had clung to life, even while starving
-herself to give food to her child; and now that succor
-had come, her spirit in its exaltation triumphed over her
-body. Happiness was more powerful than the ravages
-of disease. But if that condition, if that mastery of
-mind over body, had continued, it would have been superhuman.
-The day came at last in which Mrs. Linwood
-sank back into the natural and inevitable state where the
-fatality of life ordered the eminence of death.</p>
-
-<p>When she was convulsed with the spasms of coughing,
-which grew worse every day, Adam felt that if he could
-pray to the God she believed in, he would pray for her
-sufferings to be ended. He hated this mystery of disease,
-this cruelty of nature. It was one of the things that
-operated against his acceptance of her God. Why was
-life so cruel? Was life only nature? Nature was
-indeed cruel. But if life was conflict, if life was an
-endless progress toward unattainable perfection, toward
-greater heights of mind and soul, then was life God, and
-in eternal conflict with nature? How hopelessly and
-impotently he pondered these distressing questions! Pain
-he could endure himself, and he had divined that in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-enduring it he had enlarged his character. But to suffer
-as this poor woman was suffering—to be devoured by
-millions of infinitesimal and rapacious animals feasting
-on blood and tissue—how insupportably horrible! What
-man could endure that—what man of huge frame and
-physical might—of intense and pulsing life? Only a
-man in whom intellect was supreme, who could look upon
-life resignedly as not the ultimate end, who knew not the
-delights of sensation, who had no absorbing passion for
-the gray old desert or the heaving sea, or the windy
-heights and the long purple shadows, who never burned
-and beat with red blood running free—only a martyr
-living for the future, or a man steeped in religion, could
-endure this blight of consumption. When Adam considered
-life in nature, he could understand this disease.
-It was merely a matter of animals fighting to survive.
-Let the fittest win! That was how nature worked toward
-higher and stronger life. But when he tried to consider
-the God this stricken woman worshiped, Adam could
-not reconcile himself to her agony. Why? The eternal
-Why was flung at him. She was a good woman. She
-had lived a life of sacrifice. She had always been a
-Christian. Yet she was not spared this horrible torture.
-Why?</p>
-
-<p>What hurt Adam more than anything else was the terror
-in Genie’s mute lips and the anguish in her speaking eyes.</p>
-
-<p>One day, during an hour when Mrs. Linwood rested
-somewhat easily, she called Adam to her. It happened
-to be while Genie was absent, listening to the bees or
-watching the flow of water.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you stay here—take care of Genie—until her
-uncle comes back?” queried the woman, with her low,
-panting breaths.</p>
-
-<p>“I promised you. But I think you should not want me
-to keep her here too long,” replied Adam, earnestly.
-“Suppose he does not come back in a year or two?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! I hadn’t thought of that. What, then, is your
-idea?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
-“Well, I’d wait here a good long time,” said Adam,
-soberly. “Then if Genie’s uncle didn’t come, I’d find
-a home for her.”</p>
-
-<p>“A home—for Genie!... Wansfell, have you considered?
-That would take money—to travel—to buy Genie—what
-she ought to—have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I suppose so. That part need not worry you.
-I have money. I’ll look out for Genie. I’ll find a home
-for her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d do—all that?” whispered the woman.</p>
-
-<p>“I promise you. Now, Mrs. Linwood, please don’t
-distress yourself. It’ll be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“It <em>is</em> all right. I’m not—in distress,” she replied, with
-something tremulous and new in her voice. “Oh, thank
-God—my faith—never failed!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam was not sure what she meant by this, but as
-he revolved it in his mind, hearing again the strange ring
-of joy which had been in her voice, he began to feel that
-somehow he represented a fulfillment and a reward to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell—listen,” she whispered, with more force.
-“I—I should have told you.... Genie is not poor. No!...
-She’s rich!... Her father found gold—over in the
-mountains.... He slaved at digging.... That killed
-him. But he found gold. It’s hidden inside the hut—under
-the floor—where I used to lie.... Bags of gold!
-Wansfell, my child will be rich!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well!... Oh, but I’m glad!” exclaimed Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It sustains me.... But I’ve worried so....
-My husband expected me—to take Genie out of the desert....
-I’ve worried about that money. Genie’s uncle—John
-Shaver is his name—he’s a good man. He loved her.
-He used to drink—but I hope the desert cured him of
-that. I think—he’ll be a father to Genie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he know about the gold that will be Genie’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. We never told him. My husband didn’t trust
-John—in money matters.... Wansfell, if you’ll say
-you’ll go with Genie—when her uncle comes—and invest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-the money—until she’s of age—I will have no other prayer
-except for her happiness.... I will die in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I promise. I’ll do my best,” he declared.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The next time she spoke to him was that evening at
-dusk. Frogs were trilling, and a belated mocking bird
-was singing low, full-throated melodies. Yet these beautiful
-sounds only accentuated the solemn desert stillness.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell—you remember—once we talked of God,”
-she said, very low.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I remember,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you just where you were—then?”</p>
-
-<p>“About the same, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure you understand yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure? Oh no. I change every day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, what do you call the thing in you—the will
-to tarry here? The manhood that I trusted?... The
-forgetfulness of self?... What do you call this strength
-of yours that fulfilled my faith—that gave me to God
-utterly—that enables me to die happy—that will be the
-salvation of my child?”</p>
-
-<p>“Manhood? Strength?” echoed Adam, in troubled perplexity.
-“I’m just sorry for you—for the little girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah yes, sorry! Indeed you are! But you don’t know
-yourself.... Wansfell, there was a presence beside my
-bed—just a moment before I called you. Something
-neither light nor shadow in substance—something neither
-life nor death.... It is gone now. But when I am
-dead it will come to you. <em>I</em> will come to you—like that....
-Somewhere out in the solitude and loneliness of
-your desert—at night when it is dark and still—and the
-heavens look down—there you will face your soul....
-You’ll see the divine in man.... You’ll realize that the
-individual dies, but the race lives.... You’ll have
-thundered at you from the silence, the vast, lonely land
-you love, from the stars and the infinite beyond—that your
-soul is immortal.... That this <em>Thing</em> in you is God!”</p>
-
-<p>When the voice ceased, so vibrant and full at the close,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-so more than physical, Adam bowed his head and plodded
-over the soft sand out to the open desert where mustering
-shadows inclosed him, and he toiled to and fro in the
-silence—a man bent under the Atlantean doubt and agony
-and mystery of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Genie’s mother died.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Long before sunrise of a later day Adam climbed to
-the first bulge of the mountain wall. On lofty heights
-his mind worked more slowly—sometimes not at all.
-The eye of an eagle sufficed him. Down below, on the
-level, during these last few days, while Genie sat mute,
-rigid, stricken, Adam had been distracted. The greatest
-problem of his desert experience confronted him. Always
-a greater problem—always a greater ordeal—that was
-his history of the years. Perhaps on the heights might
-come inspiration. The eastern sky was rosy. The desert
-glowed soft and gray and beautiful. Gray lanes wound
-immeasurably among bronze and green spots, like islands
-in a monotonous sea. The long range of the Bernardinos
-was veiled in the rare lilac haze of the dawn, and the
-opposite range speared the deep blue of sky with clear
-black-fringed and snowy peaks. Far down the vast valley,
-over the dim ridge of the Chocolates, there concentrated
-a bright rose and yellow and silver. This marvelous light
-intensified, while below the wondrous shadows deepened.
-Then the sun rose like liquid silver, bursting to flood
-the desert world.</p>
-
-<p>The sunrise solved Adam’s problem. His kindness, his
-pity, his patience and unswerving interest, his argument
-and reason and entreaty, had all failed to stir Genie out
-of her mute misery. Nothing spiritual could save her.
-But Genie had another mother—nature—to whom Adam
-meant to appeal as a last hope.</p>
-
-<p>He descended the slope to the oasis. There, near a
-new-made grave that ran parallel with an old one, mossy
-and gray, sat Genie, clamped in her wretchedness.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie,” he called, sharply, intending to startle her.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
-He did startle her. “I’m getting sick. I don’t have
-exercise enough. I used to walk miles every day. I
-must begin again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then go,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p>“But I can’t leave you alone here,” he protested. “Some
-other bad men might come. I’m sorry. You <em>must</em> come
-with me.”</p>
-
-<p>At least she was obedient. Heavily she rose, ready to
-accompany him, a thin shadow of a girl, hallowed eyed
-and wan, failing every hour. Adam offered his hand
-at the stream to help her across. But for that she would
-have fallen. She left her hand in his. And they set
-out upon the strangest walk Adam had ever undertaken.
-It was not long, and before it ended he had to drag her,
-and finally carry her. That evening she was so exhausted
-she could not repel the food he gave her, and afterward
-she soon fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Next day he took her out again, and thereafter every
-morning and every afternoon, relentless in his determination,
-though his cruelty wrung his heart. Gentle and
-kind as he was, he yet saw that she fell into the stream,
-that she pricked her bare feet on cactus, that she grew
-frightened on the steep slopes, that she walked farther
-and harder every day. Nature was as relentless as Adam.
-Soon Genie’s insensibility to pain and hunger was as if it
-had never been. Whenever she pricked or bruised the
-poor little feet Adam always claimed it an accident; and
-whenever her starved little body cried out in hunger he
-fed her. Thus by action, and the forcing of her senses,
-which were involuntary, he turned her mind from her
-black despair. This took days and weeks. Many and
-many a time Adam’s heart misgave him, but just as often
-something else in him remained implacable. He had seen
-the training of Indian children. He knew how the mother
-fox always threw from her litter the black cub that was
-repugnant to her. The poor little black offspring was
-an outcast. He was soon weaned, and kicked out of
-the nest to die or survive. But if he did survive the cruel,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
-harsh bitterness of strife and heat and thirst and starvation—his
-contact with his environment—he would grow
-superior to all the carefully mothered and nourished cubs.
-Adam expected this singular law of nature, as regarded
-action and contact and suffering, to be Genie’s salvation,
-provided it did not kill her; and if she had to
-die he considered it better for her to die of travail,
-of effort beyond her strength, than of a miserable pining
-away.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, as he finished his camp tasks, he missed
-her. Upon searching, he found her flat on the grassy
-bank of the stream, face downward, with her thin brown
-feet in the air. He wondered what she could be doing,
-and his heart sank, for she had often said it would be
-so easy and sweet to lie down and sleep in the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, child, what are you doing?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! the bees—the honey bees! They’re washing
-themselves in the water. First I thought they were drinking.
-But no!... They’re washing. It’s so funny.”</p>
-
-<p>When she looked up, Adam thrilled at sight of her
-eyes. If they had always been beautiful in shape and
-color, what were they now, with youth returned, and a
-light of the birth of wonder and joy in life? Youth
-had won over tragedy. Nature hid deep at the heart of
-all creation. The moment also had a birth for Adam—an
-exquisite birth of the first really happy moment of his
-long desert years.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see,” he said, and he lowered his ponderous
-length and stretched it beside her on the grassy bank.
-“Genie, you’re right about the bees being funny, but
-wrong about what they’re doing. They are diluting their
-honey. Well, I’m not sure, but I think bees on the desert
-dilute their honey with water. Watch!... Maybe they
-drink at the same time. But you see—some of them have
-their heads turned away from the water, as if they meant
-to back down.... Bees are hard to understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the great horn spoon!” ejaculated Genie, and then
-she laughed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
-Adam echoed her laugh. He could have shouted or
-sung to the skies. Never before, indeed, had he heard
-Genie use such an expression, but the content of it was
-precious to him. It revealed hitherto unsuspected depths
-in her, as the interest in bees hinted of an undeveloped
-love of nature.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, do you care about bees, birds, flowers—what
-they do—how they live and grow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Love them,” she answered, simply.</p>
-
-<p>“You do! Ah, that’s fine! So do I. Why, Genie,
-I’ve lived so long on the desert, so many years! What
-would I have done without love of everything that flies
-and crawls and grows?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not old,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s good you think that. We’ll be great pards now....
-Look, Genie! Look at that humming bird! There,
-he darts over the water. Well! What’s he doing?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s quick ear had caught the metallic hum of tiny,
-swift wings. Then he had seen a humming bird poised
-over the water. As he called Genie’s attention it hummed
-away. Then, swift as a glancing ray, it returned. Adam
-could see the blur of its almost invisible wings. As it
-quivered there, golden throat shining like live fire, with
-bronze and green and amber tints so vivid in the sunlight,
-it surely was worthy reason for a worship of nature.
-Not only had it beauty, but it had singular action. It
-poised, then darted down, swift as light, to disturb the
-smooth water, either with piercing bill or flying wings.
-Time and again the tiny bird performed this antic. Was
-the diminutive-winged creature playing, or drinking, or
-performing gyrations for the edification of a female of
-his species, hidden somewhere in the overhanging foliage?
-Adam knew that some courting male birds cooed, paraded,
-strutted, fought before the females they hoped to make
-consorts. Why not a humming bird?</p>
-
-<p>“By your great horn spoon, Genie!” exclaimed Adam.
-“I wonder if that’s the way he drinks.”</p>
-
-<p>But all that Adam could be sure of was the beautiful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span>
-opal body of the tiny bird, the marvelous poise as it hung
-suspended in air, the incredibly swift darts up and down,
-and the little widening, circling ripples on the water. No,
-there was more Adam could be sure of, and Genie’s
-delight proved the truth of it—and that was how sure
-the harvest of thought, how sure the joy of life which
-was the reward for watching!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>One morning when Adam arose to greet the sunrise
-he looked through the gap between the trees, and low
-down along the desert floor he saw a burst of yellow.
-At first he imagined it to be a freak of sunlight or
-reflection, but he soon decided that it was a <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">palo verde</i>
-in blossom. Beautiful, vivid, yellow gold, a fresh hue
-of the desert spring. May had come. Adam had forgotten
-the flight of time. What bittersweet stinging memory
-had that flushing <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">palo verde</i> brought back to him!
-He had returned to the desert land he loved best, and
-which haunted him.</p>
-
-<p>Genie responded slowly to the Spartan training. She
-had been frail, at best, and when grief clamped her soul
-and body she had sunk to the verge. The effort she was
-driven to, and the exertion needful, wore her down until
-she appeared merely skin and bones. Then came the
-dividing line between waste and repair. She began to
-mend. Little by little her appetite improved until at last
-hunger seized upon her. From that time she grew like
-a weed. Thus the forced use of bone and muscle drove
-her blood as Adam had driven her, and the result was
-a natural functioning of physical life. Hard upon that
-change, and equally as natural, came the quickening of
-her mind. Healthy pulsing blood did not harbor morbid
-grief. Action was constructive; grief was destructive.</p>
-
-<p>Adam, giving himself wholly to this task of rehabilitation,
-added to his relentless developing of Genie’s body a
-thoughtful and interesting appeal to her mind. At once
-he made two discoveries—first, that Genie would give
-herself absorbingly to any story whatsoever, and secondly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
-that his mind seemed to be a full treasure house
-from which to draw. He who had spoken with so few
-men and women on the desert now was inspired by a
-child.</p>
-
-<p>He told Genie the beautiful Indian legend of Taquitch
-as it had been told to him by Oella, the Coahuila maiden
-who had taught him her language.</p>
-
-<p>When he finished Genie cried out: “Oh, I know. Taquitch
-is up on the mountain yet! In summer he hurls
-the lightning and thunder. In winter he lets loose the
-storm winds. And always, by day and night, he rolls
-the rocks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Genie, he’s there,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did he steal the Indian maidens?” she asked,
-wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>Genie evolved a question now and then that Adam found
-difficult to answer. She had the simplicity of an Indian,
-and the inevitableness, and a like ignorance of the so-called
-civilization of the white people.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I suppose Taquitch fell in love with the Indian
-maidens,” replied Adam, slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Fell in love. What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t your mother ever tell you why she married
-your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you think she married him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose they wanted to be together—to work—and
-go places, like they came West when they were sick.
-To help each other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. Well, Genie, they wanted to be together
-because they loved each other. They married because
-they fell in love with each other. Didn’t you ever have
-Indians camp here, and learn from them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, different tribes have been here. But I didn’t
-see any Indians falling in love. If a chief wanted a
-wife he took any maiden or squaw he wanted. Some
-chiefs had lots of wives. And if a brave wanted a wife
-he bought her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span>
-“Not much falling in love there,” confessed Adam, with
-a laugh. “But, Genie, you mustn’t think Indians can’t
-love each other. For they can.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I’ve seen birds falling in love,” went on
-Genie, seriously. “I’ve watched them when they come
-to drink and wash. Quail and road runners, now—they
-often come in pairs, and they act funny. At least one
-of each pair acted funny. But it was the pretty one—the
-one with a topknot—that did all the falling in love. Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Genie, the male, or the man-bird, so to speak,
-always has brighter colors and crests and the like, and
-he—he sort of shines up to the other, the female, and
-shows off before her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why doesn’t she do the same thing?” queried Genie.
-“That’s not fair. It’s all one-sided.”</p>
-
-<p>“Child, how you talk! Of course love isn’t one-sided,”
-declared Adam, getting bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is. She ought to show off before him. But
-I’ll tell you what—after they began to build a nest I
-never saw any more falling in love. It’s a shame. It
-ought to last always. I’ve heard mother say things to
-father I couldn’t understand. But now I believe she
-meant that after he got her—married her—he wasn’t like
-he was before.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam had to laugh. The old discontent of life, the
-old mystery of the sexes, the old still, sad music of
-humanity spoken by the innocent and unknowing lips
-of this child! How feminine! The walls of the inclosing
-desert, like those of an immense cloister, might hide a
-woman all her days from the illuminating world, but they
-could never change her nature.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, I must be honest with you,” replied Adam.
-“I’ve got to be parents, brother, sister, friend, everybody
-to you. And I’ll fall short sometimes in spite of my
-intentions. But I’ll be honest.... And the fact is, it
-seems to be a sad truth that men and man-birds, and
-man-creatures generally, are all very much alike. If they
-want anything, they want it badly. And when they fall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-in love they do act funny. They will do anything. They
-show off, beg, bully, quarrel, are as nice and sweet as—as
-sugar; and they’ll fight, too, until they get their particular
-wives. Then they become natural—like they were
-before. It’s my idea, Genie, that all the wives of creation
-should demand always the same deportment which won
-their love. Don’t you agree with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do, you bet. That’s what <em>I’ll</em> have.... But will <em>I</em>
-ever be falling in love?”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes that looked into Adam’s then were to him
-as the wonder of the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you will. Some day, when you grow up.”</p>
-
-<p>“With you?” she asked, in dreamy speculation.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Genie! Not me. Why—I—I’m too old!” he
-ejaculated. “I’m old enough to be your daddy.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not old,” she replied, with a finality that admitted
-of no question. “But if you were—and still like
-you are—what difference would it make?”</p>
-
-<p>“Like I am! Well, Genie, how’s that?” he queried,
-curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so big and strong! You can do so much with
-those hands. And your voice sort of—of quiets something
-inside me. When I lie down to sleep, knowing
-you’re there under the cottonwood, I’m not afraid of the
-dark.... And your eyes are just like an eagle’s. Oh,
-you needn’t laugh! I’ve seen eagles. An Indian here
-once had two. I used to love to watch them look. But
-then their eyes were never kind like yours.... I think
-when I get big I’ll go falling in love with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, little girl, that’s a long way off,” said Adam,
-divided between humor and pathos. “But let’s get back
-to natural history. A while ago you mentioned a bird
-called a road runner. That’s not as well-known a name
-among desert men as chaparral cock. You know out in
-the desert there are no roads. This name road runner
-comes from a habit—and it’s a friendly habit—of the
-bird running along the road ahead of a man or wagon.
-Now the road runner is the most wonderful bird of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-desert. That is saying a great deal. Genie, tell me all
-you know about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know all about him,” declared Genie, brightly.
-“There’s one lives in the mesquite there. I see him every
-day, lots of times. Before you came he was very tame.
-I guess now he’s afraid. But not so afraid as he was....
-Well, he’s a long bird, with several very long
-feathers for a tail. It’s a funny tail, for when he walks
-he bobs it up and down. His color is speckled—gray and
-brown and white. I’ve seen dots of purple on him, too.
-He has a topknot that he can put up and lay down, as
-he has a mind to. When it’s up it shows some gold
-color, almost red underneath. And when it’s up he’s mad.
-He snaps his big bill like—like—oh, I don’t know what
-like, but it makes you shiver. I’ve never seen him in
-the water, but I know he goes in, because he shakes out
-his feathers, picks himself, and sits in the sun. He can
-fly, only he doesn’t fly much. But, oh, how he can run!
-Like a streak! I see him chase lizards across the sand.
-You know how a lizard can run! Well, no lizard ever
-gets away from a road runner. There’s a race—a fierce
-little tussle in the sand—a snap! snap!—and then old
-killer road runner walks proudly back, carrying the lizard
-in his bill. If it wasn’t for the way he kills and struts
-I could love him. For he was very tame. He used to
-come right up to me. But I never cared for him as I
-do for other birds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, you’ve watched a road runner, all right. I
-didn’t imagine you knew so much. Yes, he’s a killer, a
-murderer. But no worse than other desert birds. They
-all kill. They’re all fierce. And if they weren’t they’d
-die.... Now I want to tell you the most wonderful
-thing a road runner does. He’ll fight and kill and eat
-a rattlesnake!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! Honest Injun?” cried Genie.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I’ve watched many a battle between a road runner
-and a rattlesnake, and nearly all of those battles were
-won by the birds. But <em>that</em> is not the most wonderful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>
-thing a road runner does. I’ll tell you. I’ve never seen
-this thing myself, but a friend of mine, an old prospector
-named Dismukes, swears it’s true. He knows more about
-the desert than any man I ever met, and he wouldn’t tell
-a lie. Well, here’s what it is. He says he saw a road
-runner come upon a sleeping rattlesnake. But he didn’t
-pounce upon the snake. It happened to be that the snake
-slept on the sand near some bushes of <i>cholla</i> cactus. You
-know how the dead cones fall off and lie around. This
-wonderful bird dragged these loose pieces of cactus and
-laid them close together in a circle, all around the rattlesnake.
-Built a fence around him! Penned him in! Now
-I can vouch for how a rattlesnake hates cactus.... Then
-the fierce bird flew up and pounced down upon the snake.
-Woke him up! The rattlesnake tried to slip away, but
-everywhere he turned was a cactus which stuck into
-him, and over him the darting, picking bird. So round
-and round he went, striking as best he could. But he
-was unable to hit the bird, and every pounce upon him
-drew the blood. You’ve heard the snap of that big long
-beak. Well, the rattlesnake grew desperate and began
-to bite himself. And what with his own bites and those
-of his enemy he was soon dead.... And then the beautiful,
-graceful, speckled bird proceeded to tear and devour
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet it’s true!” ejaculated Genie. “A road runner
-could and would do just that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely. It’s strange, and perhaps true. Indeed,
-the desert is the place for things impossible anywhere
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do birds and beasts kill and eat each other?”
-asked Genie.</p>
-
-<p>“It is nature, Genie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nature could have done better. Why don’t people
-eat each other? They do <em>kill</em> each other. And they eat
-animals. But isn’t that all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, some kinds of people—cannibals in the South
-Seas—and savages—do kill and eat men. It is horrible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-to believe. Dismukes told me that he came upon a tribe
-of Indians on the west coast of Sonora in Mexico. That’s
-not more than four hundred miles from here. He went
-down there prospecting for gold. He thought these
-savages—the Seri Indians, they’re called—were descended
-from cannibals and sometimes ate man flesh themselves.
