Hand in hand, Hale and June followed the footsteps of spring from
the time June met him at the school-house gate for their first
walk into the woods. Hale pointed to some boys playing marbles.
"That's the first sign," he said, and with quick understanding
June smiled.
The birdlike piping of hylas came from a marshy strip of woodland
that ran through the centre of the town and a toad was croaking at
the foot of Imboden Hill.
They crossed the swinging foot-bridge, which was a miracle to
June, and took the foot-path along the clear stream of South Fork,
under the laurel which June called "ivy," and the rhododendron
which was "laurel" in her speech, and Hale pointed out catkins
greening on alders in one swampy place and willows just blushing
into life along the banks of a little creek. A few yards aside
from the path he found, under a patch of snow and dead leaves, the
pink-and-white blossoms and the waxy green leaves of the trailing
arbutus, that fragrant harbinger of the old Mother's awakening,
and June breathed in from it the very breath of spring. Near by
were turkey peas, which she had hunted and eaten many times.
"You can't put that arbutus in a garden," said Hale, "it's as wild
as a hawk."
Presently he had the little girl listen to a pewee twittering in a
thorn-bush and the lusty call of a robin from an apple-tree. A
bluebird flew over-head with a merry chirp--its wistful note of
autumn long since forgotten. These were the first birds and
flowers, he said, and June, knowing them only by sight, must know
the name of each and the reason for that name. So that Hale found
himself walking the woods with an interrogation point, and that he
might not be confounded he had, later, to dip up much forgotten
lore. For every walk became a lesson in botany for June, such a
passion did she betray at once for flowers, and he rarely had to
tell her the same thing twice, since her memory was like a vise--
for everything, as he learned in time.
Her eyes were quicker than his, too, and now she pointed to a
snowy blossom with a deeply lobed leaf.
"Bloodroot," said Hale, and he scratched the stem and forth issued
scarlet drops. "The Indians used to put it on their faces and
tomahawks"--she knew that word and nodded--"and I used to make red
ink of it when I was a little boy."
"No!" said June. With the next look she found a tiny bunch of
fuzzy hepaticas.
Hale, looking at her glowing face and eyes and her perfect little
body, imagined that she would never know unless told that she had
one, and so he waved one hand vaguely at his chest:
"It's an organ--and that herb is supposed to be good for it."
By that time she was gurgling with delight over a bunch of spring
beauties that came up, root, stalk and all, when she reached for
them.
"Well, ain't they purty?" While they lay in her hand and she
looked, the rose-veined petals began to close, the leaves to droop
and the stem got limp.
"Ah-h!" crooned June. "I won't pull up no more o' them."
'"These little dream-flowers found in the spring.' More poetry,
June."
A little later he heard her repeating that line to herself. It was
an easy step to poetry from flowers, and evidently June was
groping for it.
A few days later the service-berry swung out white stars on the
low hill-sides, but Hale could tell her nothing that she did not
know about the "sarvice-berry." Soon, the dogwood swept in snowy
gusts along the mountains, and from a bank of it one morning a
red-bird flamed and sang: "What cheer! What cheer! What cheer!"
And like its scarlet coat the red-bud had burst into bloom. June
knew the red-bud, but she had never heard it called the Judas
tree.
"You see, the red-bud was supposed to be poisonous. It shakes in
the wind and says to the bees, 'Come on, little fellows--here's
your nice fresh honey, and when they come, it betrays and poisons
them."
"Well, what do you think o' that!" said June indignantly, and Hale
had to hedge a bit.
"Well, I don't know whether it really does, but that's what they
say." A little farther on the white stars of the trillium gleamed
at them from the border of the woods and near by June stooped over
some lovely sky-blue blossoms with yellow eyes.
"Forget-me-nots," said Hale. June stooped to gather them with a
radiant face.
Later, they ran upon yellow adder's tongues in a hollow, each
blossom guarded by a pair of ear-like leaves, Dutchman's breeches
and wild bleeding hearts--a name that appealed greatly to the
fancy of the romantic little lady, and thus together they followed
the footsteps of that spring. And while she studied the flowers
Hale was studying the loveliest flower of them all--little June.
About ferns, plants and trees as well, he told her all he knew,
and there seemed nothing in the skies, the green world of the
leaves or the under world at her feet to which she was not
magically responsive. Indeed, Hale had never seen a man, woman or
child so eager to learn, and one day, when she had apparently
reached the limit of inquiry, she grew very thoughtful and he
watched her in silence a long while.
"I'm just wonderin' why I'm always axin' why," said little June.
