Part 12 (1/2)
”That is just what you, personally, didn't do,” Jack reminded him. ”It was your bonfire, not ours.”
It was almost sundown when Spoof for the seventh time absolved us from all blame in the matter, and we started on our trek homeward across the green prairie. Jack offered to go to town the next day and negotiate a deal for a new wagon, but Spoof would not hear of it. He himself would go, and no other.
”I have to pick up some new language, anyway,” he insisted. ”The bullocks are growing very tired of the monotony of my remarks.”
Spoof evidently left the next morning, for when Jack and I went over to Two about the middle of the forenoon the place was deserted. We set to work in his hay field, and by Wednesday night we had harvested more hay than Spoof would have put up in a week. That was our atonement.
Affairs now began to move with some rapidity in our little settlement.
Until now we had had the world, as far as the eye could carry, to ourselves, but Spoof proved only the advance guard of a stream of neighbours which, from its source in a dozen different springs of humanity, was to pour in upon us during the next few months. Wednesday night we came back from Spoof's, as we had a little shyness about being overtaken in our good works, and the next morning, while I was gulping great draughts of ozone in front of the shack before breakfast, Marjorie called over my shoulder,
”What's that, away to the east, Frank?”
Sure enough, there was a little white pyramid outlined against the horizon; another tent pitched against the front trenches of civilization.
”Neighbours, Marjorie; neighbours!” I said. ”We're getting to be quite a community. Do you ever think of the day when all this wilderness of prairie will be plowed, every foot of it; all bearing something for the world's needs, with prosperous farm houses at every corner, schools, churches----”
”I smell the porridge!” Marjorie exclaimed, rus.h.i.+ng into the shack. She had a way of cutting off my rhapsodies like that.
Jack had seen the tent, too, and he and Jean came over at noon to discuss it. We decided to knock off work early that evening and all drive over to make the acquaintance of the new-comers.
We found that the tent was pitched on Eighteen, in the next towns.h.i.+p to the east. As we came up we were greeted by a fine collie dog, who seemed to be suffering from the conflicting emotions of his natural good humor and a sense that we had no business on Eighteen. His rush upon us with great barking and show of ferocity ended in much amiable tail-wagging.
Evidently we measured up to his requirements, which we took to be no mean compliment.
A team of ponies were tethered on the prairie not far away, and a democrat stood beside the tent, with some of its burden still to be unloaded. A woman of slender build and rather striking beauty stood at the door. There was surprise, and, as I thought, a suggestion of fear in her eyes. More remarkable was the sudden and unmistakable relief which sprang into her expression when she had seen us clearly.
I am not a detective, even of the amateur kind, but I found myself instantly gripped by a conclusion. ”The woman is afraid,” I said to myself, ”and yet she is no coward, she has no fear of strangers, but she is afraid of someone--afraid of someone she knows. She was relieved when she saw we were strangers.” The thought was one which was to recur to me from many angles during the next few months.
She seemed to hesitate about greeting us, and Jean, always the quick-witted one of our quartette, was the first to break a rather stupid silence. She sprang lightly from the wagon and went forward with arms outstretched.
”We are your neighbours, from Fourteen and Twenty-two,” she explained.
”We saw your tent, and thought we would welcome you to prairie-land.”
”That is good of you,” said a well modulated English voice, but some way the voice seemed to break just there, and the lips of the new-comer went all a-tremble. The next we knew she and Jean had their arms about each other. . . .
”Oh, how horribly stupid of me!” the stranger exclaimed, in a moment or two, disengaging herself and dabbing her eyes with a little lump of handkerchief. ”One gets a bit--a bit lonely, in spite of everything. You will think I am rather a bad pioneer. My name is Mrs. Alton, and I'm _so_ glad you came, Miss--Miss----”
Jean introduced herself and the others of our party, and then we clambered down out of the wagon.
”Gerald and I have been very much alone,” Mrs. Alton explained. ”Gerald doesn't seem to mind it a bit--rather glories in it, I think. Already he has made some great explorations, but always under Sandy's watchful eye. Sandy is a great comfort. Aren't you, sir?”
She turned to the dog, who sedately held up one paw in acknowledgment of her remark.
”Gerald, I should have told you, has just turned three. I am a widow,”
Mrs. Alton rattled on, as though not wis.h.i.+ng to stress the point--”and Gerald and I have our way to make in the world. He is tired now, and asleep after a great day's roaming, but I shall wake him before you go.”
”Oh, please don't!” Jean entreated. ”Let us see him as he sleeps,” and without waiting for an invitation she gently made her way into the little tent.
”Don't you think me clever?” Mrs. Alton asked, when we had at last discovered it.