-No one knows but that they do it often. I’ve met prospectors
-and travelers who scouted the idea of the Seris
-being cannibals. But I’ve heard some bad stories about
-them. Dismukes absolutely believed that in a poor season
-for meat, if chance offered, they would kill and eat a
-white man. Prospectors have gone into that country
-never to return.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ughh! I’ve near starved, but I’d never get that
-hungry. I’d die. Wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I would, child.”</p>
-
-<p>And so, during the leisure hours, that grew more and
-longer as the hot summer season advanced, Adam led
-Genie nearer to nature, always striving with his observations
-to teach the truth, however stern, and to instruct
-and stimulate her growing mind. All was not music of
-birds and perfume of flowers and serene summer content
-at the rosy dawns and the golden sunsets. The desert
-life was at work. How hard to reconcile the killing
-with the living! But when Adam espied an eagle swooping
-down from the mountain heights, its wings bowed,
-and its dark body shooting so wondrously, then he spoke
-of the freedom of the lonely king of birds, and the grace
-of his flight, and the noble spirit of his life.</p>
-
-<p>Likewise when Adam heard the honk of wild geese he
-made haste to have Genie see them winging wide and
-triangular flight across the blue sky, to the north. He
-told her how they lived all the winter in the warm south,
-and when spring came a wonderful instinct bade them
-rise and fly far northward, to the reedy banks of some
-lonely lake, and there gobble and honk and feed and
-raise their young.</p>
-
-<p>On another day, and this was in drowsy June when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-all the air seemed still, he was roused from his siesta by
-cries of delight from Genie. She knelt before him on
-the sand, and in one hand she held a beautiful horned toad,
-and the other hand she stretched out to Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! Oh, look!” she cried, ecstatically, and her eyes
-then rivaled the jeweled eyes of the desert reptile. Some
-dark-red drops of bright liquid showed against the brown
-of Genie’s hand. “There! It’s blood! I picked him up
-as I had all the others, so many hundreds of times. Only
-this time I felt something warm and wet. I looked at
-my hand. There! He had squirted the drops of blood!
-And, oh, I was quick to look at his eyes! One was still
-wet, bloody. I know he squirted the drops of blood from
-his eyes!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Adam had confirmed for him one of the mysteries
-of the desert. Dismukes had been the first to tell Adam
-about the strange habit of horned toads ejecting blood
-from their eyes. One other desert man, at least, had
-corroborated Dismukes. But Adam, who had seldom
-passed a horned toad without picking it up to gaze at
-the wondrous coloration, and to see it swell and puff, had
-never come upon the peculiar phenomenon. And horned
-toads on his trails had been many. To interest Genie,
-he built her a corral of flat stones in the sand, and he
-scoured the surrounding desert for horned toads. What
-a miscellaneous collection he gathered! They all had the
-same general scalloped outlines and tiny horns, but the
-color and design seemed to partake of the physical characteristics
-of the spot where each was found. If they
-squatted in the sand and lay still, it was almost impossible
-to see them, so remarkable was their protective coloration.
-Adam turned the assortment over to Genie with instruction
-to feed them, and play with them, and tease them
-in the hope that one might sometime eject drops of blood
-from his eyes. When it actually happened, Genie’s
-patience was rewarded.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s theory that the reward of the faithful desert
-watcher would always come was exemplified in more than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-one way. Genie had never seen or heard of a tarantula
-wasp. She had noticed big and little tarantulas, but of
-the fierce, winged, dragon-fly hawk of the desert—the
-tarantula wasp—she had no knowledge. Adam, therefore,
-had always kept a keen lookout for one.</p>
-
-<p>They were up in the canyon on a hot June day, resting
-in the shade of the rustling palms. A stream babbled
-and splashed over the stones, and that was the only sound
-to break the dreaming silence of the canyon. All at once
-Adam heard a low whir like the hum of tiny wings. As
-he turned his head the sound became a buzz. Then he
-espied a huge tarantula wasp. Quickly he called to Genie,
-and they watched. It flew around and around about a
-foot from the ground, a fierce-looking, yet beautiful
-creature, with yellow body and blue gauzy wings. It was
-fully two inches and more long.</p>
-
-<p>“He sees a tarantula. Now watch!” whispered Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the wasp darted down to the edge of a low
-bush, into some coarse grass that grew there. Instantly
-came a fierce whiz of wings, like the buzz of a captured
-bumblebee, only much louder and more vibrant. Adam
-saw the blades of grass tumble. A struggle to the death
-was going on there. Adam crawled over a few yards,
-drawing Genie with him; and they saw the finish of a
-terrific battle between the wasp and a big hairy tarantula.</p>
-
-<p>“There! It’s over, and the tarantula is dead,” said
-Adam. “Genie, I used to watch this kind of a desert
-fight, and not think much more about it. But one day
-I made a discovery. I had a camp over here, and I watched
-a tarantula wasp kill a tarantula. I didn’t know it then,
-but this wasp was a female, ready to lay her eggs. Well,
-she rolled the big spider around until she found a place
-that suited her. Then she dug a hole, rolled him into it,
-covered him over, and flew away. I wondered then why
-she did that. I went away from that camp, and after a
-while I came back. Then one day I remembered about
-the wasp burying the tarantula. And so, just for fun
-and curiosity, I found the grave—it was near the end of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span>
-a stone—and I opened it up. What do you think I
-discovered?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me!” exclaimed Genie, breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“I found the tarantula almost eaten up by a lot of
-tiny wasps, as much like worms as wasps! Then I understood.
-That tarantula wasp had killed the tarantula, laid
-her eggs inside his body, tumbled him into his grave, and
-covered him over. By and by those eggs hatched, and
-the little wasps ate the tarantula—lived and grew, and
-after a while came out full-fledged tarantula wasps like
-their mother.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Time</span> passed. The days slipped by to make weeks,
-and weeks merged into months. Summer with its
-hot midday hours, when man and beast rested or slept,
-seemed to shorten its season by half. No human creature
-ever entered a desert oasis without joy, nor left it without
-regret. As time went fleeting by Adam now and then
-remembered Dismukes, and these memories were full of
-both gladness and pathos. He tried to visualize the old
-prospector in the new role of traveler, absorber of life,
-spendthrift, and idler. Nevertheless, Adam could never
-be sure in his heart that Dismukes would find what he
-sought.</p>
-
-<p>But for the most part of the still, hot, waking hours,
-Adam, when he was not working or sleeping, devoted
-himself to Genie. The girl changed every day—how, he
-was unable to tell. Most wondrous of all in nature was
-human life, and beyond all sublimity was the human
-soul!</p>
-
-<p>Every morning at sunrise Genie knelt by her mother’s
-grave with bowed head and clasped hands, and every
-evening at sunset or in the golden dusk of twilight she
-again knelt in prayer.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, why do you kneel there—now?” asked Adam
-once, unable to contain his curiosity. “You did not use to
-do it. Only the last few weeks or month.”</p>
-
-<p>“I forgot I’d promised mother,” she replied. “Besides,
-could I pray when I wanted to die?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I suppose not. It would be hard,” replied Adam,
-gravely. “Please don’t think me curious. Tell me, Genie,
-what do you pray for?”</p>
-
-<p>“I used to pray, ‘Now I lay me down to sleep,’ as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
-mother taught me when I was little. But now I make
-up my own prayers. I ask God to keep the souls of
-mother and father in heaven. I pray I may be good and
-happy, so when they look down and see me they will be
-glad. I pray for you, and then for every one in the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>Slow, strong unrest, the endless moving of contending
-tides, heaved in Adam’s breast.</p>
-
-<p>“So you pray for me, Genie?... Well, it is good
-of you. I hope I’m worthy.... But, <em>why</em> do you
-pray?”</p>
-
-<p>She pondered the question. Thought was developing
-in Genie. “Before mother died I prayed because she
-taught me. Since then—lately—it—it lifts me up—it
-takes away the sorrow here.” And she put a hand over
-her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, then you believe in God—the God who is supposed
-to answer your prayers?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. And he is not a god like Taquitch—or the beasts
-and rocks that the Indians worship. My God is all around
-me, in the sunshine, in the air, in the humming bees and
-whispering leaves and murmuring water. I feel him
-everywhere, and in me, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, tell me one prayer, just <em>one</em> of yours or your
-mother’s that was truly answered,” appealed Adam, with
-earnest feeling.</p>
-
-<p>“We prayed for some one to come. I know mother
-prayed for some one to save me from being alone—from
-starving. And I prayed for some one to come and help
-her—to relieve her terrible dread about me.... And
-<em>you</em> came!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam was silenced. What had he to contend with here?
-Faith and fact were beyond question, as Genie represented
-them. What little he knew! He could not even believe
-that a divine guidance had been the spirit of his wandering
-steps. But he was changing. Always the future—always
-the unknown calling—always the presentiment of sterner
-struggle, of larger growth, of ultimate fulfillment! His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-illusion, his fetish, his phantasmagoria rivaled the eternal
-and inexplicable faith of his friend Dismukes.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Andreas Canyon was far from the camp under the
-cottonwoods, but Adam and Genie, having once feasted
-their eyes upon its wildness and beauty and grandeur,
-went back again and again, so that presently the distance
-in the hot sun was no hindrance, and the wide area of
-white, glistening, terrible <i>cholla</i> cactus was no obstacle.</p>
-
-<p>For that matter the cactus patch was endurable because
-of its singular beauty. Adam could not have told why
-<i>cholla</i> fascinated him, and, though Genie admitted she
-liked to look at the frosty silver-lighted cones and always
-had an impulse to prick her fingers on the cruel thorns,
-she could not explain why.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, the Yaqui Indians in Sonora love this <i>cholla</i>,”
-said Adam. “Love it as they hate Mexicans. They will
-strip a Mexican naked, tear the skin off the soles of his
-feet, and drive him through the <i>cholla</i> until he’s dead. It
-wouldn’t take long!... All prospectors hate <i>cholla</i>. I
-hate it, yet I—I guess I’m a little like the Yaquis. I
-often prick my finger on <i>cholla</i> just to feel the sting, the
-burn, the throb. The only pain I could ever compare to
-that made by <i>cholla</i> is the sting of the sharp horn of a
-little catfish back in Ohio. Oh! I’ll never forget that!
-A poison, burning sting!... But <i>cholla</i> is terrible because
-the thorns stick in your flesh. When you jerk to free
-yourself the thorns leave the cones. Each thorn has an
-invisible barb and it works deeper and deeper into flesh.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t <em>I</em> know!” exclaimed Genie, emphatically. “I’ve
-spent whole hours digging them out of my feet and legs.
-But how pretty the <i>cholla</i> shines! Only it doesn’t tell
-the truth, does it, Wanny?”</p>
-
-<p>“Child, please don’t call me Wanny. It’s so—so silly,”
-protested Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not. No sillier than your calling me child! I’m
-nearly fifteen. I’m growing right out of my clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Call me Adam.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span>
-“No, I don’t like that name. And I can’t call you
-mister or father or brother.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what’s wrong with Adam?”</p>
-
-<p>“I read in mother’s bible about Adam and Eve. I
-hated her when the devil got into her. And I didn’t like
-Adam. And I don’t like the <em>name</em> Adam. You’d never
-have been driven from heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not so sure about that,” said Adam, ruefully.
-“Genie, I was wicked when I was a—a young man.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were! Well, I don’t care. <em>You’d</em> never be
-tempted to disobey the Lord—not by Eve with all her
-stolen apples!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, called me Wanny,” returned Adam, and
-he made haste to change the subject. There were times
-when Genie, with her simplicity, her directness, her curiosity,
-and her innocence, caused Adam extreme perplexity,
-not to say embarrassment. He remembered his own bringing
-up. It seemed every year his childhood days came
-back closer. And thrown as he was in constant companionship
-with this child of nature, he began to wonder
-if the sophisticated education of children, especially girls,
-as it had been in his youth, was as fine and simple and
-true to life as it might have been.</p>
-
-<p>Andreas Canyon yawned with wide mouth and huge
-yellow cliffs. Just beyond the mouth of the canyon and
-across the wide space from cliff to slope bloomed the
-most verdant and beautiful oasis of that desert region.
-Huge gray bowlders, clean and old, and russet with lichen,
-made barricade for a clear stream of green water, as if
-to protect it from blowing desert sand. Yet there were
-little beaches of white sand, lined by colored pebbles.
-Green rushes and flags grew in the water. Beyond the
-stream, on the side of the flat-rocked slope, lay a many-acred
-thicket of mesquite, impenetrable except for birds
-and beasts. The green of the leaves seemed dominated by
-bronze colors of the mistletoe.</p>
-
-<p>The oasis proper, however, was the grove of cottonwoods,
-sycamores, and palms. How bright green the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
-foliage of cottonwoods—and smooth white the bark of
-sycamores! But verdant and cool as it was under their
-shade, Adam and Genie always sought the aloof and
-stately palms, wonderful trees not native there, planted
-years and years before by the Spanish padres.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I love it here!” exclaimed Genie. “Listen to the
-palms whisper!”</p>
-
-<p>They stood loftily, with spreading green fanlike leaves
-at the tops, and all the trunks swathed and bundled
-apparently in huge cases of straw. These yellow sheaths
-were no less than the leaves that had died. As the palms
-grew the new leaves kept bursting from the tufted tops,
-and those leaves lowest down died and turned yellow.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, your uncle seems a long time coming back for
-you,” remarked Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope he never comes,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was surprised and somewhat disconcerted at her
-reply, and yet strangely pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I never liked him and I don’t want to go away
-with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother said he was a good man—that he loved
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Ed was good, and very kind to me. I—I
-ought to be ashamed,” replied Genie. “But he drank,
-and when he drank he kissed me—he put his hands on
-me. I hated that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever tell your mother?” inquired Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I told her. I asked her why he did that. And
-she said not to mind—only to keep away from him when
-he drank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, your uncle did wrong, and your mother did
-wrong not to tell you so,” declared Adam, earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“Wrong? What do you mean—wrong? I only thought
-I didn’t like him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll tell you some day.... But now, to go
-back to what you said about leaving—you know I’m going
-with you when your uncle comes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
-“Wanny, do <em>you</em> want that time to come soon?” she
-asked, wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course, for your sake. You’re getting to be
-a big girl. You must go to school. You must get out
-to civilization.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I’m crazy to go!” she burst out, covering her
-face. “Yet I’ve a feeling I’ll hate to leave here....
-I’ve been so happy lately.”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, it relieves me to hear you’re anxious to go.
-And it pleases me to know you’ve been happy lately.
-You see I’m only a—a man, you know. How little I
-could do for you! I’ve tried. I’ve done my best. But
-at that best I’m only a poor old homeless outcast—a
-desert wanderer! <span class="locked">I’m——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hush up!” she cried, with quick, sweet warmth.
-Swiftly she enveloped him, hugged him close, and kissed
-his cheek. “Wanny, you’re grand!... You’re like
-Taquitch—you’re <em>my</em> Taquitch with face like the sun!
-And I love you—love you as I never loved anyone except
-my mother! And I hope Uncle Ed never comes, so
-you’ll have to take care of me always.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam gently disengaged himself from Genie’s impulsive
-arms, yet, despite his embarrassment and confused sense
-of helplessness, he felt the better for her action. Natural,
-spontaneous, sincere, it warmed his heart. It proved more
-than all else what a child she was.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, let me make sure you understand,” he said,
-gravely. “I love you, too, as if you were my little sister.
-And if your uncle doesn’t come I’ll take you somewhere—find
-you a home. But I never—much as I would like
-to—never can take care of you always.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” she flashed, with her terrible directness.</p>
-
-<p>Adam had begun his development of Genie by telling
-the truth; he had always abided by it; and now, in these
-awakening days for her, he must never veer from the
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>“If I tell you why—will you promise never to speak of
-it—so long as you live?” he asked, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
-“Never! I promise. Never, Wanny!”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, I am an outcast. I am a hunted man. I can
-never go back to civilization and stay.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he told her the story of the ruin of his life.
-When he finished she fell weeping upon his shoulder and
-clung to him. For Adam the moment was sad and sweet—sad
-because a few words had opened up the dark,
-tragic gulf of his soul; and sweet because the passionate
-grief of a child assured him that even he, wanderer as
-he was, knew something of sympathy and love.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Wanny, you—could—go and—be—pun—ished—and
-then—come back!” she cried, between sobs. “You’d—never—have to—hide—any
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>Out of her innocence and simplicity she had spoken
-confounding truth. What a terrible truth! Those words
-of child wisdom sowed in Adam the seed of a terrible
-revolt. Revolt—yea, revolt against this horrible need to
-hide—this fear and dread of punishment that always and
-forever so bitterly mocked his manhood! If he could find
-the strength to rise to the heights of Genie’s wisdom—divine
-philosophy of a child!—he would no longer hate
-his shadowed wandering steps down the naked shingles
-and hidden trails of the lonely desert. But, alas! whence
-would come that strength? Not from the hills! Not
-from the nature that had made him so strong, so fierce,
-so sure to preserve his life! It could only come from the
-spirit that had stood in the dusky twilight beside a dying
-woman’s side. It could come only from the spirit to whom
-a child prayed while kneeling at her mother’s grave. And
-for Adam that spirit held aloof, illusive as the specters
-of the dead, beyond his grasp, an invisible medium, if
-indeed it was not a phantom, that seemed impossible of
-reality in the face of the fierce, ruthless, inevitable life
-and death and decay of the desert. Could God be nature—that
-thing, that terrible force, light, fire, water, pulse—that
-quickening of plant, flesh, stone, that dying of all
-only to renew—that endless purpose and progress, from
-the first whirling gas globe of the universe, throughout<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-the ages down to the infinitesimal earth so fixed in its
-circling orbit, so pitiful in its present brief fertility? The
-answer was as unattainable as to pluck down the stars,
-as hopeless as to think of the fleeting of the years, as
-mysterious as the truth of where man came from and
-whence he was to go.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Snow on the gray old peak! It reminded Adam how,
-long ago, from far down the valley, he had watched the
-mountain crown itself in dazzling white. Snow on the
-heights meant winter that tempered the heat, let loose
-the storm winds; and therefore, down in the desert, comfort
-and swiftly flying days. Indeed, so swift were they
-that Adam, calling out sad and well-remembered words,
-“Oh, time, stand still here!” seemed to look at a few more
-golden sunsets and, lo! again it was spring. Time would
-not stand still! Nor would the budding, blossoming
-youth of Genie! Nor would the slow-mounting might of
-the tumult in Adam’s soul!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Then swifter than the past, another year flew by.
-Genie’s uncle did not come. And Adam began to doubt
-that he would ever come. And the hope of Genie’s, that
-he never would come began insidiously to enter into
-Adam’s thought. Again the loneliness, the solitude and
-silence, and something more he could not name, began to
-drag Adam from duty, from effort of mind. The desert
-never stopped its work, on plant, or rock, or man.
-Adam knew that he required another shock to quicken his
-brain, to stir again the spiritual need, to make him fight
-the subtle, all-pervading, ever-present influence of the
-desert.</p>
-
-<p>In all that time Adam saw but two white men, prospectors
-passing by down the sandy trails. Indians came that
-way but seldom. Across the valley there was an encampment,
-which he visited occasionally to buy baskets, skins,
-meat, and to send Indians out after supplies. The great
-problem was clothes for Genie. It was difficult to get materials,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
-difficult for Genie to make dresses, and impossible to
-keep her from tearing or wearing or growing out of
-them. Adam found that Indian moccasins, and tough
-overalls such as prospectors wore, cut down to suit Genie,
-and woolen blouses she made herself, were the only things
-for her. Like a road runner she ran over the rocks and
-sand! For Genie, cactus was as if it were not! As for
-a hat, she would not wear one. Adam’s responsibility
-weighed upon him. When he asked Genie what in the
-world she would wear when he took her out of the desert,
-to pass through villages and ranches and towns, where
-people lived, she naïvely replied, “What I’ve got on!”
-And what she wore at the moment was, of course, the
-boyish garb that was all Adam could keep on her, and
-which happened just then to be minus the moccasins.
-Genie loved to scoop up the warm white sand with her
-bare brown feet, and then to dabble them in the running
-water.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I give up!” exclaimed Adam, resignedly. “But
-when we do get to Riverside or San Diego, where there’s
-a store, you’ve <em>got</em> to go with me to buy girl’s dresses
-and things—and you’ve <em>got</em> to wear them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Wanny, that will be grand!” she cried, dazzled
-at the prospect. “But—let’s don’t go—just yet!”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>In the early fall—what month it was Adam could not
-be sure—he crossed the arm of the valley to the encampment
-of the Coahuilas. The cool nights and tempering
-days had made him hungry for meat. He found the
-Indian hunters at home, and, in fact, they had just packed
-fresh sheep meat down from the mountain. They were
-of the same tribe as the old chief, Charley Jim, who had
-taught Adam so much of the desert during those early
-hard years over in the Chocolates. Adam always asked
-for news of Charley Jim, usually to be disappointed. He
-was a nomad, this old chieftain, and his family had his
-wandering spirit. Adam shouldered his load of fresh
-meat and took his way down out of the canyon where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
-the encampment lay, to the well-beaten trail that zigzagged
-along the irregular base of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>Adam rested at the dividing point of the trails. It
-was early in the day, clear and still. How gray and barren
-and monotonous the desert! All seemed dead. A strange,
-soft, creeping apathy came over Adam, not a dreaminess,
-for in his dreams he lived the past and invented the future,
-but a state wherein he watched, listened, smelled, and
-felt, all unconscious that he was doing anything. Whenever
-he fell into this trance and was roused out of it,
-or came out of it naturally, then he experienced a wonderful
-sense of vague content. That feeling was evanescent.
-Always he longed to get it back, but could not.</p>
-
-<p>In this instant his quick eye caught sight of something
-that was moving. A prospector with a brace of burros—common
-sight indeed it was to Adam, though not for
-the last few years.</p>
-
-<p>The man was coming from the south, but outside of
-the main trail, for which, no doubt, he was heading.
-Adam decided to wait and exchange greetings with him.
-After watching awhile Adam was constrained to mutter,
-“Well, if that fellow isn’t a great walker, my eyes are
-failing!” That interested him all the more. He watched
-burros and driver grow larger and clearer. Then they
-disappeared behind a long, low swell of sand fringed
-by sage and dotted by mesquite. They would reappear
-presently, coming out behind the ridge at a point near
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Some minutes later he saw that the burros and driver
-had not only cleared the end of the ridge, but were now
-within a hundred yards of where he sat. The burros
-were trotting, with packs bobbing up and down. Only
-the old slouch hat of the prospector showed above the
-packs. Manifestly he was a short man.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, but he’s a walker!” ejaculated Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly sight of that old slouch hat gave Adam a
-thrill. Then the man’s shoulders appeared. How enormously
-broad! Then, as the burros veered to one side,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span>
-the driver’s whole stature was disclosed. What a stride
-he had, for a man so short! Almost he seemed as wide as
-he was long. His gait was rolling, ponderous. He wore
-old, gray, patched clothes that Adam wildly imagined
-he had seen somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he yelled at the burros: “Hehaw! Gedap!”</p>
-
-<p>That deep voice, those words, brought Adam leaping
-to his feet, transfixed and thrilling. Had he lost his
-mind? What trick of desert mirage or illusion! No—the
-burros were real—they kicked up the dust—rattled the
-pebbles in the sage; no—the man was real, however he
-seemed a ghost of Adam’s past.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Dismukes!</em>” shouted Adam, hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>The prospector halted his long, rolling stride and looked.