She was learning in school, too, and she was happier there now,
for there had been no more open teasing of the new pupil. Bob's
championship saved her from that, and, thereafter, school changed
straightway for June. Before that day she had kept apart from her
school-fellows at recess-times as well as in the school-room. Two
or three of the girls had made friendly advances to her, but she
had shyly repelled them--why she hardly knew--and it was her
lonely custom at recess-times to build a play-house at the foot of
a great beech with moss, broken bits of bottles and stones. Once
she found it torn to pieces and from the look on the face of the
tall mountain boy, Cal Heaton, who had grinned at her when she
went up for her first lesson, and who was now Bob's arch-enemy,
she knew that he was the guilty one. Again a day or two later it
was destroyed, and when she came down from the woods almost in
tears, Bob happened to meet her in the road and made her tell the
trouble she was in. Straightway he charged the trespasser with the
deed and was lied to for his pains. So after school that day he
slipped up on the hill with the little girl and helped her rebuild
again.
"Now I'll lay for him," said Bob, "and catch him at it."
"All right," said June, and she looked both her worry and her
gratitude so that Bob understood both; and he answered both with a
nonchalant wave of one hand.
"Never you mind--and don't you tell Mr. Hale," and June in dumb
acquiescence crossed heart and body. But the mountain boy was
wary, and for two or three days the play-house was undisturbed and
so Bob himself laid a trap. He mounted his horse immediately after
school, rode past the mountain lad, who was on his way home,
crossed the river, made a wide detour at a gallop and, hitching
his horse in the woods, came to the play-house from the other side
of the hill. And half an hour later, when the pale little teacher
came out of the school-house, he heard grunts and blows and
scuffling up in the woods, and when he ran toward the sounds, the
bodies of two of his pupils rolled into sight clenched fiercely,
with torn clothes and bleeding faces--Bob on top with the mountain
boy's thumb in his mouth and his own fingers gripped about his
antagonist's throat. Neither paid any attention to the school-
master, who pulled at Bob's coat unavailingly and with horror at
his ferocity. Bob turned his head, shook it as well as the thumb
in his mouth would let him, and went on gripping the throat under
him and pushing the head that belonged to it into the ground. The
mountain boy's tongue showed and his eyes bulged.
"'Nough!" he yelled. Bob rose then and told his story and the
school-master from New England gave them a short lecture on
gentleness and Christian charity and fixed on each the awful
penalty of "staying in" after school for an hour every day for a
week. Bob grinned:
"All right, professor--it was worth it," he said, but the mountain
lad shuffled silently away.
An hour later Hale saw the boy with a swollen lip, one eye black
and the other as merry as ever--but after that there was no more
trouble for June. Bob had made his promise good and gradually she
came into the games with her fellows there-after, while Bob stood
or sat aside, encouraging but taking no part--for was he not a
member of the Police Force? Indeed he was already known far and
wide as the Infant of the Guard, and always he carried a whistle
and usually, outside the school-house, a pistol bumped his hip,
while a Winchester stood in one corner of his room and a billy
dangled by his mantel-piece.
The games were new to June, and often Hale would stroll up to the
school-house to watch them--Prisoner's Base, Skipping the Rope,
Antny Over, Cracking the Whip and Lifting the Gate; and it pleased
him to see how lithe and active his little protege was and more
than a match in strength even for the boys who were near her size.
June had to take the penalty of her greenness, too, when she was
"introduced to the King and Queen" and bumped the ground between
the make-believe sovereigns, or got a cup of water in her face
when she was trying to see stars through a pipe. And the boys
pinned her dress to the bench through a crack and once she walked
into school with a placard on her back which read:
"June-Bug." But she was so good-natured that she fast became a
favourite. Indeed it was noticeable to Hale as well as Bob that
Cal Heaton, the mountain boy, seemed always to get next to June in
the Tugs of War, and one morning June found an apple on her desk.
She swept the room with a glance and met Cal's guilty flush, and
though she ate the apple, she gave him no thanks--in word, look or
manner. It was curious to Hale, moreover, to observe how June's
instinct deftly led her to avoid the mistakes in dress that
characterized the gropings of other girls who, like her, were in a
stage of transition. They wore gaudy combs and green skirts with
red waists, their clothes bunched at the hips, and to their shoes
and hands they paid no attention at all. None of these things for
June--and Hale did not know that the little girl had leaped her
fellows with one bound, had taken Miss Anne Saunders as her model
and was climbing upon the pedestal where that lady justly stood.
The two had not become friends as Hale hoped. June was always
silent and reserved when the older girl was around, but there was
never a move of the latter's hand or foot or lip or eye that the
new pupil failed to see. Miss Anne rallied Hale no little about
her, but he laughed good-naturedly, and asked why she could not
make friends with June.
"She's jealous," said Miss Saunders, and Hale ridiculed the idea,
for not one sign since she came to the Gap had she shown him. It
was the jealousy of a child she had once betrayed and that she had
outgrown, he thought; but he never knew how June stood behind the
curtains of her window, with a hungry suffering in her face and
eyes, to watch Hale and Miss Anne ride by and he never guessed
that concealment was but a sign of the dawn of womanhood that was
breaking within her. And she gave no hint of that breaking dawn
until one day early in May, when she heard a woodthrush for the
first time with Hale: for it was the bird she loved best, and
always its silver fluting would stop her in her tracks and send
her into dreamland. Hale had just broken a crimson flower from its
stem and held it out to her.
