Part 22 (1/2)
”Oh, I was a proper idiot all round this morning,” grumbled the doctor.
”I didn't know what I was doing.”
The brown eyes were open wide upon him.
”You see,” continued the doctor desperately, ”I'd looked forward to meeting you for so long.” The brown eyes grew wider. ”And then to think that I actually didn't know you.”
”You didn't look at me,” cried Moira.
”No, I was looking for the girl I saw that day, almost three years ago, in the Glen. I have never forgotten that day.”
”No, nor I,” replied the girl softly. ”That is how I knew you. It was a terrible day to us all in the Glen, my brother going to leave us and under that dreadful cloud, and you came with the letter that cleared it all away. Oh, it was like the coming of an angel from heaven, and I have often thought, Mr. Martin--Dr. Martin you are now, of course--that I never thanked you as I ought that day. I was thinking of Allan. I have often wished to do it. I should like to do it now.”
”Get at it,” cried the doctor with great emphasis, ”I need it. It might help me a bit. I behaved so stupidly this morning. The truth is, I was completely knocked out, flabbergasted.”
”Was that it?” cried Moira with a bright smile. ”I thought--” A faint color tinged her pale cheek and she paused a moment. ”But tell me about the Indian. My brother just made little of it. It is his way with me. He thinks me just a little girl not to be trusted with things.”
”He doesn't know you, then,” said the doctor.
She laughed gayly. ”And do you?”
”I know you better than that, at least.”
”What can you know about me?”
”I know you are to be trusted with that or with anything else that calls for nerve. Besides, sooner or later you must know about this Indian.
Wait till we cross the bridge and reach the top of the hill yonder, it will be better going.”
The hillside gave them a stiff scramble, for the trail went straight up.
But the sure-footed ponies, scrambling over stones and gravel, reached the top safely, with no worse result than an obvious disarrangement of the girl's hair, so that around the Scotch bonnet which she had pinned on her head the little brown curls were peeping in a way that quite shook the heart of Dr. Martin.
”Now you look a little more like yourself,” he cried, his eyes fastened upon the curls with unmistakable admiration, ”more like the girl I remember.”
”Oh,” she said, ”it is my bonnet. I put on this old thing for the ride.”
”No,” said the doctor, ”you wore no bonnet that day. It is your face, your hair, you are not quite--so--so proper.”
”My hair!” Her hands went up to her head. ”Oh, my silly curls, I suppose. They are my bane.” (”My joy,” the doctor nearly had said.) ”But now for the Indian story.”
Then the doctor grew grave.
”It is not a pleasant thing to greet a guest with,” he said, ”but you must know it and I may as well give it to you. And, mind you, this is altogether a new thing with us.”
For the next half hour as they rode westward toward the big hills, steadily climbing as they went, the story of the disturbance in the north country, of the unrest among the Indians, of the part played in it by the Indian Copperhead, and of the appeal by the Superintendent to Cameron for a.s.sistance, furnished the topic for conversation. The girl listened with serious face, but there was no fear in the brown eyes, nor tremor in the quiet voice, as they talked it over.
”Now let us forget it for a while,” cried the doctor. ”The Police have rarely, if ever, failed to get their man. That is their boast. And they will get this chap, too. And as for the row on the Saskatchewan, I don't take much stock in that. Now we're coming to a view in a few minutes, one of the finest I have seen anywhere.”
For half a mile farther they loped along the trail that led them to the top of a hill that stood a little higher than the others round about.
Upon the hilltop they drew rein.