-Then Adam plunged over sand and through sage. He
-could not believe his eyes. He must get his hands on
-this man, to prove reality. In a trice the intervening
-space was covered. Then Adam, breathless and aghast,
-gazed into a face that he knew, yet which held what he
-did not know.</p>
-
-<p>“Howdy, Wansfell! Thought I’d meet you sooner
-or later,” said the man.</p>
-
-<p>His voice was unmistakable. He recognized Adam.
-Beyond any possibility of doubt—Dismukes! In the
-amaze and gladness of the moment Adam embraced this
-old savior and comrade and friend—embraced him as a
-long-lost brother or as a prodigal son. Then Adam released
-him, with sudden dawning consciousness that Dismukes
-seemed to have no feeling whatever about this
-meeting.</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes! I had to grab you—just to feel if it was
-you. I’m knocked clean off my pins,” declared Adam,
-breathing hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it’s me, Wansfell,” replied Dismukes. His large,
-steady eyes, dark brown like those of an ox, held an
-exceeding and unutterable sadness.</p>
-
-<p>“Back on the desert? <em>You!</em>” exclaimed Adam. “Dismukes,
-then you lost your gold—bad luck—something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>
-happened—you never went to the great cities—to spend
-your fortune—to live and live?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, friend, I went,” replied Dismukes.</p>
-
-<p>A great awe fell upon Adam. His keen gaze, cleared
-of the mist of amaze, saw Dismukes truly. The ox eyes
-had the shadow of supreme tragedy. Their interest was
-far off, as if their sight had fixed on a dim, distant
-mountain range of the horizon. Yet they held peace.
-The broad face had thinned. Gone was the dark, healthy
-bronze! And the beard that had once been thick and
-grizzled was now scant and white. The whole face expressed
-resignation and peace. Those wonderful wide
-shoulders of Dismukes appeared just as wide, but they
-sagged, and the old, tremendous brawn was not there.
-Strangest of all, Dismukes wore the ragged gray prospector’s
-garb which had been on his person when Adam
-saw him last. There! the yellow stain of Death Valley
-clay—and darker stains—sight of which made Adam’s
-flesh creep!</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! So you went, after all,” replied Adam, haltingly.
-“Well! Well!... Let’s sit down, old comrade. Here
-on this stone. I confess my legs feel weak.... Never
-expected to see you again in this world!”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, no man can ever tell. It’s folly to think
-an’ toil an’ hope for the future.”</p>
-
-<p>What strong, sad history of life revealed itself in that
-reply!</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!... I— But never mind what I think. Dismukes,
-you’ve not been on the desert long.”</p>
-
-<p>“About a week. Outfitted at San Diego an’ came over
-the mountain trail through El Campo. Landed in Frisco
-two weeks an’ more ago. By ship from Japan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you have these old clothes hid away somewhere?”
-inquired Adam. “I remember them.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I packed them wherever I went for the whole
-three years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Three years! Has it been that long?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, friend Wansfell, three years.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
-Adam gazed out across the desert with slowly dimming
-eyes. The wasteland stretched there, vast and illimitable,
-the same as all the innumerable times he had gazed.
-Solemn and gray and old, indifferent to man, yet strengthening
-through its passionless fidelity to its own task!</p>
-
-<p>“Dismukes, I want you to tell me where you went,
-what you did, why you came back,” said Adam, with
-earnestness that was entreaty.</p>
-
-<p>Dismukes heaved a long sigh. He wagged the huge,
-shaggy head that was now gray. But he showed no
-more indication of emotion. How stolid he seemed—how
-locked in his aloofness!</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ll tell you,” he said. “Maybe it’ll save you
-somethin’ of what I went through.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he became lost in thought, perhaps calling upon
-memory, raking up the dead leaves of the past. Adam
-recalled that his own memory of Dismukes and the past
-brought note of the fact how the old prospector had loved
-to break his habit of silence, to talk about the desert, and
-to smoke his black pipe while he discoursed. But now
-speech did not easily flow and he did not smoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Lookin’ back, I seem to see myself as crazy,” began
-Dismukes. “You’ll remember how crazy. You’ll remember
-before we parted up there on the Mohave at that
-borax camp where the young man was—who couldn’t
-drive the mules.... Wansfell, from the minute I turned
-my back on you till now I’ve never thought of that.
-Did you drive the ornery mules?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did I?” Adam’s query was a grim assertion. “Every
-day for three months! You remember Old Butch, that
-gray devil of a mule. Well, Dismukes, the time came
-when <em>he</em> knew me. If I even picked up the long bull
-whip Old Butch would scream and run to lay his head
-on me.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ you saw the young driver through his trouble?”</p>
-
-<p>“That I did. And it was more trouble than he told
-us then. The boss Carricks had was low-down and cunning.
-He’d got smitten with the lad’s wife—a pretty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
-girl, but frail in health. He kept Carricks on jobs away
-from home. We didn’t meet the lad any too soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! That’s got a familiar sound to me,” declared
-Dismukes. “Wansfell, what’d you do to thet low-down
-boss?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go on with <em>your</em> story,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Aha! That’s so. I want to make Two Palms Well
-before dark.... Wansfell, like a horned-toad on the
-desert, I changed my outside at Frisco. Alas! I imagined
-all within—blood—mind—soul had changed!... Went
-to Denver, St. Louis, an’ looked at the sights, not much
-disappointed, because my time seemed far ahead. Then
-I went to my old home. There I had my first jar. Folks
-all dead! Not a relation livin’. Could not even find my
-mother’s grave. No one remembered me an’ I couldn’t
-find any one I ever knew. The village had grown to a
-town. My old home was gone. The picture of it—the
-little gray cottage—the vines an’ orchard—lived in my
-mind. I found the place. All gone! Three new houses
-there. Forty years is a long time! I didn’t build the
-church or set out a park for the village of my boyhood....
-Then I went on to Chicago, Philadelphia, New York.
-Stayed long in New York. At first it fascinated me. I
-felt I wanted to see it out of curiosity. I was lookin’
-for some place, somethin’ I expected. But I never saw
-it. The hotels, theaters, saloons, gamblin’ hells, an’
-worse—the operas an’ parks an’ churches—an’ the wonderful
-stores—I saw them all. Men an’ women like ants
-rushin’ to an’ fro. No rest, no sleep, no quiet, no peace!
-I met people, a few good, but most bad. An’ in some
-hotels an’ places I got to be well known. I got to have
-a name for throwin’ gold around. Men of business sought
-my acquaintance, took me to dinners, made much of me—all
-to get me to invest in their schemes. Women! Aw!
-the women were my second disappointment! Wansfell,
-women are like desert mirages. Beautiful women, in silks
-an’ satins, diamonds blazin’ on bare necks an’ arms, made
-eyes at me, talked soft an’ sweet, an’ flattered me an’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>
-praised me an’ threw themselves at me—all because they
-thought I had stacks an’ rolls an’ bags of gold. Never
-a woman did I meet who liked <em>me</em>, who had any thought
-to hear my story, to learn my hope! Never a kind whisper!
-Never any keen eye that saw through my outside!</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wasn’t seein’ an’ findin’ the life I’d hoped for.
-That New York is as near hell as I ever got. I saw men
-with quiet faces an’ women who seemed happy. But only
-in the passin’ crowds. I never got to meet any of them.
-They had their homes an’ troubles an’ happiness, I figured,
-an’ they were not lookin’ for anyone to fleece. It was my
-habit to get into a crowd an’ watch, for I come to believe
-the mass of busy, workin’ ordinary people were good.
-Maybe if I’d somehow made acquaintance with a few of
-them it’d have been better. But that wasn’t seein’ life.
-I thought I knew what I wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“All my yearnin’s an’ dreams seemed to pall on me.
-Where was the joy? Wansfell, the only joy I had was in
-findin’ some poor beggar or bootblack or poor family, an’
-givin’ them gold. The great city was full of them. An’
-I gave away thousands of dollars. God knows <em>that</em> was
-some good. An’ now I see if I could have stuck it out,
-livin’ among such people, I might have been of some use
-in the world. But, man! livin’ was not possible in New
-York. All night the hotels roared. All night the streets
-hummed an’ clanged. There was as many people rushin’
-around by night as by day, an’ different from each other,
-like bats an’ hawks. I got restless an’ half sick. I couldn’t
-sleep. I seemed suffocatin’ for fresh air. I wanted room
-to breathe. When I looked up at night I couldn’t see the
-stars. Think of that for a desert man!</p>
-
-<p>“At last I knew I couldn’t find what I wanted in New
-York, an’ I couldn’t hunt any longer there. I had to
-leave. My plans called for goin’ abroad. <em>Then</em> came a
-strange feelin’ that I must have had all the time, but
-didn’t realize. The West called me back. I seemed to
-want the Middle West, where I’d planned to buy the green
-farm. But you know I’m a man who sticks to his mind,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span>
-when it’s made up. There were London, Paris, Rome I’d
-dreamed about an’ had planned to see. Well, I had a
-hell of a fight with somethin’ in myself before I could get
-on that ship. Right off then I got seasick. Wansfell, the
-bite of a rattlesnake never made me half as sick as that
-dirty-gray, windy sea. The trip across was a nightmare....
-London was a dreary place as big as the Mohave an’
-full of queer fishy-eyed people whom I couldn’t understand.
-But I liked their slow, easy-goin’ ways. Then
-Paris.... Wansfell, that Paris was a wonderful, glitterin’
-beautiful city, an’ if a city had been a place for me,
-Paris would have been it. But I was lost. I couldn’t
-speak French—couldn’t learn a word. My tongue refused
-to twist round their queer words. All the same, I saw
-what I’d set out to see.... Wansfell, if a man fights
-despair for the women of the world, he’ll get licked in
-Paris. An’ the reason is, there you see the same thing in
-the homely, good, an’ virtuous little wives as you see in
-those terrible, fascinatin’, dazzlin’ actresses. What that
-somethin’ is I couldn’t guess. But you like all Frenchwomen.
-They’re gay an’ happy an’ square. If I applied
-the truth of this desert to these Frenchwomen, I’d say the
-somethin’ so fascinatin’ in them is that the race is peterin’
-out an’ the women are dyin’ game.</p>
-
-<p>“From Paris I went to Rome, an’ there a queer state of
-mind came to me. I could look at temples an’ old ruins
-without even seein’ them—with my mind on my own
-country. All this travel idea, seein’ an’ learnin’ an’ doin’,
-changed so that it was hateful. I cut out Egypt, an’ I
-can’t remember much of India an’ Japan. But when I
-got on ship bound for Frisco I couldn’t see anythin’ for
-a different reason, an’ that was tears. I’d come far to find
-joy of life, an’ now I wept tears of joy because I was
-homeward bound. It was a great an’ splendid feelin’!</p>
-
-<p>“The Pacific isn’t like the Atlantic. It’s vast an’ smooth
-an’ peaceful, with swells like the mile-long ridges of the
-desert. I didn’t get seasick. An’ on that voyage I got
-some rest. Maybe the sea is like the desert. Anyway, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span>
-calmed me, an’ I could think clear once more. As I walked
-the deck by day, or hung over the rail by night, my
-yearnin’s an’ dreams came back. When I reached Frisco
-I’d take train for the Middle West, an’ somewhere I’d
-buy the green ranch an’ settle down to peace an’ quiet
-for the rest of my life. The hope was beautiful. I believed
-in it. That wild desire to search for the joy of life had
-to be buried. I had been wrong about that. It was only
-a dream—a boy’s dream, on the hope of which I had spent
-the manhood of my best years. Ah! it was bitter—bitter
-to realize that. I—who had never given in to defeat!...
-But I conquered my regret because I knew I had just
-mistaken what I wanted. An’ it was not wholly too late!...
-Wansfell, you’ve no idea of the size of the old earth.
-I’ve been round it. An’ that Pacific! Oh, what an endless
-ocean of waters! It seemed eternal, like the sky. But—at
-last—I got to—Frisco.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Dismukes choked and broke down. The deep,
-rolling voice lost its strength for a moment. He drew a
-long, long breath that it hurt Adam to hear.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, when my feet once more touched land it
-was as though I’d really found happiness,” presently went
-on Dismukes, clearing his throat of huskiness. “I was
-in the clouds. I could have kissed the very dirt. My
-own, my native land!... Now for the last leg of the
-journey—an’ the little farm—the home to be—friends to
-make—perhaps a sweet-faced woman an’ a child! Oh,
-it was as glorious as my lost dreams!</p>
-
-<p>“But suddenly somethin’ strange an’ terrible seized hold
-of me. A hand as strong as the wind gripped my heart....
-<em>The desert called me!</em>... Day an’ night I walked
-the streets. Fierce as the desert itself I fought. Oh, I
-fought my last an’ hardest fight!... On one hand was
-the dream of my life—the hope of a home an’ happiness—what
-I had slaved for. Forty years of toil! On the other
-hand the call of the desert! Loneliness, solitude, silence,
-the white, hot days, the starlit nights, the vast open
-desert, free and peaceful, the gray wastes, the colored<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
-mountains, sunrise and sunset. Ah! The desert was my
-only home. I belonged to the silence an’ desolation. Forty
-years a wanderer on the desert, blindly seekin’ for gold!
-But, oh, it was not gold I wanted! Not gold! Nor
-fortune! That was my dream, my boyish dream. Gold
-did not nail me to the desert sands. That was only my
-idea. That was what brought me into the wastelands.
-I misunderstood the lure of the desert. I thought it was
-gold, but, no! For me the desert existed as the burrow
-for the fox. For me the desert linked my strange content
-to the past ages. For me the soul of the desert was my
-soul.... <em>I had to go back!</em>... I could live nowhere
-else.... Forty years! My youth—my manhood!...
-I’m old now—old! My dreams are done.... Oh, my
-God!... <span class="smcap">I had to come back!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>Adam sat confounded in grief, in shock. His lips were
-mute. Like a statue he gazed across the wasteland, so
-terribly magnified, so terribly illumined by the old prospector’s
-revelation. How awful the gigantic red rock
-barriers! How awful the lonely, limitless expanse of
-sand! The eternal gray, the eternal monotony!</p>
-
-<p>“Comrade, take the story of my life to heart,” added
-Dismukes. “You’re a young man still. Think of my forty
-years of hell, that now has made me a part of the desert.
-Think of how I set out upon my journey so full of wild,
-sweet hope! Think of my wonderful journey, through
-the glitterin’ cities, round the world, only to find my hope
-a delusion!... A desert mirage!”</p>
-
-<p>“Man, I cannot think!” burst out Adam. “I am stunned....
-Oh, the pity of it—the sickening, pitiless fatality!
-Oh, my heart breaks for you!... Dismukes, of what
-use is hope? Oh, why do we fight? Where—where does
-joy abide for such as you and me?”</p>
-
-<p>The great, rolling ox eyes gleamed upon Adam, strong
-with the soul of peace, of victory in their depths.</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell, joy an’ happiness, whatever makes life worth
-livin’, is in <em>you</em>. No man can go forth to find what he
-hasn’t got within him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
-Then he gazed away across the desert, across sand and
-cactus and mesquite, across the blue-hazed, canyon-streaked
-ranges toward the north.</p>
-
-<p>“I go to Death Valley,” he continued, slowly, in his
-deep voice. “I had left enough gold to grub-stake me.
-An’ I go to Death Valley, but not to seek my fortune.
-It will be quiet and lonely there. An’ I can think an’ rest
-an’ sleep. Perhaps I’ll dig a little of the precious yellow
-dust, just to throw it away. Gold!... The man who
-loves gold is ruined. Passion makes men mad.... An’
-now I must go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Death Valley? No! No!” whispered Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Straight for Death Valley! It has called me across
-half the earth. I remember no desert place so lonely an’
-silent an’ free. So different from the noisy world of men
-that crowds my mind still! There I shall find peace,
-perhaps my grave. See! life is all a hopin’ to find! I
-go on my way. Wansfell, we never know what drives us.
-But I am happy now.... Our trails have crossed for
-the last time. Good-by.”</p>
-
-<p>He wrung Adam’s hand and quickly whirled to his
-burros.</p>
-
-<p>“Hehaw! Gedap!” he shouted, with a smack on their
-haunches. Adam whispered a farewell he could not speak.
-Then, motionless, he watched the old prospector face the
-gray wastes toward the north and the beckoning mountains.
-Adam had an almost irresistible desire to run after Dismukes,
-to go with him. But the man wanted to be alone.
-What a stride he had! The fruitless quest had left him
-that at least. The same old rolling gait, the same doggedness!
-Dismukes was a man who could not be halted.
-Adam watched him—saw him at last merge and disappear
-in the gray, lonely sage. And then into Adam’s strained
-sight seemed to play a quivering mirage—a vision of
-Death Valley, ghastly and white and naked, the abode of
-silence and decay set down under its dark-red walls—the
-end of the desert and the grave of Dismukes.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> November morning was keen and cold and Adam
-and Genie were on their way to spend the day at
-Andreas Canyon. Adam carried a lunch, a gun, and a
-book. Genie seemed so exuberant with wonderful spirits
-that she could scarcely keep her little moccasined feet on
-the sand. Adam had an unconscious joy in the sight
-of her.</p>
-
-<p>A dim old Indian trail led up one of the slopes of Andreas
-Canyon, to which Adam called Genie’s attention.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll climb this some day—when it comes time to take
-you away,” said Adam. “It’s a hard climb, but the shortest
-way out. And you’ll get to see the desert from the
-top of old Jacinto. That will be worth all the climb.”</p>
-
-<p>His words made Genie pensive. Of late the girl had
-become more and more beyond Adam’s comprehension—wistful
-and sad and dreamy by turns, now like a bird and
-again like a thundercloud, but mostly a dancing, singing
-creature full of unutterable sweetness of life.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the oasis, some distance up the canyon, was a
-dense growth of mesquite and other brush. It surrounded
-a sandy glade in which bubbled forth a crystal spring of
-hot water. The bottom was clean white sand that boiled
-up in the center like shining bubbles. Indians in times
-past had laid stones around the pool. A small cottonwood
-tree on the west side of the glade had begun to change the
-green color of the leaves to amber and gold. All around
-the glade, like a wild, untrimmed hedge, the green and
-brown mesquites stood up, hiding the gray desert, insulating
-this cool, sandy, beautiful spot, hiding it away from
-the stern hardness outside.</p>
-
-<p>Genie had never been here. Quickly she lost her pensiveness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span>
-and began to sing like a lark. She kicked one moccasin
-one way and the other in another direction. Straightway
-she was on the stones, with her bare, slender, brown
-feet in the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Ooooo! It’s hot!” she cried, ecstatically. “But, oh,
-it’s fine!” And she dipped them back.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, you stay here and amuse yourself,” said Adam.
-“I’m going to climb. Maybe I’ll be back soon—maybe not.
-You play and read, and eat the lunch when you’re hungry.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Wanny,” she replied, gayly. “But I should
-think you’d rather stay with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam had to be alone. He needed to be high above the
-desert, where he could look down. Another crisis in his
-transformation was painfully pending. The meeting with
-Dismukes had been of profound significance, and its effect
-was going to be far-reaching.</p>
-
-<p>He climbed up the zigzag, dim trail, rising till the canyon
-yawned beneath him, and the green thicket where he had
-left Genie was but a dot. Then the way led round the slope
-of the great foothill, where he left the trail and climbed
-to the craggy summit. It was a round, bare peak of jagged
-bronze rock, and from this height half a mile above the
-desert the outlook was magnificent. Beyond and above
-him the gray walls and fringed peaks of San Jacinto
-towered, sculptored and grand against the azure blue.</p>
-
-<p>Finding a comfortable seat with rest for his back, Adam
-faced the illimitable gulf of color and distance below.
-Always a height such as this, where, like a lonely eagle,
-he could command an unobstructed view, had been a charm,
-a strange delight of his desert years. Not wholly had
-love of climbing, or to see afar, or to feel alone, or to travel
-in beauty, been accountable for this habit.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s first reward for this climb, before he had settled
-himself to watch the desert, was sight of a condor. Only
-rarely did Adam see this great and loneliest of lonely
-birds—king of the eagles and of the blue heights. Never
-had Adam seen one close. A wild, slate-colored bird, huge
-of build, with grisly neck and wonderful, clean-cut head,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span>
-cruelty beaked! Even as Adam looked the condor pitched
-off the crag and spread his enormous wings.</p>
-
-<p>A few flaps of those wide wings—then he sailed out
-over the gulf, and around, rising as he circled. When he
-started he was below Adam; on the first lap of that circle
-he rose even with Adam’s position; and when he came
-round again he sailed over Adam, perhaps fifty feet.
-Adam thrilled at the sight. The condor was peering down
-with gleaming, dark, uncanny eyes. He saw Adam. His
-keen head and great, crooked beak moved to and fro;
-the sun shone on his gray-flecked breast; every feather
-of his immense wings seemed to show, to quiver in the air,
-and the tip feathers were ragged and separate. He cut
-the air with a soft swish.</p>
-
-<p>Around he sailed, widening his circle, rising higher, with
-never a movement of his wings. That fact, assured by
-Adam’s sharp sight, was so marvelous that it fascinated
-him. What power enabled the condor to rise without
-propelling himself? No wind stirred down there under
-the peaks, so he could not lift himself by its aid. He
-sailed aloft. He came down on one slope of his circle,
-to rise up on the other, and always he went higher. How
-easily! How gracefully! He was peering down for
-sight of prey in which to sink cruel beak and talons. Once
-he crossed the sun and Adam saw his shadow on the
-gleaming rocks below. Then his circles widened across
-the deep canyon, high above the higher foothills, until he
-approached the lofty peak. Higher still, and here the
-winds of the heights caught him. How he breasted them,
-sailing on and up, soaring toward the blue!</p>
-
-<p>Adam watched the bird with strained eyes that hurt
-but never tired. To watch him was one of the things
-Adam needed. On and ever upward soared the condor.
-His range had changed with the height. His speed had
-increased with the wind. His spirit had mounted as he
-climbed. The craggy gray peak might have harbored his
-nest and his mate, but he gave no sign. High over the
-lonely cold heights he soared. There, far above his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span>
-domain, he circled level for a while, then swooped down
-like a falling star, miles across the sky, to sail, to soar,
-to rise again. Away across the heavens he flew, wide
-winged and free, king of the eagles and of the winds,
-lonely and grand in the blue. Never a movement of his
-wings! Higher he sailed. Higher he soared till he was
-a fading speck, till he was gone out of sight to his realm
-above.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone!” sighed Adam. “He is gone. And for all I
-know he may be a spirit of the wind. From his invisible
-abode in the heavens he can see the sheep on the crags—he
-can see me here—he can see Genie below—he can see
-the rabbit at his burrow.... Nature! Life! Oh, what
-use to think? What use to torture myself over mystery
-I can never solve? I learn one great truth only to find
-it involved in greater mystery.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam had realized the need of shocks, else the desert
-influence would insulate him forever in his physical life.
-The meeting with Dismukes had been one.</p>
-
-<p>Why had Dismukes been compelled to come back to
-the desert? What was the lure of the silent places? How
-could men sacrifice friends, people, home, love, civilization
-for the solitude and loneliness of the wastelands? Where
-lay the infinite fascination in death and decay and desolation?
-Who could solve the desert secret?</p>
-
-<p>Like white, living flames, Adam’s thoughts leaped in
-his mind.</p>
-
-<p>These wanderers of the wastelands, like Dismukes and
-himself, were not laboring under fancy or blindness or
-ignorance or imagination or delusion. They were certainly
-not actuated by a feeling for some nameless thing.
