Part 21 (1/2)

”But, Lucy, you _can't_ marry him!”

”Who says I'm going to?” snapped Lucy. ”Do I have to marry every Indian that makes eyes at me? All the men in the fort were doing it.

They hadn't a look for anyone else.”

Susan took this with reservations. A good many of the men in the fort had made eyes at her. It was rather grasping of Lucy to take it all to herself, and in her surprise at the extent of her friend's claims she was silent.

”As for me,” Lucy went on, ”I'm dead sick of this journey. I wish we could stop or go back or do something. But we've got to keep on and on to the end of nowhere. It seems as if we were going forever in these tiresome old wagons or on horses that get lame every other day, and then you have to walk. I don't mind living in a tent. I like it. But I hate always going on, never having a minute to rest, getting up in the morning when I'm only half awake, and having to cook at night when I'm so tired I'd just like to lie down on the ground without taking my clothes off and go to sleep there. I wish I'd never come. I wish I'd married the man in Cooperstown that I wouldn't have wiped my feet on then.”

She slapped the frying pan on the fire and threw the meat into it. Her voice and lips were trembling. With a quick, backward bend she stooped to pick up a fork, and Susan saw her face puckered and quivering like a child's about to cry.

”Oh, Lucy,” she cried in a burst of sympathy. ”I didn't know you felt like that,” and she tried to clasp the lithe uncorseted waist that flinched from her touch. Lucy's elbow, thrown suddenly out, kept her at a distance, and she fell back repulsed, but with consolations still ready to be offered.

”Let me alone,” said Lucy, her face averted. ”I'm that tired I don't know what I'm saying. Go and get the children for supper, and don't let them stand round staring at me or they'll be asking questions.”

She s.n.a.t.c.hed the coffee pot and shook it upside down, driblets of coffee running out. With her other hand she brushed the tears off her cheeks.

”Don't stand there as if you never saw a girl cry before,” she said, savagely. ”I don't do it often, and it isn't such a wonderful sight.

Get the children, and if you tell anyone that I feel this way I'll murder you.”

The children were at some distance lying on the ground. Such unpromising materials as dust and sage brush had not quenched their inventive power or hampered their imaginations. They played with as an absorbed an industry here as in their own garden at home. They had sc.r.a.ped the earth into mounded shapes marked with the print of baby fingers and furrowed with paths. One led to a central mound crowned with a wild sunflower blossom. Up the path to this Bob conducted twigs of sage, murmuring the adventures that attended their progress. When they reached the sunflower house he laid them carefully against its sides, continuing the unseen happenings that befell them on their entrance. The little girl lay beside him, her cheek resting on an outflung arm, her eyes fixed wistfully on the personally conducted party. Her creative genius had not risen to the heights of his, and her fat little hands were awkward and had pushed the sunflower from its perch. So she had been excluded from active partic.i.p.ation, and now looked on, acquiescing in her exclusion, a patient and humble spectator.

”Look,” Bob cried as he saw Susan approaching. ”I've builded a house and a garden, and these are the people,” holding up one of the sage twigs, ”they walk fru the garden an' then go into the house and have coffee and buf'lo meat.”

Susan admired it and then looked at the baby, who was pensively surveying her brother's creation.

”And did the baby play, too?” she asked.

”Oh, no, she couldn't. She doesn't know nuffing, she's too small,”

with the scorn of one year's superiority.

The baby raised her solemn eyes to the young girl and made no attempt to vindicate herself. Her expression was that of subdued humility, of one who admits her short-comings. She rose and thrust a soft hand into Susan's, and maintained her silence as they walked toward the camp.

The only object that seemed to have power to rouse her from her dejected reverie were the broken sage stalks in the trail. At each of these she halted, hanging from Susan's sustaining grasp, and stubbed her toe accurately and carefully against the protruding root.

They would have been silent that evening if it had not been for Zavier.

His mood was less merry than usual, but a stream of frontier anecdote and story flowed from him, that held them listening with charmed attention. His foreign speech interlarded with French words added to the picturesqueness of his narratives, and he himself sitting crosslegged on his blanket, his hair hanging dense to his shoulders, his supple body leaning forward in the tension of a thrilling climax, was a fitting minstrel for these lays of the wild.

His final story was that of Antoine G.o.din, one of the cla.s.sics of mountain history. G.o.din was the son of an Iroquois hunter who had been brutally murdered by the Blackfeet. He had become a trapper of the Sublette brothers, then mighty men of the fur trade, and in the expedition of Milton Sublette against the Blackfeet in 1832 joined the troop. When the two bands met, G.o.din volunteered to hold a conference with the Blackfeet chief. He chose as his companion an Indian of the Flathead tribe, once a powerful nation, but almost exterminated by wars with the Blackfeet. From the ma.s.sed ranks of his warriors the chief rode out for the parley, a pipe of peace in his hand. As G.o.din and the Flathead started to meet him, the former asked the Indian if his piece was charged, and when the Flathead answered in the affirmative told him to c.o.c.k it and ride alongside.

Midway between the two bands they met. G.o.din clasped the chief's hand, and as he did so told the Flathead to fire. The Indian levelled his gun, fired, and the Blackfeet chief rolled off his horse. G.o.din s.n.a.t.c.hed off his blanket and in a rain of bullets fled to the Sublette camp.

”And so,” said the voyageur with a note of exultation in his voice, ”G.o.din got revenge on those men who had killed his father.”

For a moment his listeners were silent, suffering from a sense of bewilderment, not so much at the story, as at Zavier's evident approval of G.o.din's act.

It was Susan who first said in a low tone, ”What an awful thing to do!”

This loosened Bella's tongue, who lying in the opening of her tent had been listening and now felt emboldened to express her opinion, especially as Glen, stretched on his face nearby, had emitted a snort of indignation.

”Well, of all the wicked things I've heard since I came out here that's the worst.”