Part 41 (1/2)
The ladies bowed formally, and secretly approved of the grace with which the foreman removed his cap and returned their salute.
Nevertheless, there was an icy note in Mrs. Appleton's voice as she said:
”My niece begs to be excused. She is very tired after her rather hard trip.” If Bill noticed the frigidity in the tone he gave no sign.
”I imagine it has been a very trying trip for you all. However, I will offer you the best accommodations the camp affords. If you will kindly choose which of those two rooms you prefer I will have your belongings moved in at once.”
”I suppose you brought cots,” he added, turning to Appleton.
”Yes, everything necessary for a tenderfoot outfit.”
”When the ladies have selected their room I will have your gear moved into the other,” said Bill; and, with a bow to the ladies, moved off in the direction of the cook-shack.
Alone in the office, Ethel Manton gazed about upon the meager furnis.h.i.+ngs; a desk, the little air-tight stove with its huge wood-box; three wooden chairs, a trunk secured by a padlock, and a bunk neatly laid with heavy blankets.
Several pairs of boots, moccasins, and heavy mittens were ranged along the floor next to the wall, while from pegs above them hung a faded mackinaw, a slicker, and several pairs of corduroy trousers.
Tacked to the wall above the desk was a large, highly colored calendar, while upon the opposite wall hung a rifle and a belt of yellow cartridges. Her woman's eye took in the scrupulous neatness of the room and the orderly disposition of the various articles.
For the first time in her life she was in a man's room, and she felt a keen thrill of interest in her surroundings. Upon the top of the desk beside the little bracket-lamp was a short row of books.
”It is too bad,” she muttered, ”that he couldn't have been _nice_. How I would have enjoyed talking with him and telling him how splendid it is that he is _making good_!
”Maybe somewhere a girl is wondering where he is--and waiting day after day for word from him--and worrying her very heart out. Oh, I hope she will never know about this Jeanne--ugh! An Indian--and Uncle Appleton said he is a _gentleman_!”
She paused before the desk and idly read the t.i.tles of the books; there were a logger's manual, a few text-books on surveying and timber estimating, several of the latest novels, apparently unread and a well-thumbed copy of Browning.
”Browning! Of all things--in a log camp! Now I know there is a girl--poor thing!” Open, face downward upon the surface of the desk where it had been pushed aside to make room for a rough sketch of the camp with its outreaching skidways and cross-hauls, lay a small volume.
”And Southey!” she exclaimed under her breath, and picked up the book.
It was ”Madoc,” and three lines, heavily underscored, stood boldly out upon the page:
”Three things a wise man will not trust, The wind, the suns.h.i.+ne of an April day, And woman's plighted faith.”
Over and over she read the lines, and, returning the book to its place, pondered, as she allowed her glance to rove again over the little room whose every detail bespoke intense masculinity.
”I might at least be nice to him,” she murmured. ”Maybe the girl _was_ horrid. And he is 'way up here, trying to forget!” Unconsciously she repeated the words of her Uncle Appleton: ”He _has_ made good.”
And then there flashed through her mind the words of the guide: ”She is beautiful, and she loves him. She accompanied him for three days and three nights on the trail to the land of the white man, and he promised that he would come again into the woods and protect her from harm.”
”This Indian girl,” she whispered--”she loves him, and he persuaded her to accompany him, and when they drew near to civilization he sent her back--with a promise!”
Her lips thinned and the hot blood mounted to her cheeks. No matter what conditions sent this man into the woods, there could be no justification for _that_. She shuddered as she drew her skirts away where they brushed lightly against the blankets of his bunk, and turned toward the door.
And just at that moment the door opened, and in the gathering darkness a man stood framed in the doorway. She drew back, startled, and with the swiftness of light her glance swept him from the top of his cap to the soles of his heavy boots.
He was a large man whose features were concealed by a thick beard. His fringed and beautifully embroidered s.h.i.+rt of buckskin was open at the throat, as if to allow free play to the mighty muscles of his well-formed neck.
Only a few seconds he stood thus, and with a swift movement removed the cap from his head.