-The desert was a fact. The spell it cast was a fact.
-Also it began to dawn upon Adam that nothing in civilization,
-among glittering cities and moving people, in palaces
-or hovels, in wealth or poverty, in fame or ignominy, in
-any walk of worldly life, could cast a spell of enchantment,
-could swell women’s hearts and claim men’s souls<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span>
-like the desert. The secret then had to do with a powerful
-effect of the desert—that was to say, of lonely
-and desolate and wild places—upon the minds of human
-beings.</p>
-
-<p>Adam remembered how Dismukes had loved to travel
-alone. If he had any selfishness in his great heart, it
-had been to gloat over the lonely places by himself. Even
-with Adam he seldom shared those moments of watching
-and listening. Always, some part of every day, he would
-spend alone on a ridge, on a height, or out on the sage,
-communing with this strange affinity of the desert. Adam
-had known Dismukes, at the end of a hard day’s travel,
-to walk a mile and climb to a ledge, there to do nothing
-at all but watch and listen. It was habit. He did it without
-thinking. When Adam confronted him with the fact
-he was surprised. On Adam’s side, this strange faculty
-or obsession, whatever it was, seemed very much more
-greatly marked. Dismukes had, or imagined he had, the
-need to seek gold. Adam had little to do but wander over
-the waste ways of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>And now Adam, stirred to his depths by the culminating,
-fatal tragedy of Dismukes’ life, and a passionate determination
-to understand it, delved into his mind and memory
-as never before, to discover forgotten lessons and
-larger growths. But not yet in his pondering did they
-prove to him why every day of his desert life, and particularly
-in the last few years, had he gone to this or
-that lonely spot for no reason at all except that it gave
-him strange, vague happiness. Here was an astounding
-fact. He could have seen the same beauty, color, grandeur,
-right from his camp. The hours he had passed thus were
-innumerable.</p>
-
-<p>What had he done, what had gone on in his mind, during
-all these seemingly useless and wasted hours? Nothing!
-Merely nothing it seemed to sit for hours, gazing
-out over the desolate, gray-green, barren desert, to sit
-listening to the solitude, or the soft wind, or the seep of
-sand, or perhaps the notes of a lonely bird. Nothing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span>
-because most of all that time he did not have in his mind
-the significance of his presence there. He really did not
-know he was there. This state of apparent unconsciousness
-had never been known to Adam at all until Magdalene
-Virey had given him intimation of it. He had
-felt the thing, but had never thought about it. But during
-these three years that he had lived near San Jacinto
-it had grown until he gained a strange and fleeting power
-to exercise it voluntarily. Even this voluntary act seemed
-unthinking.</p>
-
-<p>Adam, now, however, forced it to be a thinking act.
-And after many futile efforts he at last, for a lightning
-flash of an instant, seemed to capture the state of mind
-again. He recognized it because of an equally swift, vague
-joy that followed. Joy, he called it, for want of a better
-name. It was not joy. But it was wildly sweet—no—not
-so—but perhaps sweetly wild. That emotion, then,
-was the secret of the idle hours—the secret of the doing
-nothing. If he could only grasp the secret of the nothing!
-Looked at with profound thought, this nothing resolved
-itself into exactly what it had seemed to his first vague,
-wandering thought—merely listening, watching, smelling,
-feeling the desert. That was all. But now the sense of
-it began to assume tremendous importance. Adam believed
-himself to be not only on the track of the secret
-of the desert’s influence, but also of life itself.</p>
-
-<p>Adam realized that during these lonely hours he was
-one instant a primitive man and the next a thinking, or
-civilized, man. The thinking man he understood; all
-difficulty of the problem lay hid in this other side of him.
-He could watch, he could feel without thinking. That
-seemed to be the state of the mind of an animal. Only
-it was a higher state—a state of intense, feeling, waiting,
-watching suspension! Adam divined that it was the
-mental state of the undeveloped savage, and that it brought
-fleeting moments of strange emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond all comprehension was the marvel of inscrutable
-nature. Somehow it had developed man. But the instincts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span>
-of the ages were born with him when he was born. In
-blood, bone, tissue, heart, and brain! Wonder beyond that
-was the wonder that man had ever become civilized at
-all! Some infinite spirit was behind this.</p>
-
-<p>In the illumination of his mind Adam saw much that
-had been mystery to him. When he had hunted meat,
-why had the chase been thrilling, exciting, pressing his
-heart hot against his side, sending his blood in gusts over
-his body? What a joy to run and leap after the quarry!
-Strange indeed had been his lust to kill beasts when, after
-killing, he was sorry. Stranger than this was a fact keen
-in his memory—the most vivid and intense feeling—come
-back from his starvation days when he had a wild rapture
-in pursuit of birds, rats, snakes that he had to kill with
-stones. Never, in all the years, had this rapture faded.
-Relic of his cruel boyhood days, when, like all boys, he
-had killed for the sake of killing, until some aspect of his
-bloody, quivering victim awakened conscience! Conscience
-then must be the great factor in human progress—the
-difference between savage and civilized man. Terribly
-strange for Adam to look at his brawny hands and remember
-what they had done to men! Over him, then, gushed
-the hot blood, over him quivered the muscular intensity,
-over him waved the fierce passion which, compared with
-that of his boyhood, was as the blaze of sun to a candle.
-He had killed men in ruthless justice, in strife of self-defense,
-but always afterward he had regretted. He had
-fought men in a terrible, furious joy, with eyes tingeing
-red, with nerves impervious to pain, with the salt
-taste of a fellow creature’s blood sweet on his snarling
-lips, but always afterward he was full of wonder and
-shame.</p>
-
-<p>Just under the skin of every man and every woman,
-perhaps stronger in one than another, flowed red blood
-in which primitive instincts still lived and would always
-live. That was the secret of the desert. The lonely,
-desolate land, the naked sand and rock-ribbed hills, the
-wilderness of silence and solitude stirred the instinctive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span>
-memory of a primitive day. Men watched and listened
-unthinkingly in the wastelands, for what they knew not,
-but it was for the fleeting trancelike transformation back
-to savage nature. There were many reasons for which
-men became wanderers in the wastelands—love of gold;
-the need to forget or to remember; passion and crime and
-wanderlust; the appeal of beauty and sublimity—but what
-nailed them to the forbidding and inhospitable desert was
-the instinct of the savage. That was the secret of the spell
-of the desert. Men who had been confined to cities, chained
-to dull and humdrum toils, stagnating in the noisy haunts,
-sore and sick and deflated, standing for some impossible
-end, when let loose in the gray, iron-walled barrens of the
-desert were caught by a subtle and insidious enchantment
-that transfigured some, made beasts of most, and mysteriously
-bound all. Travelers passing across could not
-escape it, and they must always afterward remember the
-desert with a thrill of strange pleasure and of vague regret.
-Women who had been caught by circumstance and nailed
-to homes along the roads or edges of the desert must feel
-that nameless charm, though they hated the glaring, desolate
-void. Magdalene Virey, resigned to her doom
-in Death Valley, had responded to the nature that was
-in her.</p>
-
-<p>Through this thing Adam saw the almost inconceivable
-progress of men upward. If progress had not been slow,
-nature would never have evolved him. And it seemed well
-that something of the wild and the primitive must forever
-remain instinctive in the human race. If the primitive
-were eliminated from men there would be no more
-progress. All the gladness of the senses lived in this law.
-The sweetness of the ages came back in thoughtless watching.
-The glory of the sunrise, the sadness of the sunset,
-the whisper of the wind and the murmur of the stream,
-the music of birds and their beauty—the magic of these
-came back from the dim, mystic dreamland of the primal
-day, from the childhood of the race. Nature was every
-man’s mother. Nevertheless, the wonder and the splendor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span>
-of life was the age-long progress of man toward unattainable
-perfection, the magnificent victory of humanity over
-mastery by primal instincts. And the fact that this seemed
-true to Adam made him wonder if the spirit of this
-marvelous life was not God.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The sun was westering when he descended the long,
-zigzag trail. He walked slowly, tired from his mental
-strain. And when he got down the sun was just tipping
-the ramparts above, flooding the canyon with golden haze
-and ruddy rays. Adam thought that Genie, weary from
-long waiting, would be asleep on the sand, or at least
-reading, and that he could slip into the glade to surprise
-her. They played a game of this sort, and to her had
-gone most of the victories.</p>
-
-<p>Like a panther he slid through the grasping mesquite
-boughs, and presently, coming to the denser brush, he
-stooped low to avoid making a rustle. As he moved along,
-bending so that he touched the sand with his hands, he
-came upon two fat beetles wagging and contesting over
-possession of some little particle. Scooping up a handful
-of sand, he buried them, and then, as they so ludicrously
-scrambled out, he gathered them up, intending, if he could
-get behind Genie unobserved, to drop them on her book
-or bare feet.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it happened that he did not look ahead until after
-he had straightened up inside the glade. All before him
-seemed golden gleams and streaks of sunset rose. The
-air was thick with amber haze. Genie stood naked, ankle-deep
-in the bubbling spring. Like an opal her slender
-white body caught glimmer and sheen. Wondrously transparent
-she looked, for the sunlight seemed to shine through
-her! The red-gold tints of her hair burned like a woven
-cord of fire in bronze. Glistening crystal drops of water
-fell from her outstretched hands and her round arms
-gleamed where the white met the line of tan. The light
-of the sun shone upon her pensive, beautiful face as she
-stood wholly unaware of intrusion. Then she caught the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span>
-sound of Adam’s stifled gasp. She saw him. She burst
-into a scream of startled, wild laughter that rang with a
-trill through the dell.</p>
-
-<p>Adam, breaking the spell of that transfixed instant,
-rushed headlong away.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Gaining</span> the open, Adam strode swiftly down the
-trail to where the canyon spread wide and ended in
-the bowlder-strewn desert.</p>
-
-<p>The world in which he moved seemed transfigured,
-radiant with the last glow of dying day, with a glory of
-golden gleam. His heart pounded and his blood flooded
-to and fro, swelling his veins. Life on the earth for him
-had been shot through and through with celestial fire.
-His feet were planted on the warm sands and his hands
-reached to touch the gray old bowlders. He needed these
-to assure himself that he had not been turned into the
-soft, cool wind or the slanting amber rays so thickly
-glistening with particles of dust, or the great, soaring
-king of the eagles. Adam crushed a bunch of odorous
-sage to his face, smelled it, breathed it, tasted it; and the
-bitter sweetness thrilled his senses. It was real. It was a
-part of the vast and glowing desert, of the wonderful
-earth, of the infinite universe that he yearned to incorporate
-into his being. The last glorious rays of the setting sun
-shone upon him and magnified his stature in a long, purple
-shadow. How the last warmth seemed to kiss his cheek
-as it sank behind the rim of the range! The huge bowlders
-were warm and alive under his hands. He pricked his
-fingers upon the <i>cholla</i> thorns just to see the ruddy drops
-of his life’s current; and there was strange joy in the
-sting which proved him flesh and blood and nerve. He
-stood alone, as he had many thousands of times on the
-gray old desert, his feet on the sand, his knees in the
-sage; but the being alone then was inexpressibly different.
-It was as if he had, like the tarantula wasp, been born
-from a cocoon stage in a dark, dead cell, into a beautiful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span>
-world of light, of freedom, of color, of beauty, of all
-that was life. He felt the glory of his beating heart, his
-throbbing pulse, his sight and all his sense. He turned
-his face to the cool, sweet, sage-scented breeze, and then
-he lifted it to the afterglow of sunset. Ah! the new,
-strange joy of life—the incalculable force of the natural
-man!</p>
-
-<p>The luminous desert stretched before him, valley and
-mountain, and beyond them was other range and other
-valley, leading to the sea, and across its heaving bosom
-were other lands; and above him was the vast, deep-blue
-sky with its pale evening star, and beyond them began
-the infinite.</p>
-
-<p>Adam felt himself a part of it all. His ecstasy was that
-he lived. Nature could not deny him. He stood there,
-young and strong and vital.</p>
-
-<p>Then he heard Genie calling him. With a start he
-turned to answer. She was running down the trail. How
-swift, how lithe, how light! The desert had given her
-the freedom, the grace, the suppleness of its wild denizens.
-Like a fawn she bounded over the stones, and her hair
-caught the last gleams of glowing sunlight. When she
-neared Adam she checked her flying steps, pattering to a
-halt, one brown hand over her breast.</p>
-
-<p>“Wheooo!” she burst out, panting. “I—couldn’t—find—you.
-Why’d—you come—so far?”</p>
-
-<p>The something that had come between Adam’s sight and
-the desert now surrounded Genie. Immeasurably she was
-transformed, and the change seemed a mystery.</p>
-
-<p>“We must hurry back. It’ll soon be dark. Come,”
-he replied.</p>
-
-<p>With step as free and swift as his she kept pace with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanny, you stole up on me—tried to scare me—while
-I was bathing,” she said, with arch reproach.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, it was an accident,” he returned, hurriedly, and
-how strangely the blood tingled in his face! “I meant to
-scare you—yes. But I—I never thought—I never dreamed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span>
-... Genie, I give you my word.... Please say you
-believe me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Wanny,” she said, in surprise, “of course I
-believe you! It’s nothing to mind about. I didn’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. I—I’m glad you take it that way,” replied
-Adam. “I’m sorry I was so—so stupid.”</p>
-
-<p>“How funny you are!” she exclaimed, and her gay
-laugh pealed out. “What’s there to be sorry about?...
-You see, I forgot it was getting late.... Ooooo! how
-good the water felt! I just couldn’t get enough....
-You did scare me just a little. I heard you—and was
-scared before I looked.... Wanny, I guess I was imagining
-things—dreaming, you call it. I was all wet, and looking
-at myself in the sunlight. I’d never seen myself like
-that. I’d read of mermaids with shining scales of gold,
-and nymphs of the woods catching falling blossoms. And
-I guess I thought I was them—and everything.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam scorned the old husk of worldliness that had
-incased his mind in his boyhood, and clung round it still.
-This child of nature had taught him many a thought-provoking
-lesson, and here was another, somehow elevating
-and on a level with his mental progress of the day. Genie
-had never lived in the world, nor had she been taught many
-of its customs. She was like a shy, wild young fawn; she
-was a dreaming, exuberant girl. Genie had been taught
-to write and study and read, and was far from being
-ignorant; but she had not understood the meaning of
-Adam’s apology. What struck Adam so deeply and confounded
-him again was the fact that her innocent and
-sweet smile now, as she gazed up at him, was little different
-from the one upon her face when she saw him staring at
-her nude. She had been surprised at his concern and had
-laughed at his contrition. And that low, rippling laugh,
-so full of vital and natural life, seemed to blow, as the
-desert wind blew worn and withered leaves, all of Adam’s
-recalled sophistications back into the past whence they
-had come.</p>
-
-<p>Adam and Genie walked hand in hand down the long<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span>
-bowlder-strewn slope to the valley floor, where the <i>cholla</i>
-shone paling silver in gathering twilight, and the delicate
-crucifixion tree deceived the eye. The lonely November
-twilight deepened into night. The stars shone bright.
-The cool wind blew. The sage rustled.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Sleep did not soon woo Adam’s eyelids this night, with
-the consequence that he awoke a little later than his usual
-hour. The rose of the dawn had bloomed.</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam, on his knees by the brown running stream,
-in the midst of his ablutions, halted to stare at the sunrise.
-Had it ever before been so strangely beautiful? During
-his sleep the earth had revolved, and, lo! here was the
-sun again. Wonderful and perennial truth! Not only
-had it revolved, but it had gone on its mysterious journey,
-hurtling through space with inconceivable rapidity. While
-he slept! Again he had awakened. A thousand years ago
-he had awakened just like this, so it seemed, to the sunrise,
-to the loneliness of lonely places, to the beauty of
-nature, to the joy of life. He sensed some past state,
-which, when he thought about it, faded back illusively and
-was gone. But he knew he had lived somewhere before
-this. All of life was in him. The marvelous spirit he
-felt now would never die.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>There dawned upon Adam a sudden consciousness of
-Genie’s beauty. She was the last realized and the most
-beautiful creation of the desert around him.</p>
-
-<p>It came to him as a great surprise. She, too, knelt at
-the stream, splashing the cool water, bathing her face,
-wetting the dark, gold-tinted locks and brushing them
-back. Curiously and absorbingly Adam gazed at her, with
-eyes from which some blinding shutter had fallen. Yes,
-she was beautiful. It seemed a simple fact that he had
-overlooked, yet it was amazing. It distracted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanny, you’re all eyes,” cried Genie, gayly. “What’s
-the matter with me? Why do you look so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, you’re growing up,” he replied, soberly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span>
-“Well, you’d have known that before if you’d seen me
-sewing,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“How old are you?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’m nearly seventeen,” she said, and the words
-brought back the dreams.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you’re a young lady!” ejaculated Adam. “And—and——”
-He had been about to add that she was beautiful,
-but he held his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess that, too.... Hold out your arm.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam complied, and was further amazed to see, as
-she walked under his outstretched arm, that the glossy,
-wavy crown of her head almost touched it. She was as
-tall and slim and graceful as an arrowweed.</p>
-
-<p>“There! I’ll have you know you’re a mighty big man,”
-she said. “And if you weren’t so big I’d come clear up
-to your shoulder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, don’t you want to leave this desert?” he queried,
-bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no,” she replied, instantly. “I love it. And—and—please
-don’t make me think of towns, of lots of
-people. I want to run wild like a road runner. I’d be
-perfectly happy if I didn’t have to spend half the day
-mending these old clothes.... Wanny, if they get any
-worse they’ll fall off me—and <em>then</em> I’ll have to run around
-like you saw me yesterday!... Oh, but for the thorns,
-that’d be grand!”</p>
-
-<p>Her light, rippling laugh rang out, sweet and gay.</p>
-
-<p>Adam waited for her later, in the shade of Taquitch
-Canyon, where from the topmost of a jumble of bowlders
-he watched a distant waterfall, white and green as it flashed
-over a dark cliff.</p>
-
-<p>He watched her coming. Her ragged boy’s garb with
-its patches and rents no longer hid her femininity and her
-charm from his eyes. He saw anew. The litheness of
-her, the round and graceful figure from flying feet to
-glinting hair, cried aloud to the loneliness of Adam’s heart
-the truth of her. An enchantment hung upon her very
-movements. She traveled from rock to rock, poising,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span>
-balancing, leaping, and her curly hair danced on her head.
-Quick as those of a wildcat were her leaps. And her gay,
-sweet call or cry, birdlike and wild, echoed from the cliffs.</p>
-
-<p>She was coming to Adam across the great jumble of
-rocks—a girl wonderful as a sprite. And her coming was
-suddenly realized as fulfillment of dreams. Adam faced
-the truth of some facts about his dreaming. Lonely hours
-on lonely slopes, of waiting and watching, had created the
-shadow of a woman or a girl gliding in the golden glow
-of the afternoon sunlight, coming to charm away forever
-the silence and solitude. So innumerable times he had
-dreamed, but never realized till now those dreams. She
-was coming, and the sleepy shade awoke to a gleam and a
-voice. The lacy waterfall shone white and its murmur
-seemed music of many streams. A canyon swallow
-twittered.</p>
-
-<p>Adam thought how passing strange had been the tortures,
-the awakenings, and changings of his desert experience.
-And here was a vague dream fulfilled! This
-realization was unutterably sweet—so sweet because these
-years had been barren of youth, steeped in unconscious
-growing worship of beauty, spent alone with pains and
-toils. He watched her coming. Fresh as the foam of the
-waterfall, clean as the winds of the heights, wild as the
-wild young fawn—so she seemed! Youth and gayety—beauty
-and life!</p>
-
-<p>But suddenly Adam seemed struck by an emotion, if
-not of terror, then of dread at some inconceivable and
-appalling nature of her presence. That emotion was of
-the distant past as was the vague peril of her approach.
-A girl—a woman creature—mystery of the ages—the giver
-of life as the sun gave heat—had come to him, out of the
-clouds or the desert sands, and the fatality of her coming
-was somewhat terrible.</p>
-
-<p>Genie reached the huge bowlder upon which Adam sat,
-and like a squirrel she ran up its steep side, to plump
-herself breathless and panting down against his knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Old Taquitch—here’s another—Indian maiden—for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span>
-you to steal,” she said, roguishly. “But before you—carry
-me up to the clouds—duck me under the waterfall!”</p>
-
-<p>All the accumulated thought and emotion of recent hours
-concentrated in the gaze he fixed upon her face.</p>
-
-<p>Her trilling laugh pealed out. She thought he was playing
-Taquitch, god of the heights. He was teasing her
-with his piercing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! Look at me, O Taquitch!” she cried, with deep,
-pretended solemnity. “I am Ula, princess of the Coahuilas.
-I have left my father’s house. I have seen the sun shining
-in your face, oh, god of the lightnings! And I love—I
-love—I love with all the Indian’s heart. I will go with
-you to the peaks. But never—never more shall you steal
-another maiden!”</p>
-
-<p>Adam scarcely heard Genie. He was piercing through
-eyes and face to the mind and soul and life and meaning
-of her beauty. Her skin was creamy, golden brown, transparent,
-with tiny tracery of veins underneath and faint
-tints of rose. The low forehead and level brows showed
-moist and soft and thoughtful under the dark, damp curls
-with their amber glints. A hint of desert leanness hid in
-the contour of her oval face. Her mouth was strong, with
-bowed upper lip, the under sensitive and sad—a red, sweet
-mouth, like a flower. And her eyes, now meeting his so
-frankly, losing the mock solemnity and the fun, became
-deep-brown, crystal gulfs of light and shade, of thought
-and feeling, beautiful with the beauty of exquisite color,
-but lovelier for the youth, the joy and wonder of life,
-the innocence of soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanny—are you—playing?” she asked, tremulously,
-and her warm little hand clasped his.</p>
-
-<p>That changed the spell of her. To look at her beauty
-was nothing comparable with the warm throb of her young,
-pulsing life. Out of Adam’s slow and painful and intense
-thought at last evolved a nucleus of revelation. But those
-clear eyes strangely checked this growing sense of a truth
-about to overwhelm him. They made him think, and
-thought had begun to waver and pale beside some subtler<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span>
-faculty of his being. Thus he realized the slow preponderance
-of feeling over thought, of body over soul,
-of physical over spiritual. And in this realization of
-unequal conflict he divined the meaning of his strange
-sense of peril in Genie’s presence. The peril lay in the
-sophistication of his mind, not in Genie’s beauty. Naturally
-as the mating of the birds he wanted her. That was
-all. It was like her simplicity, inevitable as life itself,
-and true to nature! But in his thoughts, flashing after
-comprehension, the simple fact loomed with staggering,
-overwhelming significance.</p>
-
-<p>Bidding Genie rest or amuse herself, Adam climbed to
-a ledge above the waterfall, and there, with the mighty
-mass of mountain crowding out the light, he threw himself
-upon the bare stone.</p>
-
-<p>Not long did he torment himself with wonder and fury
-and bewilderment over an indubitable fact. Almost at
-once he sank into a self-accusing state which grew from
-bad to worse, until he was sick, sore, base, and malignant
-in his arraignment of self. Again the old order of mind,
-the habit of youthful training, the learned precepts and
-maxims and laws, flooded back to augment his trouble.
-And when they got their sway he cursed himself, he hated
-himself, he beat his breast in the shame of an abasement
-terribly and inevitably and irretrievably true at that
-hour.</p>
-
-<p>But this was a short-lived passion. It did not ring true
-to Adam. It was his youth had suffered shame—the youth
-trained by his mother—the youth that had fallen upon
-wild and evil days at old Picacho. His youth flaming up
-with all its chivalry, its ideals, its sense of honor and
-modesty, its white-hot shame at even an unconscious wrong
-to a girl! Not the desert philosophy of manhood that
-saw nature clearly and saw it whole!</p>
-
-<p>“Peace!” he cried, huskily, as if driving back a ghost
-of his youth. “I am no beast—no animal!”</p>
-
-<p>Nay, he was a lonely wanderer of the wastelands, who
-many and many a time had dreamed himself sweetheart,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span>
-lover, husband of all the beautiful women in the world.
-Ah! it was his love of beauty, of life!</p>
-
-<p>And so in his dreams, nature, like a panther in ambush,
-had come upon him unawares to grip him before he knew.
-Aye—he wanted Genie now—yearned for her with all
-that intense and longing desire which had falsely seemed
-love and joy of the whole living world. But it was not
-what it seemed. All the tenderness of a brother, all the
-affection of a father Adam had for Genie—emotions that
-now faded before the master spirit and the imperious
-flame of life. How little and pitiful arose the memory
-of Margarita Arallanes—how pale beside this blood fire
-of his senses! Life had failed him in his youth; life had
-cheated him. Yet he had arisen on stepping stones of
-agony to intenser love of that life. He had been faithful,
-while life had mocked him.</p>
-
-<p>Passionate love of life, to see, to hear, to feel, to touch,
-had come to him with its saving grace, after the ruthless
-and violent strife of the desert had taught him to survive.
-But these were not the soul of nature. This was not
-nature’s secret. He was a man, a creature of inherited
-instincts that the desert had intensified. In nature’s eyes
-he was no different from the lonely desert bird or beast
-seeking its mate. The law was not wrong, but all the
-progress of mankind as represented in Adam’s revolt made
-that law wrong.</p>
-
-<p>When at last he had driven shame from his mind and
-justified his manhood over the instincts of which he could
-have no control, then he faced the ordeal.</p>
-
-<p>Contending tides of passion and strife! That had been
-his desert life. And as the years had passed each new
-mounting tumult in heart or soul, each fight against men
-or elements, had exceeded the last. Would there never be
-an end? Was this his great ordeal—the last—before which
-he must go down in defeat? No—by all the gods false
-or true—no, it should never be! Thus he shot arrowy
-lightnings of soul at the fiery army of instincts trooping
-on to overwhelm his consciousness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span>
-For a long time the ordeal never got so far as argument.
-It was revel of the senses, unleashed at last, untamed by
-the past, fiercer and stronger and more irresistible for all
-disuse. Melancholy and terrible was the truth that his
-desert years, so hard, so clean, so cold, so pure, the restraint
-of his enforced exile, had developed in him instincts
-masterless in their importunity. Life shrieking out
-of his flesh and blood for the future that nature demanded!
-There was revolt here, conscienceless revolt against the
-futility of manhood, voices from the old bones of his ancestors,
-from the dim and mystic past. Here at last was
-revealed the deepest secret of the desert, the eternal law
-men read in its lonely, naked face—self-preservation and
-reproduction. The individual lived and fought and perished,
-but the species survived.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s instinctive reaction seemed that of a savage
-into whose surging blood had been ejected some inhibitory
-current of humanism which chafed at the quivering shores
-of his veins and tried to dam the flood. He was like a
-strong man convulsed by fever. Like the strung thread
-of a bent bow he vibrated.</p>
-
-<p>There came a knocking at the gate of his mind. The
-tempter! The voice of the serpent! Nature or devil,
-it was all one—a mighty and eloquent and persuasive force.
-It whispered to Adam that he was alone on the desert.
-Fate had been cruel. Love had betrayed him. Life had
-denied him. A criminal, surely not forgotten by justice,
-he could never leave the lonely wastelands to live. A
-motherless, fatherless girl, with no kith or kin, had been
-left in his care, and he had saved her, succored her. Care
-and health and love had made her beautiful. By all the
-laws of nature she was his, to hold, to cherish, to cheer
-the lonely, gray years. He had but to open his arms and
-call to her, reveal to her the mystery and glory of life,
-and she would be his forever. Unconsciously she herself
-leaned toward this fate, tempting him in all her innocence.
-She would grow into a glorious woman—the keen, sweet,
-fierce youth of her answering to the work of the desert.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span>
-Were not all desert flowers more rare and vivid—were
-not all desert creatures more beautiful and strong than
-their like elsewhere? Genie would be his, as the eagle had
-its mate, and she would never know any other life. She
-would be compensation for his suffering, a companion for
-his wandering. Think! the joy of her, the thrill of her!
-The wonderful fire of her dark eyes and the dance of her
-curls and the red lips ripe for kisses! No man had any
-right to deny himself immortality. What was the world
-and its customs to him? Where was the all-wise and
-beneficent God who looked after the miserable and forlorn?
-Life was life, and that was everything. Beauty in
-life—that was eternal, the meaning of nature, and every
-man must love it, share it, and mark the image of himself
-upon the future. Lastly and most potent, the present
-fleeting hour that must soon pass! Let him grasp his
-precious jewel before it was too late—live in the moment.
-Life might be eternal, but not for him. Soon the seeping
-sand would nestle round his bleached bones and fill the
-sockets where once his eyes had burned. Genie was a gift
-of chance. He had wandered down into this valley, and
-now his life should never be lonely again. Lover of beauty
-and worshiper of nature, he had but to extend his arms
-to receive a treasure far greater than the gold of the
-desert, more beautiful than its flaming flowers, more mysterious
-than its fierce and inevitable life. A girl whose
-white body, like a transparent opal, let the sunshine
-through! A woman, gift of the ages to man, flame of
-love and life, most beautiful of all things quick or dead,
-a mystery for man to cherish, to love, to keep, to bind!</p>
-
-<p>Then, at the instant when Adam’s fall was imminent,
-and catastrophe leaned like the huge overhanging mountain
-mass, he wrestled up to fling the supremity of his soul
-into the teeth of nature.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>No!... No!</em>” he gasped, hoarsely. “Not for me!”</p>
-
-<p>At the last he saw clearly. The love he had for Genie
-now proclaimed itself. The other had not been love,
-whatever its greatness, its importunity, its almost blasting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span>
-power. He was an outcast, and any day a man or men
-might seek him out to kill him or be killed. What madness
-was this of his to chain a joyous girl to his wandering
-steps? What but woe to her and remorse to him could
-ever come of such relation? Genie was so full of life
-and love that she hated to leave even the loneliness of the
-desert. To her, in the simplicity and adaptation of her
-nature, he was all. But she was a child, and the day he
-placed her in an environment where youth called to youth,
-and there were work, play, study, cheer, and love, he
-would become a memory. The kisses of her red ripe lips
-were not for him. The dance of her glinting curls, the
-flash of her speaking eyes, the gold-brown flesh of her,
-had been created by nature; and nature must go on with
-its inscrutable design, its eternal progress, leaving him outside
-the pale. The joy he was to feel in Genie must come
-of memory, when soon he had gone on down into the
-lonely wastelands. She would owe life and happiness to
-him, and, though she might not know it, he always would.
-A child, a girl, a woman—and some day perhaps a wife
-and mother—some happy man’s blessing and joy—and
-these by the same inevitable nature that had tortured him
-would reward him in the solemn white days and the lonely
-starlit nights. For he had been and would be the creator
-of their smiles. How fierce and false had been his struggle,
-in the light of thought, when the truth was that he would
-give his life to spare Genie a moment’s pain!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">That</span> afternoon when Adam returned to camp sore
-in body and spent in force, yet with strangely tranquil
-soul, there was an old Indian waiting for him. Genie had
-gone back long before Adam, and she sat on the sand,
-evidently having difficult but enjoyable conversation with
-the visitor.</p>
-
-<p>At sight of his hard, craggy, bronze face, serried and
-seamed with the lines of years, it seemed that a bolt shot
-back in Adam’s heart, opening a long-closed door.</p>
-
-<p>“Charley Jim!” he ejaculated, in startled gladness.</p>
-
-<p>“How, Eagle!” His deep voice, the familiar yet forgotten
-name, the lean brown hand, confirmed Adam’s
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>“Chief, the white man has not forgotten his Indian
-friend,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Eagle no same boy like mescal stalk. Heap big!
-Many moon! Snows on the mountain!” said Charley
-Jim, with a gleam of a smile breaking the bronze face.
-His fingers touched the white hair over Adam’s temples.
-Pathos and dignity marked the action.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy no more, Charley Jim,” returned Adam. “Eagle
-has his white feathers now!”</p>
-
-<p>Genie burst into a trill of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“You funny old people! You make me feel old, too,”
-she protested, and she ran away.</p>
-
-<p>Charley Jim’s somber eyes followed her, then returned
-to question Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“She same girl here—long time—sick man’s girl?” And
-he made signs to show the height of a child and the weakness
-of a man’s lungs.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, chief. He her father. Dead. Mother dead, too,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span>
-replied Adam, and he pointed to the two green graves
-across the stream.</p>
-
-<p>“Ugh! No live good. No get well.... Eagle, sick
-man have brother—him dead. Jim find ’um. Him
-dig gold—no water—dead.... Jim find ’um heap
-bones.”</p>
-
-<p>It was thus Adam heard the story of the tragedy of
-Genie’s uncle. Charley Jim told it more clearly, though
-just as briefly, in his own tongue. Moons before he had
-found a prospector’s pack and then a pile of rags and
-bones half buried in the sand over in a valley beyond the
-Cottonwood Mountains. He recognized the man’s pack
-as belonging to the brother of the sick man, Linwood, both
-of whom he knew. Adam could trust an Indian’s memory.
-Genie’s uncle had come to the not rare end of a wandering
-prospector’s life. The old desert tragedy—thirst! All
-at once Adam’s eyes seemed to burn blind with a red dim
-veil, and his tongue clove to the roof of his mouth, and
-through his body passed a cold shudder, and he had
-strange vision of himself staggering blindly in a circle,
-plunging madly for the false mirage. The haunting plague
-passed away. Adam turned to examine the few pack
-articles Charley Jim had brought for possible identification
-of the dead. One of these, a silver belt buckle of
-odd design, oxidized and tarnished, might possibly be remembered
-by Genie. Adam called her, placed it in her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, did you ever see that?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she replied, with a start of recognition. “It was
-my father’s. He gave it to my uncle.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam nodded to the Indian. “Chief, you were right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Wanny—it means he’s found my uncle—dead!”
-exclaimed Genie, in awe.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Genie,” replied Adam, with a hand of sympathy
-upon her shoulder. “We know now. He’ll never come
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>With the buckle in her hands the girl slowly walked
-toward the graves of her parents.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span>
-Charley Jim mounted his pony to ride away.</p>
-
-<p>“Chief—tell me of Oella,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian gazed down upon Adam with somber eyes.
-Then his lean, sinewy hand swept up with stately and
-eloquent gesture to be pressed over his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Oella dead,” he replied, sonorously, and then he looked
-beyond Adam, out across the lonesome land, beyond the
-ranges, perhaps to the realm of his red gods. Adam read
-the Indian gesture. Oella had died of a broken heart.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>He stood there at the edge of the oasis, stricken mute,
-as his old Indian friend turned to go back across the valley
-to the Coahuila encampment. A broken heart! That
-superb Indian maiden, so lithe and tall and strong, so
-tranquil, so sure—serene of soul as the steady light of her
-midnight eyes—dead of a broken heart! She had loved
-him—a man alien to her race—a wanderer and a stranger
-within her gates, and when he had gone away life became
-unendurable. Another mystery of the lonely, gray, melancholy
-wastelands! Adam quivered there in the grip of
-it all.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Later when he returned to Genie it was to say, simply,
-“My dear, as soon as I can find my burros we pack for
-the long trail.”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” she exclaimed, with lighting eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I shall take you out to find you a home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honest Injun?” she blazed at him, springing erect.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, I would not tease about that. We know your
-uncle is dead. The time to go has come. We’ll start at
-sunrise.”</p>
-
-<p>Forgotten were Genie’s dreams of yesterday! A day at
-her time of life meant change, growth, oblivion for what
-had been. With a cry of wondering delight she flung
-herself upon Adam, leaped and climbed to the great height
-of his face, and there, like a bird, she pecked at him with
-cool, sweet lips, and clung to him in an ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t!... Still a child, Genie,” he said, huskily, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span>
-he disengaged himself from her wild embrace. He meant
-that she was not still a child. It amazed him and hurt
-him to see her radiance at the thought of leaving the desert
-oasis which had been home for so long. Fickleness of
-youth! Yesterday she had wanted to live there forever;
-to-day the enchantments of new life, people, places, called
-alluringly. It was what Adam had expected. It was
-what he wanted for her. How clear had been his vision
-of the future! How truly, the moment he had fought
-down his selfish desires, had he read her innocent heart!
-His own swelled with gladness, numbing out the pang.
-For him, some little meed of praise! Not little was it to
-have conquered self—not little was it to have builded the
-happiness of an orphan!</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s burros had grown gray in their years of idle,
-contented life at the oasis. Like the road runners, they
-enjoyed the proximity of camp; and he found them shaggy
-and fat, half asleep while they grazed. He drove them
-back to the shade of the cottonwoods, where Genie, seeing
-this last and immutable proof of forthcoming departure,
-began to dance over the sand in wild glee.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, you’ll do well to save some of your nimbleness,”
-admonished Adam. “We’ll have a load. You’ve
-got to climb the mountain and walk till I can buy another
-burro.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Wanny, I’ll fly!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! I rather think you will fly the very first
-time a young fellow sees you—a big girl in those ragged
-boy’s clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Adam thrilled anew with the sweetness, the wonder
-of her. His cold heart warmed to the core. How he
-would live in the hope and happiness and love that surely
-must be awaiting this girl! His mention of a young fellow
-suddenly rendered Genie amazed, shy, bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>“But—but—Wanny—you—you won’t let any yo-young
-fellow see me <em>this</em> way!” she pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>“How can I help it? You just wouldn’t sew and make
-dresses. Now you’re in for it. We’ll meet a lot of lads.... And,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">374</span>
-Genie, just the other day you didn’t care how <em>I</em>
-saw you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you’re different! You’re my dad, my brother,
-old Taquitch, and everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. That makes me feel a little better.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she turned her dark eyes upon him, piercing
-now and dilating with thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanny! Are you <em>sorry</em> to leave?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he replied, sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll stay, if you want me—ever—always,” she
-said, very low. The golden flush paled on her cheek.
-She was a child, yet on the verge of womanhood.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, I’m sorry, but I’m glad, too. What I want most
-is to see you settled in a happy home, with a guardian,
-young friends about you—all you want.”</p>
-
-<p>She appeared sober now, and Adam gathered that she
-had thought more seriously than he had given her credit for.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanny, you’re good, and your goodness makes you
-see all that for me. But a guardian—a happy home—all I
-want!... I’ll be poor. I’ll have to work for a living.
-I won’t have <em>you</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly she seemed about to weep. Her beautiful
-eyes dimmed. But Adam startled her out of her weakness.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor! Well, Genie Linwood, you’ve got a surprise in
-store for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Wherewith he led her to the door of the hut and, tearing
-up the old wagon boards that had served as a floor, he
-dug in the sand underneath and dragged forth bag after
-bag, which he dropped at her feet with sodden, heavy
-thumps.</p>
-
-<p>“Gold, Genie! Gold! Yours!... You’ll be rich....
-All this was dug by your father. I don’t know how much,
-but it’s a fortune.... Now what do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>The rapture Adam had anticipated did not manifest
-itself. Genie seemed glad, certainly, but the significance
-of the gold did not really strike her.</p>
-
-<p>“And you never told me!... Well, by the great horn
-spoon, I’m rich!... Wanny, will <em>you</em> be my guardian?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span>
-“I will, till I can find you one,” he replied, stoutly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, never look for one—then I <em>will</em> have all I want!”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The last sunlight, the last starlight night, the last sunrise
-for Adam and Genie at the oasis, were beautiful memories
-of the past.</p>
-
-<p>Adam, driving the burros along the dim old Indian
-trail, meditated on the inevitableness of the end of all
-things. For nearly three years he had seen that trail every
-few days and always he had speculated on the distant time
-when he would climb it with Genie. That hour had struck.
-Genie, with the light feet of an Indian, was behind him,
-now chattering like a magpie and then significantly silent.
-She had her bright face turned to the enchanting adventures
-of the calling future; she was turning her back upon
-the only home she could remember.</p>
-
-<p>“Look, Genie, how gray and dry the canyon is,” said
-Adam, hoping to divert her. “Just a little water in that
-white wash, and you know it never reaches the valley.
-It sinks in the sand.... Now look way above you—high
-over the foothills. See those gleams of white—those
-streaks of black.... Snow, Genie, and the pines and
-spruces!”</p>
-
-<p>They camped at the edge of the spruces and pines. How
-sweet and cool and damp the air to desert dwellers! The
-wind sang through the trees with different tone. Adam,
-unpacking the burros, turned them loose, sure of their
-delight in the rich green grass. Genie, tired out with the
-long climb, fell upon one of the open packs to rest.</p>
-
-<p>With his rifle Adam strode away among the scattered
-pines and clumps of spruce. The smell of this forest
-almost choked him, yet it seemed he could not smell and
-breathe enough. The dark-green, spear-pointed spruces
-and the brown-barked pines, so lofty and spreading, intoxicated
-his desert eyes. He looked and reveled, forgetting
-the gun in his hands, until his aimless steps frightened deer
-from right before him. Then, to shoot was habit, the
-result of which was regret. These deer were tame, not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span>
-like the wary, telescope-eyed mountain sheep; and Adam,
-after his first exultant thrill—the old recurrent thrill from
-out the past—gazed down with sorrow at the sleek, beautiful
-deer he had slain. What dual character he had—what
-contrast of thrill and pang, of blood and brain, of desert
-and civilization, of physical and spiritual, of nature and—But
-he did not know what!</p>
-
-<p>He laughed later, and Genie laughed, too, at how ravenous
-he was at supper, how delicious the venison tasted,
-how good it was to eat.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’ll give myself up as a bad job,” he told her.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanny, for me you’ll always be Taquitch, giant of the
-desert and god of the clouds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! You’ll forget me in ten days after you meet <em>him</em>!”
-replied Adam, somewhat bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>Genie could only stare her amaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me, child. I don’t mean that. I know you’ll
-never forget me.... But you’ve been my—my little girl
-so long that it hurts to think of your being some other
-man’s.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he was to see the marvel of Genie’s first blush.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>It was well that Adam had thought to pack extra blankets
-for Genie. She had never felt the nip of frost. And
-when night settled down black, with the wind rising, she
-needed to be warmly wrapped. Adam liked the keen air,
-and also the feel of the camp-fire heat upon his outstretched
-palms.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning the sky was overcast with broken, scudding
-clouds, and a shrill wind tossed the tips of the pines.
-Genie crawled out of her blankets to her first experience of
-winter. When she dipped her hands into the water she
-squealed and jerked them out. Then at Adam’s bantering
-laughter she bravely dashed into the ordeal of bathing
-face and hands with that icy water.</p>
-
-<p>Adam did not have any particular objective point in
-mind. He felt strangely content to let circumstances of
-travel or chance or his old wandering instinct guide him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span>
-They traveled leisurely through the foothills on the
-western side of the Sierra Madres, finding easy trails
-and good camp sites, and meeting Indians by the way.
-Six days out from the desert they reached a wagon
-road, and that led down to a beautiful country of soft
-velvety-green hills and narrow, pleasant valleys where
-clumps of live oaks grew, and here and there nestled a
-ranch.</p>
-
-<p>So they traveled on. The country grew less rugged and
-some of it appeared to belong to great ranches, once the
-homes of the Spanish grandees. Late one afternoon travel
-brought them within sight of Santa Ysabel. Adam turned
-off the main road, in search of a place to camp, and, passing
-between two beautiful hills, came upon a little valley, all
-green with live oaks and brown with tilled ground. He
-saw horses, cattle, and finally a farmhouse, low and
-picturesque, of the vine-covered adobe style peculiar to a
-country first inhabited by the Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>Adam went toward the house, which was mostly concealed
-by vines and oaks, and presently happened upon a
-scene that seldom gladdened the eyes of a desert wanderer.
-On a green plot under the trees several children stopped
-their play to stare at Adam, and one ran to the open door.
-There were white pigeons flying about the roof, and gray
-rabbits in the grass, and ducks wading in the brook. Adam
-heard the cackle of hens and the bray of a burro. A column
-of blue smoke lazily rose upward from a gray, adobe,
-fire-blackened oven.</p>
-
-<p>Before Adam got to the door a woman appeared there,
-with the child at her skirts. She was middle-aged and
-stout, evidently a hard-working rancher’s wife. She had
-a brown face, rather serious, but kind, Adam thought.
-And he looked keenly, because he was now getting into
-the civilized country that he expected would become Genie’s
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening, ma’am!” he said. “Will you let me
-camp out there by the oaks?”</p>
-
-<p>“How d’ye do, stranger,” she replied. “Yes, you’re welcome.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span>
-But you’re only a mile or so from Santa Ysabel.
-There’s a good inn.”</p>
-
-<p>“Time enough to go there to-morrow or next day,” replied
-Adam. “You see, ma’am, I’m not alone. I’ve a
-young girl with me. We’re from the desert. And I want
-her to have some—some decent clothes before I take her
-where there are people.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman laughed pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Your daughter?” she asked, with interest.</p>
-
-<p>“No relation,” replied Adam. “I—I was a friend of
-her mother, who died out on the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stranger, you’re welcome to my house overnight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, but I’d rather not trouble you. We’ll be
-very comfortable. It’s a nice place to camp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come far?” asked the woman, whose honest blue eyes
-were taking stock of Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, far for Genie. We’ve been about ten days coming
-over the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon you’d like some milk and eggs for supper?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now, ma’am, if you only knew how I would like
-some,” returned Adam, heartily. “And poor Genie, who
-has fared so long on desert grub, she’d surely appreciate
-your kindness.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fetch some over, or send it by my boy,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Adam returned thoughtfully to the little grove where he
-had elected to camp. This woman’s kindness, the glint of
-sympathy in her eyes, brought him up short with the certitude
-that they were the very virtues he was looking for
-in the person to whom he intended to trust Genie. It
-behooved him from now on to go keenly at the task of
-finding that person. It would not be easy. For the present
-he meant to hide any hint of Genie’s small fortune, and had
-cautioned her to that end.</p>
-
-<p>Genie appeared tired and glad to sit on the green grassy
-bank. “I’ll help—in a little while,” she said. “Isn’t this
-a pretty place? Oh, the grass feels so cool and smells so
-sweet!... Wanny, who’d you see at the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some youngsters and a nice woman,” replied Adam.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span>
-It was on his tongue to tell Genie about the milk and eggs
-for supper, but in the interest of a surprise he kept silent.</p>
-
-<p>Sunset had passed when Adam got the packs spread,
-the fire built, and supper under way.</p>
-
-<p>At length the supper appeared to be about ready, except
-for the milk and eggs that had been promised. Adam set
-the pot and pan aside at the edge of the fire, and went off
-in search of some wood that would be needed later. He
-packed a big log of dead oak back to camp, bending under
-its weight.</p>
-
-<p>When he looked up he saw a handsome, stalwart lad,
-bareheaded and in shirt sleeves, standing just beyond the
-fire, holding out with brown muscular arms a big pan of
-milk. The milk was spilling over the edges. And on
-one of his fingers hung a small bucket full of eggs. He
-had to balance himself carefully while he stooped to deposit
-the bucket of eggs on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, Johnnie, where’ll I put the milk?” he called,
-cheerily.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was astounded, and suddenly tickled to see Genie
-trying to hide behind one of the packs. She succeeded
-in hiding all but her head, which at the moment wore an
-old cap that made her look more than ever like a boy.</p>
-
-<p>“My name’s not Johnnie,” she flashed, with spirit.</p>
-
-<p>The lad appeared nonplused, probably more at the tone
-of voice than the speech. Then he laughed. Adam liked
-the sound of that laugh, its ring, its heartiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Sammy, then.... Come get this milk,” called the boy.</p>
-
-<p>Genie maintained silence, but she glared over the top
-of the pack.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, bub,” the lad went on, plaintively, “I can’t
-stand this way all night. Mother wants the pan....
-Boy, are you deaf?... Say, bub, I won’t eat you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How dare you call me bub!” cried Genie, hotly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll be doggoned!” exclaimed the young fellow.
-“Listen to the kid!... I’ll call you worse than bub in a
-minute. Hurry, bubbie!”</p>
-
-<p>Genie made a quick movement that whirled her around,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span>
-with her cap flying off, and then she got to her knees.
-Thus, with face disclosed and blazing eyes, and curls no
-boy ever had, she presented a vastly different aspect.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m no boy! I—I’m a—a lady!” she declared, with
-angry, trembling voice of outraged dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” gasped the lad. Then, in his amaze and horror,
-he dropped the pan of milk, that splashed all over, nearly
-drowning the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello! What’s the trouble?” asked Adam, genially,
-appearing from the oaks.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I—spilled the milk—mother sent,” he replied, in
-confusion.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s too bad! No wonder, such a lot of milk!...
-What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Eugene—sir—Eugene Blair.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s queer—Eugene Blair.... My name’s
-Wansfell, and I’m glad to meet you,” said Adam, offering
-his hand. “Now let me make you acquainted with Miss
-Eugenie Linwood.”</p>
-
-<p>The only acknowledgment Genie gave to her first introduction
-was a slow sinking down behind the pack. Her
-expression delighted Adam. As for the young man—he
-appeared to be about twenty years old—he was overcome
-with embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>“Glad to—to know you Miss—Miss Linwood,” he
-gulped. “Please ex-excuse me. Mother never said—there
-was a—a girl.... And you looked so—I took you for
-a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, son,” put in Adam, kindly. “Genie
-did look like a boy. So I’ve been telling her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now—if you’ll excuse me I’ll run back after more
-milk,” said the lad, hurriedly, and, grasping up the pan,
-he ran away.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Miss Know-it-all,” said Adam, banteringly,
-“<em>what</em> did I tell you? Didn’t I tell you we’d meet some
-nice young fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“He—he didn’t see me—<em>all</em> of me,” replied Genie,
-tragically.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span>
-“What? Why, a fellow with eyes like his could see
-right through that pack!” declared Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“He called me bub!” suddenly exclaimed Genie, her tone
-changing from one of tragic woe to one of tragic resentment.
-“<em>Bub!</em>... The—the first boy I ever met in my
-whole life!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t he call you bub?” queried Adam.
-“There’s no harm in that. And when he discovered his
-mistake he apologized like a little man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>hate</em> him!” flashed Genie. “I’d starve to death before
-I’d eat his eggs and milk.” With that she flounced off
-into the clump of oaks.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was seeing Genie in a new light. It amused him
-greatly, yet he could not help but look ruefully after her,
-somewhat uncertain. Feminine reactions were unknown
-quantities. Genie reminded him wonderfully of girls he
-had known when he was seventeen.</p>
-
-<p>Presently young Blair returned with more milk, and
-also considerably more self-possession. Not seeing Genie,
-he evidently took the hint and quickly left.</p>
-
-<p>“Come over after supper,” called Adam, after him.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” he replied, and then was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Very shortly then Adam had supper prepared, to which
-he cheerfully invited Genie. She came reluctantly, with
-furtive eyes on the green beyond camp, and sat down to
-fold her feet under her, after the manner of an Indian.
-Adam, without any comment, served her supper, not omitting
-a generous quantity of fragrant fried eggs and
-a brimming cupful of creamy milk. Wherewith Genie
-utterly forgot, or magnificently disdained, any recollection
-of what she had said. She even asked for more.
-But she was vastly removed from the gay and lightsome
-Genie.</p>
-
-<p>“What’d you ask him back here for?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to talk to him. Don’t you?” replied Adam,
-innocently.</p>
-
-<p>“Me!... When he called me bub?”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, be sensible. They’re nice people. I think I’ll<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span>
-camp here a day or so. We’ll rest up, and that’ll give me
-time to look around.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look around!... What’ll become of <em>me</em>?” wailed
-Genie, miserably.</p>
-
-<p>“You can watch camp. I dare say young Blair will forget
-your rudeness and be nice to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Genie glared with terrible eyes upon Adam, and
-she seemed between tears and rage.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I never—never knew—you could be like this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like what? Genie, I declare, I’m half ashamed of
-you! Nothing has happened. Only this lad mistook you
-for a boy. Anyone would think the world had come to
-an end. All because you woke up and found out you had
-on boy’s clothes. Well, you’ve got to take your medicine
-now. You <em>would</em> wear them. You never minded <em>me</em>.
-You didn’t care <em>how</em> I saw you!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care how <em>he</em> saw me or sees me, either, so
-there,” declared Genie, enigmatically.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Well, what’s wrong, then?” queried Adam, more
-curious than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“I—he—it—it was what he called me,” replied Genie,
-confusedly.</p>
-
-<p>Adam gazed at her downcast face with speculative eyes,
-intuitively feeling that she had not told the whole truth.
-He had anticipated trouble with this spirited young wild
-creature from the desert, once they got into civilization.</p>
-
-<p>“Genie, I’ve been mostly in fun. Now I’m serious....
-I want you to be perfectly natural and nice with these
-Blairs, or anyone else we meet.”</p>
-
-<p>Manifestly she took that seriously enough. Without
-another word she dragged her blankets and canvas away
-from the firelight, and at the edge of the gathering gloom
-under the oaks she made her bed and crawled into it.</p>
-
-<p>A little while after dark, young Blair presented himself
-at Adam’s fire, and took a seat to which he was invited.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you folks are ranching it?” asked Adam, by
-way of opening conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s hardly a ranch, though we have hopes,” replied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span>
-Blair. “Mother and I run the farm. My father’s not—he’s
-away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like good soil. Plenty of water and fine grass,”
-observed Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Best farming country all around—these valleys,” declared
-the lad, warming to enthusiasm. “Ranchers taking
-it all up. Only a few valleys left. There’s one just below
-this—about a hundred acres—if I could only get that!...
-But no such luck for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can never tell,” replied Adam, in his quiet way.
-“You say ranchers are coming in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. San Diego is growing fast. People are buying
-out the Mexicans and Indians up in these hills. In a few
-years any rancher with one of these valleys will be rich.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much land do you own?”</p>
-
-<p>“My mother bought this little farm here—ten acres—and
-the valley, which was about ninety. But my father—we
-lost the valley. And we manage to live here.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s quick sympathy divined that something pertaining
-to the lad’s father was bitter and unhappy. He questioned
-further about the farm, what they raised, where they
-marketed it, how many cattle, horses, chickens, ducks they
-had. In half an hour Adam knew the boy and liked him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re pretty well educated for a farmer boy,” remarked
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I went to school till I was sixteen. We’re from Indiana—Vincennes.
-Father got the gold fever. We came West.
-Mother and I took to a surer way of living.”</p>
-
-<p>“You like ranching, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee! but I’d love to be a real rancher! There’s not
-only money in cattle and horses, on a big scale, but it’s
-such a fine life. Outdoors all the time!... Oh, well, I
-<em>do</em> have the outdoors as much as anybody. But for mother
-and the kids—I’d like to do better by them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw the youngsters and I’d like to get acquainted.
-Tell me about them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing much to tell. They’re like little Indians.
-Tommy’s three, Betty’s four, Hal’s five. He was a baby<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span>
-when we came West. The trip was too hard on him.
-He’s been delicate. But he’s slowly getting stronger.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! You’ve a fine family. How are you going to
-educate them?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s our problem. Mother and I must do our best—until—maybe
-we can send them to school at San Diego.”</p>
-
-<p>“When your ship comes in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I’m always hoping for that. But first I’d like my
-ship to start out, so it can come back loaded.”</p>
-
-<p>The lad laughed. He was imaginative, full of fire and
-pathos, yet clear headed and courageous, neither blind to
-the handicap under which he labored nor morose at his
-fetters.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, if a man <em>waits</em> for his ship to come in—sometimes
-it never comes,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’ll be on your way to town early?” asked
-Blair, as he rose.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’ll not break camp to-morrow. Genie is tired.
-And I won’t mind a little rest. Hope we’ll see you again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. Good night.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>When he was gone, Adam took to pacing along the edge
-of the oaks. In the light of the camp fire he saw the gleam
-of Genie’s wide-open eyes. She had heard every word of
-Adam’s conversation with young Blair. He felt a great
-sympathy for Genie. Like a child, she was face to face
-with new life, new sensations, poignant and bewildering.
-How might he best help her?</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Next morning, when Adam returned from a look around,
-he discovered Genie up, puttering at the camp fire. She
-greeted him with undue cheerfulness. She was making a
-heroic effort to show that this situation was perfectly
-natural. She did pretty well, but Adam’s keen eyes and
-sense gathered that Genie felt herself on the verge of great
-and tremendous events.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast Adam asked Genie to accompany him
-to the farmhouse. She went, but the free, lithe step<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span>
-wanted something of its old grace. Adam espied the
-children in the yard, and now he took cognizance of them.
-Tommy was a ragged, tousle-headed, chubby little rascal,
-ruddy cheeked and blue eyed. Betty resembled the lad,
-Eugene, having his fine dark eyes and open countenance.
-Hal was the largest, a red-headed, freckle-faced imp if
-Adam ever saw one. They regarded the newcomers with
-considerable interest. Genie approached them and offered
-to swing Betty, who was sitting in a clumsy little hammock-like
-affair made of barrel staves. And Adam, seeing the
-children’s mother at the door, went that way.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Mrs. Blair!” he said. “We’ve come
-over to chat a bit and see your youngsters.”</p>
-
-<p>She greeted them smilingly, and came out wiping her
-hands on her apron. “Goodness knows we’re glad to have
-you. Gene has gone to work. Won’t you sit on the bench
-here?...”</p>
-
-<p>Then she espied Genie. “For land’s sake! That your
-girl in the boy’s clothes? Gene told me what a dunce he’d
-been.... Oh, she’s pretty! What shiny hair!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Genie. I want you to meet her—and then, Mrs.
-Blair, perhaps you can give an old desert codger a little
-advice,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p>He called Genie, and she came readily, though not without
-shyness. Despite her garb and its rents, Adam could
-not but feel proud of her. Mrs. Blair’s kindliness quickly
-put the girl at ease. After a little talk, in which Genie’s
-part augured well for the impression she was to make
-upon people, Adam bade her play with the children.</p>
-
-<p>“No wonder Gene spilled the milk!” ejaculated Mrs.
-Blair.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” queried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“The girl’s more than pretty. Never saw such hair.
-And her eyes! They’re not the color of hair and eyes
-I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the desert’s work, Mrs. Blair. On the desert
-nature makes color, as well as life, more vivid, more
-intense.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span>
-“And this Genie—isn’t it odd—her name is like my
-boy Gene’s—she’s no relation of yours?”</p>
-
-<p>Briefly then Adam related Genie’s story and the circumstances
-of his association with her.</p>
-
-<p>“Laws-a-me! Poor child!... And now she has no
-people—no home—not a friend in the world but you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not one. It’s pretty sad, Mrs. Blair.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sad? It’s worse than that.... Strikes me, though,
-Mr. Wansfell, you must be family and friends and all
-to that girl.... And let a mother tell you what a noble
-thing you’ve done—to give three years of your life to
-an orphan!”</p>
-
-<p>“What I did was good for me. Better than anything I
-ever did before,” replied Adam, earnestly. “I’d go on if
-it were possible. But Genie needs a home, young people,
-work, to learn and live her life. And I—I must go back
-to the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! So that’s it!” exclaimed the woman, nodding.
-“My husband spoke just like you do. He took to the
-desert—sold my farm to get money to work his gold claims.
-Always he had to go back to the desert.... And now
-he’ll never come home again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the desert claims many men. But I could and
-would sacrifice whatever the desert means to me, for
-Genie’s sake, if it—if there was not a reason which makes
-that impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now you’re hunting a home for her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s well educated, you said?”</p>
-
-<p>“Her mother was a school-teacher.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then she could teach children.... Things work out
-strangely in life, don’t they? My Betty might be left
-alone. Any girl may become an orphan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Mrs. Blair, will you be so kind as to take Genie,
-or go with us into town, and help us get some clothes
-for her? A few simple dresses and things she needs. I’d
-be helpless. And Genie knows so little. She ought to
-have a woman go with her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span>
-“Indeed she shall have,” declared Mrs. Blair. “I’ll be
-only too glad to go. I need some things——” Then she
-struck her forehead with a plump hand. “I’ve a better
-idea. There’s not much to be bought in the store at Santa
-Ysabel. But my neighbor up the valley—his name is Hunt—he
-has a granddaughter. They’re city folks. They’ve
-been somebody once. This granddaughter is older than
-Genie—she’s more of a woman’s figure—and I heard
-her say only the other day that she brought a lot of
-outgrown dresses with her and didn’t know what to do
-with them. All her clothes are fine—not like you
-buy out here.... I’ll take Genie over there right this
-minute!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Blair got up and began to untie her apron. Kindliness
-beamed upon her countenance and she seemed to have
-acquired a more thoughtful eye.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re good indeed,” said Adam, gratefully. “I thank
-you. It will be so much nicer for Genie. She dreaded
-this matter of clothes. You can tell Miss Hunt I’d be
-glad to <span class="locked">pay——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Shucks! She wouldn’t take your money. She’s quality,
-I told you. And her name’s not Hunt. That’s her grandfather’s
-name. I don’t know what hers is—except he calls
-her Ruth.”</p>
-
-<p>Ruth! The sudden mention of that name seemed to
-Adam like a stab. What a queer, inexplicable sensation
-followed it!</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be right out,” declared Mrs. Blair, bustling into
-the house.</p>
-
-<p>Adam called Genie to him and explained what was to
-happen. She grew radiant.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Wanny, then I won’t have to go into a town—to be
-laughed at—and I can get—get dressed like—like a lady—before
-he sees me again!” she exclaimed, breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“He? Who’s that, Genie?” inquired Adam, dryly,
-though he knew he could guess very well.</p>
-
-<p>Genie might have lived on the desert, like a shy, lonely,
-wild creature, but she was eternally feminine enough to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span>
-bite her tongue at the slip she had made, and to blush
-charmingly.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mrs. Blair bustled out again, in sunbonnet and
-shawl, and with the alacrity of excitement she led Genie
-away through the grove of oaks toward the other end of
-the valley.</p>
-
-<p>Adam returned to camp, much relieved and pleased, yet
-finding suddenly that a grave, pondering mood had come
-upon him. In the still noon hour, when the sun was hot
-and the flies buzzed lazily, Adam would surely have
-succumbed to drowsiness had he not been vociferously
-hailed by some one. He sat up to hear one of the little
-Blairs call, “Say, my maw wants you to eat with us.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam lumbered up and, trying to accommodate his giant
-steps to those of the urchin, finally reached the house. He
-heard Mrs. Blair in the kitchen. Then something swift
-and white rushed upon Adam from somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Look!</em>” it cried, in ecstatic tones, and pirouetted before
-his dazzled eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Genie! In a white dress, white slippers—all white, even
-to the rapt, beautiful, strangely transformed face! It
-was a Genie he could not recognize. Yet, however her
-dark gold-glinting tresses were brushed and arranged, he
-would have known their rare, rich color. And the eyes
-were Genie’s—vivid like the heart of a magenta cactus
-flower, unutterably and terribly expressive of happiness.
-But all else—the girl’s height and form and movement—had
-acquired something subtly feminine. The essence of
-woman breathed from her.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Wanny, I’ve a whole <em>bundle</em> of dresses!” she cried,
-rapturously. “And I put this on to please you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pleased!... Dear girl, I’m—I’m full of joy for you—overcome
-for myself,” exclaimed Adam. How, in that
-moment, he blessed the nameless spirit which had come
-to him the day Genie’s fate and future hung in the balance!
-What a victory for him to remember—seen now in the
-light of Genie’s lovely face!</p>
-
-<p>Then Mrs. Blair bustled in. Easy indeed was it to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span>
-see how the happiness of others affected her. “It’s good
-we have dinner at noon,” she said, as she put dish after
-dish upon the table, “else we’d had to do with little. Sit
-at table, folks.... Children, you must wait. We’ve
-company.... Gene, come to dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam found himself opposite Genie, who had suddenly
-seemed to lose her intensity, though not her glow. She
-had softened. The fierce joy had gone. Adam, watching
-her, received from her presence a thrill of expectancy, and
-realized that at least one of her sensations of the moment
-was being conveyed to him. Then Eugene entered. His
-face shone. He had wet his hair and brushed it and put
-on a coat. If something new and strange was happening
-to Genie, it had already happened to Eugene Blair.</p>
-
-<p>“Folks, help yourselves and help each other,” said Mrs.
-Blair.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was ready for that. What a happy dinner! He
-ate with the relish of a desert man long used to sour dough
-and bacon, but he had keen ears for Mrs. Blair’s chatter
-and eyes for Genie and Eugene. The mother, too, had a
-steady and thoughtful gaze for the young couple, and her
-mind was apparently upon weightier matters than her
-speech indicated.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, folks,” said Mrs. Blair, presently, “if you’ve all
-had enough, I’ll call the children.”</p>
-
-<p>Eugene arose with alacrity. “Let’s go outdoors,” he
-said, stealing a shy look at Genie. She seemed to move in
-a trance. Adam went out, too, and found himself under
-the oaks. The very air was potent with the expectancy
-that Adam had sensed in the house. Something was about
-to happen. It puzzled him. Yet he liked the suspense.
-But he was nonplused. The young couple did not present
-a riddle. All the same, the instant Adam felt convinced
-of this he looked at them and lost his conviction. They did
-present a riddle. He had not seen any other lad and girl
-together for many years, but somehow he wagered to himself
-that if he had seen a thousand couples, this one would
-stand out strikingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span>
-Then Mrs. Blair appeared. She had the look of a woman
-to whom decision had come. The hospitality, the kindly
-interest in Genie, the happiness in seeing others made
-happy, were in abeyance to a strong, serious emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Wansfell, if you’ll consent I’ll give Genie a home
-here with me,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Consent!... I—I gladly do that,” he replied, with
-strong agitation. “You are a—a good woman, Mrs. Blair.
-I am overwhelmed with gladness for Genie—for her luck....
-It’s so sudden—so unexpected.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some things happen that way,” she replied. “They
-just come about. I took to Genie right off. So did my
-boy. I asked him—when we got back from our neighbor’s—if
-it would not be a good idea to keep Genie. We are
-poor. It’s one more to feed and clothe. But she can help.
-And she’ll teach the children. That means a great deal
-to me and Gene.... He would be glad, he said. So I
-thought it over—and I’ve decided. We’ve your consent....
-Now, Genie, will you stay and have a home with us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ll—I’ll be so happy! I’ll try so—so hard!”
-faltered Genie.</p>
-
-<p>“Then—it’s settled. My dear girl, we’ll try to make you
-happy,” declared Mrs. Blair, and, sitting beside Genie, she
-embraced her.</p>
-
-<p>Adam’s happiness was so acute it seemed pain. But was
-his feeling all happiness? What had Genie’s quick look
-meant—the intense soul-searching flash she gave him when
-Mrs. Blair had said it was all settled? Genie’s desert eyes
-saw separation from the man who had been savior, father,
-brother. One flash of eyes—then she was again lost in
-this immense and heart-numbing idea of a home. Adam
-saw Eugene look at her as his mother enfolded her. And
-Adam’s heart suddenly lifted to exaltation. Youth to
-youth! The wonderful, the calling, the divine! The lad’s
-look was soulful, absorbing, full of strange, deep melancholy,
-full of dreamy, distant, unconscious enchantment.
-What had seemed mysterious was now as clear as the sunlight.
-By some happy chance of life the homeless Genie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span>
-had been guided to a good woman and a noble lad. Goodness
-was the commonest quality in the hearts of women;
-and nobility, in youth at least, flowered in the breast of
-every man.</p>
-
-<p>And while Eugene thus gazed at Genie she lifted her
-eyelids, so heavy with their dreams, and met his gaze.
-Suddenly she sweetly, strangely blushed and looked away,
-at Adam, through him to the beyond. She seemed full of
-a vague, dreaming sweetness of life; a faint smile played
-round her lips; her face lost its scarlet wave for pearly
-whiteness; and tears splashed down upon her listless hands.</p>
-
-<p>The moment, with all it revealed to Adam, swiftly passed.</p>
-
-<p>“Gene, take her and show her the horses,” said Mrs.
-Blair. “She said she loved horses. Show her all around.
-We’ll let the work go by to-day.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Mrs. Blair talked awhile with Adam, asking to know
-more about Genie, and confiding her own practical plans.
-Then she bustled off to look after the children, who had
-been forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Adam was left to the happiest and most grateful reflections
-of his life. Much good must come for him, for his
-lonely hours, when once more the wastelands claimed him;
-but that was the only thought he gave himself. Lounging
-back on the old rustic bench, he gave himself up to a growing
-delight of anticipation. These good Blairs did not
-dream that in offering Genie a home out of the kindliness
-of their hearts they had touched prosperity. They were
-poor. But Genie was rich. They meant to share with the
-orphan their little; they had no thought of anything Genie
-might share with them. Adam decided that he would buy
-the ninety acres, and the hundred in the valley beyond it;
-and horses, cattle, all the stock and implements for a fine
-ranch. Genie, innocent and bewildered child that she
-was, had utterly forgotten her bags of gold. On the next
-day, or soon, Adam meant to borrow Gene’s horse and
-buggy and drive to Santa Ysabel and then to San Diego.
-He must find some good investment for the rest of Genie’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span>
-gold, and a good bank, and some capable and reliable
-person to look after her affairs. How like a fairy story
-it would seem to Genie! What amazement and delight
-it would occasion Mrs. Blair! And as for the lad, no gold
-could enhance Genie’s charm for him. Gene would love
-Genie! Adam had seen it written in their unconscious
-eyes. And Gene would have the working of the beautiful
-ranch his eager heart had longed for. For the first time
-Adam realized the worth of gold. Here it would be a
-golden harvest.</p>
-
-<p>Dreaming thus, Adam was only faintly aware of voices
-and footsteps that drew nearer; and suddenly he seemed
-transfixed and thrilling, his gaze on a face he knew, the
-face on the miniature he carried—the lovely face of Ruth
-Virey.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">393</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“The</span> foxes have holes—the birds of the air have
-nests!” cried Adam.</p>
-
-<p>Was it he who lay there with aching heart and burning
-eyes? Ah! Again the lonely wasteland claimed him.
-That illimitable desert was home. Whose face was that
-limned on the clouds, and set into the beaten bossy mosaic
-of the sands, and sculptored in the contour of the dim,
-colored ranges?</p>
-
-<p>His burros nipped the sage behind him as he lay, back
-against a stone, on the lofty height of the Sierra Madre
-divide, gazing down into that boundless void. What was
-it that had happened? Ah! He had fled! And he lived
-over again for the thousandth time, that week—that fleeting
-week of transport with its endless regrets—in which
-he had found Genie a home, in which the daughter of
-Magdalene Virey had stormed his soul.</p>
-
-<p>Vague and happy those first days when he bought the
-valley lands and flooded them with cattle—vague because
-of the slow gathering of insupportable and unconscious love—happy
-because he lived with Genie’s rapture and her romance.
-Vivid were some of the memories—when he placed
-in Genie’s little brown hands papers and deeds and bankbooks,
-and by a gesture, as if by magic, proclaimed to her
-wondering sense the truth of a tale of Aladdin; when, to
-the serious-faced mother, pondering the costs, he announced
-her once more owner of the long-regretted land; when, to
-a fire-eyed lad, he had drawn aside the veil of the future.</p>
-
-<p>But vague, mystic as a troubled dream, the inception of
-a love that rose like the blaze of the sun—vague as the
-opaque dawn of the desert! Whenever he looked up, by
-night or day, at task or idleness, there shone the lovely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">394</span>
-face, pale as a dawn-hazed star, a face like Magdalene
-Virey’s, with all of its beauty, but naught of its passion;
-with all of its charm, yet none of its havoc. With youth,
-and bloom, and wide-open purple eyes, dark as midnight,
-staring at fate. And a voice like the voice of her mother,
-sweet, but not mocking, haunted the dreams of the man
-and lived in the winds.</p>
-
-<p>“And you are a desert man,” she had said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—a desert man,” he had replied.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a place I want to go some day—when I am
-twenty-one.... Death Valley! Do you know it? My
-grandfather says I’m mad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Death Valley! For such as you? Stay—never go
-near that awful hell!”</p>
-
-<p>The ghastly white pit and its naked red walls, the midnight
-furnace winds with their wailing roar, the long, long
-slopes to the avalanche graves! Ah! the torment of his
-heart, the tragedy he would hide, and the secret he must
-keep, and the miniature that burned in its place—they drew
-her with the invisible cords of life and fate. What he
-would spare her surged in the air that she breathed.</p>
-
-<p>She had come to him under the oaks, and yet again,
-quitting her friends, drawn to the lonely desert man.</p>
-
-<p>“They told me Genie’s story,” she said, and her eyes
-spoke eloquent praise her lips denied. “And so—her
-mother and father died on the desert.... Tell me, desert
-man, what does Death Valley look like?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is night; it is hell—death and desolation—the grave
-of the desert, yellow and red and gray—lonely, lonely,
-lonely silent land!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you love it!... Genie says the Indians call you
-Eagle—because you have the eye of the eagle.... Tell
-me.... Tell me....”</p>
-
-<p>And she made him talk, and she came again. Vague,
-sweet, first hours they were, with their drawing pain. Was
-it well to wake in the night, with eyes darker than the
-darkness, peering into his soul? Her mother’s eyes—with
-all the glory and none of the shame! She had come another<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">395</span>
-day and then the next, while time stood still with
-its mocking wait.</p>
-
-<p>Not vaguely came a scene: “I will tell you of the desert,”
-and a part of his story followed, brief and hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! I would be a man,” she said. “I would never
-run. I would never hide.”</p>
-
-<p>Mocking words from a tongue too sweet to mock! She
-had her mother’s spirit. And Adam groped in the gloom,
-to the glee of his devils of scorn. The grass by day and
-the grass by night felt the impress of his face. Then love—first
-real love of youth, and noble passion of man—blazed
-as the sun in his face. From that revelation all
-was clear in the bursting light of calamity.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Ruth was coming under the oaks. She liked the cool
-shade and hated the glare. She was nineteen, with a
-woman’s form and her mother’s eyes—proud, sweet, aloof.</p>
-
-<p>“Desert man, I am lonesome,” she said. “My grandfather
-has gone again. He is chasing some new will-o’-the-wisp.
-Gold and mines, cattle and land—and now it’s
-water. He has an ear for every man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lonesome? You! What do you know of loneliness?”
-asked Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a loneliness of soul.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! but you are young. Go help Genie plan her home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Genie and Gene! Two people with but one voice!
-They cannot hear or see anyone but themselves. It’s a
-pity to invade their paradise. <em>I</em> will not.... And, oh,
-how beautiful the world must be to them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ruth, is it not so to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Beautiful lands and greens and waters!” she exclaimed,
-in restless discontent. “But I cannot live on scenery.
-There is joy here, but none for me.... I lost my mother
-and I can’t forget. She <em>had</em> to leave me and go with him—my
-father. My father who loved me as a child and hated
-me as a girl. Oh, it’s all a mystery! She went with him
-to the desert. Gold mad—she said he was. She had her
-debt to pay. And <em>I</em> could not be taken to Death Valley.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">396</span>
-“You have never heard from her since the parting?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never.... And I am a woman now. Some day I
-will go to Death Valley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Because <em>they</em> went there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But no one lives long in that valley of death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will find their graves,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Ruth, you must not. What good can come of your
-traveling there? I’ve told you of its desolate and forbidding
-nature. You are all wrong. Wait! Perhaps
-your mother will—perhaps you will hear of her some day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, desert man, I was a child when we parted. I’m a
-woman now. I want to <em>know</em>. The mystery haunts me.
-<em>She</em> loved me—ah, so well!... Sometimes I cannot bear
-to live. My grandfather hides me in lonely places. We
-meet but few people, and those he repels. It is because
-of <em>me</em>.... Desert man, I am lonelier than was Genie.
-She is like a bird. She must have lived on the sun and the
-winds. But <em>I</em> am no child, and <em>I</em> am forlorn.”</p>
-
-<p>Brooding purple eyes of trouble, of longing, of discontent,
-of fire for life! The heart and soul of Ruth Virey—the
-heritage of need and unrest—shone from her eyes.
-All unconsciously she longed to be loved. She stood on the
-threshold of womanhood like a leaf in a storm.</p>
-
-<p>“Talk with me, walk with me, desert man,” she said,
-wistfully. “You were Taquitch for Genie. Be Eagle for
-me. Your eyes know the desert where my mother sleeps—where
-perhaps her spirit wanders. You soothe my
-troubled heart. Oh, I can feel <em>myself</em> with you, for you
-understand.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Thus Adam’s soul was stormed. Magdalene Virey had
-presaged the future. In the dark stillness of the night,
-sleepless, haunted, tossed by torment, it was revealed to
-him that Magdalene Virey had risen out of the depths
-on noble love for him, and through that love she had seen
-with mystic eyes into the future. She had projected that
-love into the spirit of the desert, and it had guided Adam’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">397</span>
-wandering steps to her daughter Ruth. Was this only a
-wanderer’s dream as he lay on the hills? Was it only a
-knot in the tangled skein of his desert life? Was it
-inscrutable design of a power he disdained?</p>
-
-<p>Be what this might, the one great love of his years
-possessed him, fierce and resistless on its march to his
-defeat. It mocked his ordeal. It flaunted a banner in his
-face—noble love, noble passion, love of the soul, all that
-revered woman, wife, mother, and babe. He had found
-his mate. Strange how he remembered Margarita Arallanes
-and the wild boy’s love of a day. Poor, pale, wasteful,
-sinful, lustful little gleam! And he recalled the spell
-of Genie—that strong call of nature in the wilderness.
-Above both he had arisen. But Ruth Virey was <em>the</em>
-woman. He could win her. The truth beat at his temples,
-constricted his throat. Ruth was the flower of her mother’s
-tragic longing to be loved. Ruth burned with that longing.
-And life was not to be denied. Magdalene Virey had
-given him this child of her agony. She trusted the fate
-of Ruth in his hands. She saw with superhuman eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A deep tenderness for Ruth pervaded Adam’s soul.
-Who, of all men, could love her, save her, content her as
-he? It was not thought of her kisses, of her embraces,
-that plucked at the roots of his will. Like a passing wave
-the thrill of such bliss went out to the might of a nobler
-tide. To save Ruth from the fate of her mother, from
-the peril of her own heart! And in the saving, a home—happiness—the
-tender smile of a mother—and the kiss of
-a child!</p>
-
-<p>“But I am a criminal! I am a murderer! Any day I
-might be hanged before her very eyes!” he whispered, with
-his face in the grass, his fingers digging the turf. “Still—no
-one would ever recognize me now.... Ah! but <em>he</em>—that
-human wolf Collishaw—would not he know me?...
-Oh, if there be God—help me in my extremity!”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Once again he met her. As he rode up the valley at
-sunset she came out of the oak grove.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">398</span>
-“I’ve been with Genie. Desert man, her happiness
-frightens me. Oh, I love her! You tell me of your hard,
-lonely, terrible desert life. Why, your ears should ring
-with bells of joy forever. It is <em>you</em> who have built her
-castle. What other deeds, like that, have you done—in
-those bitter years you tell of?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not many, Ruth—perhaps not one.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe you. I am learning you, desert man.
-And, oh, I wish you knew how it swells my heart to hear
-Genie tell of what you did for her. Every day she tells
-me something new.... Ah! and more—for to-day she
-said you would be leaving soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Ruth—soon,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Back to the lonely land?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, back to the sage and sand and the big dark hills.
-Yes, it will be a lonely land,” he replied, sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“And you will wander down the trails until you meet
-some one—some woman or child or man—sick or miserable
-or lost—and then you will stop.”</p>
-
-<p>Adam had no answer.</p>
-
-<p>“The Indians called you Eagle,” she went on, and her
-tone startled him with its hint of remembered mockery.
-“You have the desert eye—you see so far.... But you
-don’t see <em>here</em>!... Why should you waste your splendid
-strength, your magnificent manhood, wandering over the
-desert <em>if</em> it’s only for unhappy people? Desert man, you
-are great. But you could do more good here—you could
-find more misery here.... I know one whose heart is
-breaking. And you’ve never <em>seen</em>, for all your eagle eye!”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen, you morbid girl,” he returned, stung as with
-fire. “I am not great. I am lost. I go to the desert because
-it is home.... Don’t think of me! But look to
-yourself. Look into your heart. Fear it, Ruth Virey. You
-are a spoiled, dreamful, passionate child. But you have a
-mind and you have a will. You can conquer your unrest,
-your discontent. Revere the memory of your mother, but
-grieve no more. The past is dead. Learn to fight. You
-are no fighter. You are weak. You give in to loneliness,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">399</span>
-sadness, longing. Resolve to be a woman! You must live
-your life. Make it worth while. Every man, every
-woman, has a burden. Lift yours cheerfully and begin to
-climb.... Work for your grandfather. He needs your
-help. Love those with whom fate has placed you. And
-fight—fight the dark moods, the selfish thoughts, the hateful
-memories! Fight like a desert beast for your life.
-Work—work till you bruise those beautiful hands. Work
-with a hoe, if you can find nothing else. Love to see things
-grow green and flower and give fruit. Love the animals,
-the birds, and learn from them; love all nature, so that
-when you meet a man some day, <em>the</em> man, you can love
-him. That is what it means to be a woman. You are a
-beautiful, sweet, useless, and petulant girl. But be so no
-more. Be a woman!”</p>
-
-<p>Pale and shocked, with brimming eyes and tremulous
-lips, she replied:</p>
-
-<p>“Stay—stay, desert man, and make me a woman!”</p>
-
-<p>And those sad dark eyes and those sweet murmured
-words had made him flee—flee like a craven in the night.
-Yes, for Ruth’s sake he had fled. Not a farewell to Genie—not
-a wave of his hand, but gone in the night—gone
-forever out of their lives!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>“The foxes have holes—the birds of the air have nests!”
-cried Adam, to the listening silence.</p>
-
-<p>Was it he who lay there with broken heart and magnified
-sight? Yes, wanderer of the wasteland again! Back
-to the lonely land! That limitless expanse of rock and
-sand was home. Was not that Ruth’s face limned on the
-clouds? Did not her sad, reproachful eyes haunt him in
-the dim, purple distances?</p>
-
-<p>From the lofty divide of the Sierra Madres Adam gazed
-down into the void he called home. Beyond the gray
-sands and far beyond the red reaches he saw across the
-California Desert into Arizona, and down into Mexico,
-and to the dim, blue Gulf.</p>
-
-<p>Home! All the years of Adam’s desert experience were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">400</span>
-needed to grasp the meaning of the stupendous scene. The
-eye of the eagle, the sight of the condor, supreme over the
-desert, most marvelous and delicate work of nature, could
-only behold, could only range that sun-blasted burned-out
-empire of the wastelands. Only the mind of man, the
-thought of man, could understand it. And for Adam it
-was home, and to his piercing eyes a thing, a place, a world,
-terribly true and beautiful and comforting, upon which he
-seemed driven to gaze and gaze, so that forever it must
-be limned on his vision and his memory.</p>
-
-<p>The day was one of sunlight and storm, of blue sky
-and purple clouds and fleecy white, of palls of swirling
-gray snow and dark veils of downward-streaming rain.
-The Sierra Madres rolled away on either side, range on
-range, rising to the north in the might of slow league-long
-mountain swell, until far against the stormy sky stood
-the old white-capped heave of San Gorgonio looming over
-the gray Mohave; and to the south, like the wave undulations
-of a calm sea, sank the long low lines of the arid
-arm of desert land.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath Adam piled the foothills, round and old and
-gray, sage gray, lavender gray, lilac gray, all so strangely
-gray—upheaved hills of aged earth and dust and stone.
-Hill by hill they lowered, with glaring gorges between,
-solitary hills and winding ranges and clustered domes, split
-by canyons and cleft by brushy ravines—miles and miles
-of foothills, reluctantly surrendering allegiance to the peaks
-above, moving downward as surely as the grains of their
-slopes, weathering and spreading at last in the sands.</p>
-
-<p>Away and away flowed that gray Sahara with its specks
-of sage, ribbed by its ridges of dunes. Immense and unbounded
-it swept to its center, the Salton Sink—bowl of
-the desert—a great lake of colored silt, a ghastly, glaring
-stain on the earth, over which the storm clouds trailed their
-veils of rain, and shadows like colossal ships sailed the
-sandy main. Away to the southward it flowed, level and
-shining, at last to rise and meet the blue sky in lucent
-spurs of gold and white. This landmark contrasted singularly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">401</span>
-with the Salton Sink. It was the illusive and shifting
-line of the Superstition Mountains, where the wind sheeted
-the sands, and by night or day, like the changing of tides,
-went on with its mysterious transformation. These giant
-sand hills caught the sunlight through a rift in the broken
-clouds. And dim under the dunes showed the scalloped,
-dark shadows.</p>
-
-<p>But these foothills and sand plains were only the edge
-of the desert. Beyond marched the mountain ranges.
-Vast, upheaved, crinkled crust of the naked earth, scored
-by fire, scarred by age, cracked by earthquake, and stained
-in the rusty reds and colored chocolates of the iron rocks!
-Down to the rim of the Salton Sink sheered a ragged range.
-Over it centered the lowering storm clouds, gray and drab
-and purple, with rays of the sun filtering through, lighting
-the grim, dark hardness, showing the smoky gloom.
-And where the ridge ran down to the desert, to make the
-lines of the sandy lake, it resembled a shore of the river
-Styx.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond gleamed the Chocolate Mountains, sharp in the
-sunshine, canyoned and blue. And still beyond them, over
-the valley and far, rose the myriad mountains of Arizona,
-dim, hazed land, mystic land, like a land of desert dreams.
-In the distant south, around the blunt end of the Chocolates,
-came a valley winding palely green, with a line following
-its center, where the Rio Colorado meandered in its
-course to the blue waters of the Gulf. Over the shadowy
-shapes of mountains in haze, over the horizon of Arizona,
-there seemed a blank, pale wall of sky, strange to the
-eye. Was it the oblivion of sight, the infinitude of heaven?
-Piercing constant gaze at last brought to Adam the ghostly
-mountains of Mexico, the faintest of faint tracery of peaks,
-doubtful, then lost, the lonely Sonorian land.</p>
-
-<p>“And that is my home!” he cried to the winds. Slow
-tears bathed his eyes, and, closing them, he rested his
-strained sight. A strange peace seemed to have stolen over
-him with his vision and grasp of the desert. A low, soft
-moan of wind in the crevices of rocks lulled his senses for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">402</span>
-the revel that was to come. He heard his burros nipping
-at the brush behind his back. From the heights an eagle
-shrilled its wild whistle of freedom and of solitude. One
-of the burros brayed, loud and bawling, a jarring note
-in a silence. Discordant sound it was, that yet brought a
-smile and a pang to Adam. For only yesterday—or was
-it long ago—what was it that had happened?</p>
-
-<p>When he opened his eyes the desert under him and the
-infinity over him had been transfigured.</p>
-
-<p>Only the full blaze of the sun! But a glory dwelt in the
-clouds and in the wide blue expanse of heaven. Silver-edged
-rents, purple ships in a golden sky, the long, fan-shaped
-rays of the sun, white rainbows of haze—these
-extended from the north across the arch to the open—a
-great peacefulness of light, deep and tender and blue.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath lay the mirror of earth, the sun-fired ranges
-like chased and beaten gold, laid with shining jewels all
-around the resplendent desert. Mountains of porphyry
-marched down to the sands, rocks of bronze red burned
-down to the sands. The white columnar pillars of the
-clouds seemed reflected in the desert, slow-gliding across
-the lucent wastes; and the mosaic of mountain and plain
-had its mirage in the sky. Above and below worked the
-alchemy of nature, mutable and evanescent, the dying of
-day, the passing of life.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">403</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Going</span> down into the desert, Adam found that his
-steps were no longer wandering and aimless. And
-the nearer he got to the canyon pass in the Chocolates, the
-stronger grew his strange eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>For years memory of that camp where he had fought
-starvation had drawn him like a magnet. He was weary
-with delving into the gulf of himself, trying to know his
-nature and heart and soul. Always he was beyond himself.
-No sooner was one mystery solved than another and
-deeper one presented itself; one victory gained than a
-more desperate trial faced him. He only knew the old
-camp called him resistlessly. Something would come to
-him there.</p>
-
-<p>Travel and tasks of morn and eve were so habitual with
-him that they made little break in his thought. And that
-thought, like his desert steps, had traveled in a circle. He
-was nearing the places where he had begun his fight with
-physical forces. His every step brought him so much
-closer to the terrible deed that had so bitterly colored and
-directed his desert life.</p>
-
-<p>He crossed the sandy basin from the Sierra Madres to
-the Chocolates in four days, two of his camps being dry.
-And on the fifth, in the afternoon, when the long shadows
-had begun to creep out from the mountains across sand
-and sage, he climbed the swelling, well-remembered slope
-where Charley Jim had lured the antelope, and gazed down
-into the oasis where he had all but starved to death, and
-where Oella had saved his life.</p>
-
-<p>What struck him with gladness was to find the gray-green,
-lonely scene identical with the picture in his memory.
-How well he remembered! And it was twelve years—thirteen—fourteen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">404</span>
-years! Yet time had made little or
-no change in the oasis. Nature worked slowly in the
-desert.</p>
-
-<p>His burros scented the water and trotted down the sage
-bank, bobbing their packs, kicking up little puffs of odorous
-dust. Adam stood still and gazed long. He seemed
-to be almost ready to draw a deep, full breath of melancholy
-joy. Then he descended to the sandy, rock-studded
-floor of the canyon, and on the wide white stream bed,
-where, as always, a slender stream tinkled over the pearly
-pebbles. How strange that he should fall into the exact
-course where once he had worn a trail! The flat stones
-upon which he stepped were as familiar as if he had trod
-them yesterday. But inside the palm grove time had
-made changes. The thatched huts were gone and the open
-places were overgrown with brush. No one had inhabited
-the oasis for many years.</p>
-
-<p>Leisurely he pitched camp, working with a sense of comfort
-and pleasure at the anticipation of a permanent, or
-at least an indefinite, stay there. Of all his lonely camps
-on the desert, this had been the loneliest. He called it Lost
-Oasis. Here he could spend days and weeks, basking like
-a lizard in the sunshine, feeling his loneliness, listening
-to the silence; and he could climb to the heights and
-dream, and watch, and live again those wonderful, revealing,
-unthinking moments when he went back to savage
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>After his work and meal were finished, and sunset was
-coloring the sky, Adam wandered around through the
-willows and along the stream. He stood for some time
-looking down upon the sandy bar where he had stumbled
-in pursuit of the rattlesnake and it had bitten him in the
-face. And then he went from one familiar place to another,
-sitting at last in the twilight, under the palms where
-Oella had nursed and fed him back to life and strength.
-Where was she now—that tranquil, somber-eyed Indian
-maiden who had refused to wed one of her race and who
-had died of a broken heart? The twilight seemed prophetic,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">405</span>
-the rustling palms seemed whispering. Both sadness
-and pleasure mingled in Adam’s return.</p>
-
-<p>But the nameless something, the vague assurance of content,
-the end of that restless, strange sense of hurrying
-onward still to seek, to find—these feelings seemed about
-to come to him, yet held tantalizingly aloof. To-morrow
-surely! He was tired with his long travel, and it would
-take a little time once more to adjust himself to loneliness.
-The perfect peace of loneliness had not yet come back to
-him. His mind was too full to attend to the seeing, listening,
-feeling that constituted harmony with the desert. Yet
-something was beginning to come between remembrances
-of the immediate past and the insistent premonitions of the
-present. When he lay down in his blankets to hear the
-low rustle of the wind in the palms and to see the haunting
-stars, it was to realize that they were the same as always,
-but that he himself had changed.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Next day he climbed to the heights where he had learned
-to hunt mountain sheep, where he had learned the watching,
-listening, primitive joy of the Indian. He thrilled in
-the climb, he breathed deep of the keen, cold wind, he
-gazed afar with piercing eyes. Hours, like those of a
-lonely eagle on a crag, Adam spent there, and he wooed
-back to him the watching, listening power with its reward
-of sweet, wild elation. But as the westering sun sent him
-down the mountain, he felt a vague regret. The indefinable
-something eluded him.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>In the dusk Adam walked along the rim of the slope
-above the oasis. He had watched the sunset fade over
-the desert, and the shading of twilight, and the gathering
-of dusk.</p>
-
-<p>He wondered what it would mean to him now to be lost
-without water or food down there in the wasteland. Would
-panic seize him? He imagined it would be only as long
-as he was not sure of death. When he realized that, he
-would find strength and peace to meet his doom. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">406</span>
-what agony to look up at the starlit heaven and breathe
-farewell to beautiful life, to the strong, sweet wine of
-nature, to the memory of love!</p>
-
-<p>To die alone down there? Ah! Why did his thoughts
-turn to death? To lie down on the sand and the sage of
-the desert, in the dead darkness of night, would be terrible.
-Yet, would it really be? Would not something come to his
-soul? A strong man’s farewell to life, out there on the
-lonesome desert, would be elemental and natural. But the
-hour of facing death—how sad, lonely, tragic! Yet it
-had been bravely met by countless men over all the desolate
-deserts of the dreary world. All men did not feel alike.
-Perhaps the strongest, bravest, calmest, would suffer the
-least. Still, it was Adam’s conviction that to look up at
-the indifferent heavens and to send a hopeless cry out
-across the desert, realizing the end, remembering with
-anguish the faces of loved ones, would indeed be a bursting
-of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>Life was so short. Hope and love so futile! Home and
-family—ah! a brother—should be treasured, and lived for
-with all the power of blood and mind. Friends should be
-precious. It was realization that a man needed.</p>
-
-<p>A crescent beautiful moon soared up over the dark bulk
-of the mountain. Adam paced to and fro in a sandy glade
-of the oasis. All the immensity of desert and infinity of
-sky seemed to be at work to overwhelm him. The stars—so
-white, wonderful, watching, eyes of heaven, remorseless
-and wise! Not a sigh of wind stirred under the palms,
-not a quiver of a leaf. Nature seemed so strange, beautiful,
-waiting. All waited! Was it for him? The shadows
-on the white sand wrote Adam’s story of wild youth and
-crime and flight and agony and passion and love. How
-sad the low chirp of insects! Adam paced there a long
-time, thinking thoughts he never had before, feeling things
-he never felt before—realizing the brevity of life, the
-soul of sorrow, the truth of nature, the sweetness of
-women, the glory of children, the happiness of work and
-home.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">407</span>
-Something was charging the air around Adam; something
-was surging deep in his soul.</p>
-
-<p>What was the meaning of that which confounded his
-emotions? Adam’s soul seemed trembling on the verge of
-a great lesson, that had been hidden all the years and now
-began to dawn upon him in the glory of the firmament—in
-the immensity of the earth—in the sense of endless
-space—in the meaning of time—in the nothingness of
-man.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a faint coldness, not of wind nor of chill air,
-but of something intangible, stole over Adam. He shivered.
-He had felt it before, though never so strong. And his
-sense of loneliness vanished. He was not alone! All
-around he peered, not frightened or aghast, but uncertain,
-vaguely conscious of a sense that seemed unnatural. The
-shadow of his lofty form showed dark on the sand. It
-walked with him as he walked. Was there a spirit in
-keeping with his steps?</p>
-
-<p>Disturbed in mind, Adam went to bed. When he awoke
-there had come to him in the night, in his sleep or in his
-dreams, whispered words from Genie’s mother, ringing
-words from Ruth Virey, “I will come to you out on the
-desert.” Mrs. Linwood had meant that to be proof of
-immortal life of the soul—of God. And Ruth had rung
-at him: “I would be a man. I would never run. I would
-never hide!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the still, small voice of conscience became a clarion.
-Torment seized Adam. The lonely lure of the desert had
-betrayed him. There was no rest—no peace. He was
-driven. He had dreamed of himself as a wanderer driven
-down the naked shingles of the desert. No dream, but
-reality!</p>
-
-<p>He spent the day upon the heights, feeling that there,
-if anywhere, he might shake this burden of his consciousness.
-In vain! He was a civilized man, and only in rare
-moments could he go back to the forgetfulness of the
-savage. He had a soul. It was a living flame. The
-heights failed him. A haunting whisper breathed in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">408</span>
-wind and an invisible spirit kept pace with his steps. And
-at last, in slow-mounting swell of heart, with terror in
-his soul, he faced the south. Ah! How sharp the pang
-in his breast! Picacho! There, purple against the sky,
-seemingly close, stood up the turreted and castled peak
-under the shadow of which lay the grave of his brother.
-And Adam sent out a lonely and terrible cry down the
-winds toward the place that resistlessly called him. He
-was called and he must go. He had wandered in a circle.
-All his steps had bent toward the scene of his crime.
-From the first to the last he had been wandering back to
-his punishment. He saw it now. That was the call—that
-the guide—that the nameless something charging
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>Realization gave him a moment’s savageness—the power
-of body over mind. Heart and blood and pulse and nerve
-burst red hot to the fight, and to passionate love of liberty,
-of life. He was in the grasp of a giant of the ages. He
-fought as he had fought thirst, starvation, loneliness—as
-he had fought the desert and the wild beasts and wilder
-men of that desert. The deep and powerful instinct which
-he had conquered for Genie’s sake—the noble emotion of
-love and bliss that he had overcome for Ruth’s sake—what
-were these compared to the hell in his heart now?
-It was love of life that made him a fierce wild cat of the
-desert. Had not the desert taught him its secret to survive,
-to breathe, to see, to listen, to live?</p>
-
-<p>Thus the I of Adam’s soul was arraigned in pitiless strife
-with the Me of his body. Like a wild and hunted creature
-he roamed the mountain top, halting at the old resting
-places, there to sit like a stone, to lie on his face, to writhe
-and fight and cry in his torment. At sunset he staggered
-down the trail, spent and haggard, to take up useless tasks,
-to find food tasteless and sleep impossible. Thus passed
-the next day and yet another, before there came a break
-in his passion and his strength.</p>
-
-<p>The violence of physical effort wore itself out. He
-remained in camp, still locked in deadly grip with himself,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">409</span>
-but wearing to that end in which his conscience would
-rise supreme, or he would sink forever debased.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>A perfect white night came in which Adam felt that
-the oasis and its environment presented a soul-quieting
-scene. What incredible paradox that he must go to nature
-for the strength to save himself from himself! To the
-nature that made him a savage—that urged in him the
-strife of the wolf! The moon, half full, shone overhead
-in a cloudless blue sky where great white stars twinkled.
-No wind stirred. The palms drooped, sad and graceful,
-strangely quiet. They were meant for wind. The shadows
-they cast were of nameless shapes. A wavering dark
-line of horizon wandered away to be lost in the wilderness.
-So still, so tranquil, so sweet the night! There
-were only two sounds—the melancholy notes of a night
-hawk, and the low, faint moan from the desert. The
-desert to Adam seemed a vast river, flowing slowly, down
-the levels of the earth to distant gates. Its moan was one
-of immutable power and motive. By this soft, low, strange
-moan the world seemed to be dominated. A spirit was
-out there in the gloom—a spirit from the illimitable, star-studded
-infinite above. And it was this spirit that came,
-at rare intervals, and whispered to Adam’s consciousness.
-Madman or knave, he was being conquered.</p>
-
-<p>“I would never hide!” Ruth Virey had said in passionate
-scorn.</p>
-
-<p>She was like her mother, wonderful as steel in her will.
-Yet these women seemed all heart. They transcended men
-in love, in sacrifice, in that living flame of soul, turbulent
-and unquenchable as the fire of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I’ll hide no more!</em>” burst from Adam, and the whisper
-startled him, like those soundless whispers in the shadows.</p>
-
-<p>He could live no longer a life in hiding. He must stand,
-in his own consciousness, if only for a moment, free to
-look any man in the face, free to be worthy to love Ruth
-Virey, free as the eagle of his spirit. He would no longer
-hide from man, from punishment. Love of that purple-eyed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">410</span>
-girl had been a stinging, quickening spur. But it was
-only instrumental in the overthrow of fear. Some other
-power, not physical, not love, but cold, pure, passionless,
-spiritual, had been drawing him like a wavering compass
-needle to its pole.</p>
-
-<p>Was it the faith Genie’s dying mother had placed in
-God? Was it a godlike something in him which conflicted
-with nature? Was it the strange progress of life,
-inscrutable and inflexible, that dragged men down or lifted
-them up, made them base or made them great?</p>
-
-<p>The darkness of his mind, the blackness of the abyss
-of his soul, seemed about to be illumined. But the truth
-held aloof. Yet could he not see what constituted greatness
-in any man? What was it to be great? The beasts
-of the desert and the birds recognized it—strength—speed—ferocity—tenacity
-of life. The Indians worshiped greatness
-so that they looked up and prayed to their gods. They
-worshiped stature, and power and skill of hand, and fleetness
-of foot, and above all—endurance. More, they endowed
-their great chieftains with wisdom. But above
-all—to endure pain, heat, shock, all of the desert hardships,
-all of the agonies of life—to endure—that was their
-symbol of greatness.</p>
-
-<p>Adam asked no other for himself or for any man. To
-endure and to surmount the ills of life! Any man could
-be great. He had his choice. To realize at last—to face
-the inevitable fight in any walk of life—to work and to
-endure—to slave and to suffer in silence—to stand like
-a savage the bloody bruises and broken bones—to bite the
-tongue and hold back the gasp—to plod on down the trails
-or the roads or the streets and to be true to an ideal—to
-endure the stings and blows of misfortune—to bear up
-under loss—to fight the bitterness of defeat and the weakness
-of grief—to be victor over anger—to smile when
-tears were close—to resist disease and evil men and base
-instincts—to hate hate and to love love—to go on when
-it would seem good to die—to seek ever the glory and
-the dream—to look up with unquenchable faith in something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">411</span>
-evermore about to be—that was what any man could
-do and so be great!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>At midnight Adam paced under the palms. All seemed
-dim, gray, cool, spectral, rustling, whispering. The old
-familiar sounds were there, only rendered different by his
-mood. Midnight was haunting. Somehow the desert with
-its mustering shadows, dark and vast and strange, resembled
-his soul and his destiny and the mystery of himself.
-How sweet the loneliness and solitude of the oasis! There
-under the palms he could walk and be himself, with only
-the eye of nature and of spirit on him in this final hour
-of his extremity.</p>
-
-<p>Happiness was not imperative; self-indulgence was not
-essential to life. Adam realized he had done wonderful
-things—perhaps noble things. But nothing great! Perhaps
-all his agony had been preparation for this supreme
-ordeal.</p>
-
-<p>How saving and splendid would it be, if out of his
-stultified youth, with its blinded love of brother and its
-weakness of will—if out of the bitter sting of infidelity
-and his fatal, tragic deed—if out of the long torture of
-hardship of the desert and its strife and its contact with
-souls as wild as his—how glorious it would be if out of
-this terrible tide of dark, contending years, so full of remorse
-and fear and endless atonement, there should rise
-a man who, trained now in the desert’s ferocity to survive,
-should use that force to a noble aim, and, climbing beyond
-his nature, sacrifice himself to the old biblical law—a life
-for a life—and with faith in unknown future lend his spirit
-to the progress of the ages!</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Adam divined that he did not belong to himself. What
-he wanted for himself, selfishly, was not commensurable
-with the need of others in this life. He was concerned
-here with many ideals, the highest of which was sacrifice,
-that the evil of him should not go on. Since he had loved
-Ruth Virey the whole value of life had shifted. Life was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">412</span>
-sweet, but no longer if he had to hide, no longer under
-the ban of crime. The stain must be washed away. By
-slow and gradual change, by torments innumerable, had
-he come to this realization. He had deceived himself by
-love of life. But the truth in him was the truth of the
-immortality of his soul, just as it was truth that he inherited
-instincts of the savage. Life was renewal. Every
-base, selfish man held back its spirituality.</p>
-
-<p>“No more! No more!” cried Adam, looking up.</p>
-
-<p>And in that cry he accepted the spirit of life, the mighty
-being that pulsated there in the darkness, the whispering
-voice of Genie’s mother, the love of Ruth that never was
-to be his, the strange, desperate fights with his instincts,
-the stranger fight of his renunciation—he accepted these
-on faith as his idea of God.</p>
-
-<p>“I will give my life for my brother’s,” he said. “I
-will offer myself in punishment for my crime. I will pay
-with my body that I may save my soul!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">413</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Adam</span> lingered in his travel through the beautiful Palo
-Verde Valley, and at last reached the long swell of
-desert slope that led down to the Rio Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>Tranquil and sad was his gaze on the majestic river
-as it swirled red and sullen between its wide green borders
-toward the upflung wilderness of colored peaks he remembered
-so well.</p>
-
-<p>All day he strode behind his faithful burros, here high
-on the river bank where he could see the somber flood
-rolling to the south, and there low in the willow-shaded
-trail. And though he had an eye for the green, dry coverts
-and the wide, winding valley, he seemed to see most
-vividly the scenes of boyhood and of home. And the memory
-revived the love he had borne his brother Guerd.
-High on the grassy hill at the old village school—he was
-there once again, wild and gay, playing the games, tagging
-at the heels of his idol.</p>
-
-<p>The miles slipped by under his tireless stride. Hour by
-hour he had quickened his pace. And when sunset caught
-him with its call to camp, he could see the grand purple
-bulk of old Picacho looming in the sky. Twilight and
-dusk and night, and the lonely camp fire! He heard the
-sullen gurgle of the river in the weeds and he saw the
-trains of stars reflected along its swirling surface. A
-killdeer, most mournful of birds, pealed his plaintive, lonely
-cry. Across the blue-black sky gleamed a shooting star.
-The wind stirred in the leaves, gently and low, and fanned
-the glowing embers, and bore the white ashes away into
-the darkness. Shadows played from the flickering blaze,
-fantastic and weird, like dancing specters in the gloom.
-Adam watched the gleaming river rolling on to its grave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">414</span>
-in the Gulf. Like all things, it died, was dispersed, and
-had rebirth in other climes. Then he watched the stars
-at their grand and blazing task.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>On the afternoon of the third day he turned under
-the red bluff into the basin of Picacho. Long the trail had
-been overgrown and dim, and cattle tracks were scarce.
-The wide willow and mesquite flat, with its groves of
-cottonwoods, had grown denser, wilder, no more crisscrossed
-by trails. Adam had slowed down now, and he
-skirted the edge of the thicket till he reached the bank
-of bronze rock that had flowed down from the peaks in
-ages past. The <i>ocatillas</i>, so pearly gray, softly green, and
-vividly scarlet, grew there just the same as long ago when
-he had plucked a flower for the dusky hair of Margarita.
-He welcomed sight of them, for they were of the
-past.</p>
-
-<p>And here, side by side, stood the crucifixion tree and
-the <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">palo verde</i> under which Margarita had told him their
-legends. The years had made no change that Adam could
-discern. The smoke tree and the green tree raised their
-delicate, exquisite, leafless foliage against the blue of sky,
-beautiful and soft, hiding from the eye the harsh law of
-their desert nature.</p>
-
-<p>Adam tarried here. His wandering steps were nearing
-their end. And he gazed across the river at the wilderness
-of Arizona peaks. It seemed he knew every one. Had
-he seen them yesterday or long ago?</p>
-
-<p>The sculptured turrets of Picacho were taking on a
-crown of gold, and from the sheer, ragged bluffs of the
-purple mass shadows and hazes and rays were streaming
-down into the valley. One golden streak slanted from the
-wind-worn hole in the rim. Solemn and noble the castled
-mountain towered in the sky. In its lonely grandeur there
-was strength.</p>
-
-<p>One moment longer Adam watched and listened, absorbing
-the color and glory and wildness, stung to the
-depths of his heart by his farewell to loneliness. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">415</span>
-retrograded one last instant to the savage who sensed but
-did not think. He thrilled to the old, mysterious, fading
-instinct. Then, as in answer to a sonorous call in his ear,
-he measured slow and laboring strides through the aisles
-to the river.</p>
-
-<p>His burros scratched their packs on the thorny mesquites
-to get down to the arrowweed and willow. Where once
-had been open bank, now all was green, except for a narrow
-sandy aisle. The dock was gone. A sunken barge lay on
-a bar, and moored to its end were two leaky skiffs. Traffic
-and trade had departed from the river landing. Adam
-remembered a prospector had told him that the mill had
-been moved from the river up to the mine under the peak.
-So now, he thought, supplies and traffic must come and go
-by way of Yuma.</p>
-
-<p>He drove his burros down the sandy aisle. A glimpse
-of an old adobe wall, gray through the mesquites, stopped
-his heart. He went on. The house of Arallanes was a
-roofless ruin, the vacant windows and doors staring darkly,
-the walls crumbling to the sands. The shed where Adam
-had slept was now half hidden by mesquites. The <i>ocatilla</i>
-poles were bleached and rotten and the brush was gone
-from the roof; but the sandy floor looked as clean and
-white as the day Adam had spread his blankets there.
-Fourteen years! Silent he stood, and the low, mournful
-wind was a knell. The past could never be undone.</p>
-
-<p>He went back to the lane and to the open. Old stone
-walls were all that appeared left of houses he expected to
-see. Over the trees, far up the slope, he espied the ruins
-of the dismantled mill. Unreal it looked there, out of place,
-marring the majestic sweep of the slope.</p>
-
-<p>His keen desert nostrils detected smoke before he saw
-blue columns rising through the green. He passed a plot
-of sand-mounded graves. Had they been there? How
-fierce a pang pierced his heart! Rude stones marked the
-graves, and on one a single wooden cross, crude and
-weathered, slanted away. Adam peered low at the lettering—M.
-A. And swiftly he swung erect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">416</span>
-There was a cluster of houses farther on, low and squat,
-a few of them new, but most of them Adam remembered.
-A post-office sign marked this village of Picacho. The
-stone-fronted store looked just the same, and the loungers
-there might never have moved from their tracks in fourteen
-years. But the faces were strange.</p>
-
-<p>A lean old man, gray and peaked, detached himself from
-the group and tottered toward Adam with his cane in
-the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, stranger, howdy! You down from upriver?”</p>
-
-<p>His voice twanged a chord of memory. Merryvale!
-Slowly the tide of emotion rose in Adam’s breast. He
-peered down into the gray old face, with its narrow, half-shut
-eyes and its sunken cheeks. Yes, it was Merryvale.</p>
-
-<p>“Howdy, friend!” replied Adam. “Yes, I come from
-up the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“Strange in these parts, I reckon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. But I—I was here years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was, I knowed you was strange because you come in by
-the river. Travelers nowadays go round the mountain.
-Prospectors never come any more. The glory of Picacho
-has faded.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t they working the mill?” queried Adam, quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Haw! Haw! The mill will never grind with ore that
-is gone! No work these last five years. The mill has
-rusted out—fallen to ruin. And the gold of old Picacho
-is gone. But, stranger, she hummed while she lasted.
-Millions in gold—millions in gold!”</p>
-
-<p>He wagged his lean old head and chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew a man here once by the name of Arallanes.
-What has become of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Arallanes? Wal, I do recollect him. I was watchman
-at the mill an’ he was boss of the gang. His daughter
-was knifed by a greaser named Felix.... Arallanes left
-here these ten years ago an’ he’s never been back.”</p>
-
-<p>“His—daughter!... Is that her grave back there—the
-sunken mound of sand—with the wooden cross?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon that’s Margarita’s grave. She was a pretty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">417</span>
-wench—mad about men—an’ there’s some who said she
-got her just deserts.”</p>
-
-<p>The broad river gleamed yellow through the breaks in
-the mesquites. Ponderous and swirling, it glided on round
-the bend. Adam’s gaze then sought the peak. The vast,
-stormy, purple mass, like a mountain of cloud, shone with
-sunset crown of silver.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere near, hidden by the trees, a Mexican broke
-the stillness with song—wild, sensuous, Spanish love, in its
-haunting melody.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew another man here,” began Adam, with the words
-a sonorous knell in his ear. “His name was Collishaw....
-What’s become of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Collishaw? Never will forgit <em>him</em>!” declared the old
-man, grimly. “Last I heard he was cheatin’ Injuns out of
-water rights over here at Walters—an’ still lookin’ fer
-somebody to hang.... Haw! Haw! That Collishaw
-was a Texas sheriff.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Adam bent lower, so that his face was on a
-level with Merryvale’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you recognize me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I shore don’t, stranger,” declared the other. “I’ve
-been nigh fifty years in the West an’ never seen your like
-yet. If I had I’d never forgot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Merryvale, do you remember a lad who shot off your
-fishing line one day? Do you remember how you took
-interest in him—told him of Western ways—that he must
-be a man?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shore I remember that lad!” exclaimed Merryvale,
-bluntly. He was old, but he was still keen. “How’d you
-know about him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Adam Larey!”</p>
-
-<p>The old man’s eyes grew piercing. Intensely he gazed,
-bending closer, strong and thrilling now, with the zest of
-earlier experience sharp in his expression.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you now. It’s Adam. I’d knowed them eyes
-among a thousand, if I’d only looked. Eagle’s eyes, Adam,
-once seen never forgot!... An’ look at the giant of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">418</span>
-him! Wai, you make me feel young again.... Adam,
-lad, I ain’t never forgot ye—never! Shake hands with
-old Merryvale.”</p>
-
-<p>Agitated, with tremulous voice and shaking hands, he
-grasped Adam, almost embracing him, his gray old face
-alight with gladness.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s good to see you, Merryvale—to learn you’ve not
-forgotten me—all these years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lad, you was like my own!... But who’d ever know
-you now? You’ve white hair, Adam, an’—ah! I see the
-desert in your face.”</p>
-
-<p>“Old friend, did you ever hear of Wansfell?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wansfell? You mean thet wanderer the prospectors
-tell about?... Shore, I’ve been hearin’ tales of him these
-many years.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Wansfell,” replied Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>So help me God!</em>... Wansfell?... You, Adam,
-the kindly lad!... Didn’t I tell you what a hell of a man
-you’d be when you grew up?”</p>
-
-<p>Adam drew Merryvale aside from the curiously gathering
-loungers.</p>
-
-<p>“Old friend, you are responsible for Wansfell....
-And now, before we tell—before I go—I want you to take
-me to—to—my—my brother’s grave?”</p>
-
-<p>Merryvale stared.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>What?</em>” he ejaculated, and again his keen old eyes
-searched Adam’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. The grave—of my brother—Guerd,” whispered
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, man!... You think Guerd Larey’s buried <em>here</em>?...
-Thet’s why you come back?”</p>
-
-<p>Astonishment seemed to dominate Merryvale, to hold
-in check other emotions.</p>
-
-<p>“My friend,” replied Adam, “I came to see his grave—to
-make my peace with him and God—and to give myself
-up to the law.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give yourself—up—to the law!” gasped Merryvale.
-“Have you gone desert mad?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">419</span>
-“No. I’m right in my mind,” returned Adam, patiently.
-“I owe it to my conscience, Merryvale.... Fourteen
-years of torture! Any punishment I may suffer here, compared
-with those long years, will be as nothing.... It
-will be happiness to give myself up.”</p>
-
-<p>Merryvale’s lean jaw quivered as the astonishment and
-concern left his face. A light of divination began to
-dawn there.</p>
-
-<p>“But what do you want to give yourself up for?” he
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“I told you. My conscience. My need to stand right
-with myself. To pay!”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean—what’d you do?... <em>What for?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“Old friend, you’ve grown thick of wits,” rejoined
-Adam. “Because of my crime.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ what was thet, Adam Larey?” queried Merryvale,
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“The crime of Cain,” replied Adam, sadly. “Come,
-friend—take me to my brother’s grave.”</p>
-
-<p>Merryvale seemed galvanized from age to youth.</p>
-
-<p>“Your brother’s grave!... Guerd Larey’s grave? By
-heaven! I wish I could take you to it!... Adam, you’re
-out of your head. You <em>are</em> desert mad.... Bless you,
-lad, you’ve made a terrible mistake! You’re not what you
-think you are. You’ve hid in the desert fourteen years—you’ve
-gone through hell—you’ve become Wansfell—all
-for nothin’!... My God! to think of thet!... Adam,
-you’re no murderer. Your brother is not dead. He wasn’t
-even bad hurt. No—no—Guerd Larey’s alive—alive—alive!”</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center small"><span class="bt bb">Press of The Hunter-Rose Company, Limited</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 id="Transcribers_Notes" class="nobreak p1">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
-consistent when a predominant preference was found
-in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; unpaired
-quotation marks were remedied when the change was
-obvious, and otherwise left unpaired.</p>
-
-<p>Redundant book hemi-title pages have been deleted.</p>
-
-<p>Table of Contents added by Transcriber.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_87">87</a>: “you’ll grow like it” was printed that way.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_128">128</a>: “But there were others hours.” was
-printed that way.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_141">141</a>: “gettin’ oneasy” was printed that way; should be “uneasy”.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND***</p>
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