"Here's another of the 'wan ones,' June. Do you know what that
is?"
"Hit's"--she paused for correction with her lips drawn severely in
for precision--"It's a mountain poppy. Pap says it kills
goslings"--her eyes danced, for she was in a merry mood that day,
and she put both hands behind her--"if you air any kin to a goose,
you better drap it."
"That's a good one," laughed Hale, "but it's so lovely I'll take
the risk. I won't drop it."
"Drop it," caught June with a quick upward look, and then to fix
the word in her memory she repeated--"drop it, drop it, drop it!"
"Somehow it don't make me so miserable, like it useter." Her smile
passed while she looked, she caught both hands to her heaving
breast and a wild intensity burned suddenly in her eyes.
"'Tain't nothin'," she choked out, and she turned hurriedly ahead
of him down the path. Startled, Hale had dropped the crimson
flower to his feet. He saw it and he let it lie.
Meanwhile, rumours were brought in that the Falins were coming
over from Kentucky to wipe out the Guard, and so straight were
they sometimes that the Guard was kept perpetually on watch. Once
while the members were at target practice, the shout arose:
"The Kentuckians are coming! The Kentuckians are coming!" And, at
double quick, the Guard rushed back to find it a false alarm and
to see men laughing at them in the street. The truth was that,
while the Falins had a general hostility against the Guard, their
particular enmity was concentrated on John Hale, as he discovered
when June was to take her first trip home one Friday afternoon.
Hale meant to carry her over, but the morning they were to leave,
old Judd Tolliver came to the Gap himself. He did not want June to
come home at that time, and he didn't think it was safe over there
for Hale just then. Some of the Falins had been seen hanging
around Lonesome Cove for the purpose, Judd believed, of getting a
shot at the man who had kept young Dave from falling into their
hands, and Hale saw that by that act he had, as Budd said, arrayed
himself with the Tollivers in the feud. In other words, he was a
Tolliver himself now, and as such the Falins meant to treat him.
Hale rebelled against the restriction, for he had started some
work in Lonesome Cove and was preparing a surprise over there for
June, but old Judd said:
"Just wait a while," and he said it so seriously that Hale for a
while took his advice.
So June stayed on at the Gap--with little disappointment,
apparently, that she could not visit home. And as spring passed
and the summer came on, the little girl budded and opened like a
rose. To the pretty school-teacher she was a source of endless
interest and wonder, for while the little girl was reticent and
aloof, Miss Saunders felt herself watched and studied in and out
of school, and Hale often had to smile at June's unconscious
imitation of her teacher in speech, manners and dress. And all the
time her hero-worship of Hale went on, fed by the talk of the
boardinghouse, her fellow pupils and of the town at large--and it
fairly thrilled her to know that to the Falins he was now a
Tolliver himself.
Sometimes Hale would get her a saddle, and then June would usurp
Miss Anne's place on a horseback-ride up through the gap to see
the first blooms of the purple rhododendron on Bee Rock, or up to
Morris's farm on Powell's mountain, from which, with a glass, they
could see the Lonesome Pine. And all the time she worked at her
studies tirelessly--and when she was done with her lessons, she
read the fairy books that Hale got for her--read them until "Paul
and Virginia" fell into her hands, and then there were no more
fairy stories for little June. Often, late at night, Hale, from
the porch of his cottage, could see the light of her lamp sending
its beam across the dark water of the mill-pond, and finally he
got worried by the paleness of her face and sent her to the
doctor. She went unwillingly, and when she came back she reported
placidly that "organatically she was all right, the doctor said,"
but Hale was glad that vacation would soon come. At the beginning
of the last week of school he brought a little present for her
from New York--a slender necklace of gold with a little reddish
stone-pendant that was the shape of a cross. Hale pulled the
trinket from his pocket as they were walking down the river-bank
at sunset and the little girl quivered like an aspen-leaf in a
sudden puff of wind.
"Why, sister Sally told me about 'em. She said folks found 'em
somewhere over here in Virginny, an' all her life she was a-
wishin' fer one an' she never could git it"--her eyes filled--
"seems like ever'thing she wanted is a-comin' to me."
June shook her head. "Sister Sally said it was a luck-piece.
Nothin' could happen to ye when ye was carryin' it, but it was
awful bad luck if you lost it." Hale put it around her neck and
fastened the clasp and June kept hold of the little cross with one
hand.
"No--no--no," she repeated breathlessly, and Hale told her the
pretty story of the stone as they strolled back to supper. The
little crosses were to be found only in a certain valley in
Virginia, so perfect in shape that they seemed to have been
chiselled by hand, and they were a great mystery to the men who
knew all about rocks--the geologists.
These men said there was no crystallization--nothing like them,
amended Hale--elsewhere in the world, and that just as crosses
were of different shapes--Roman, Maltese and St. Andrew's--so,
too, these crosses were found in all these different shapes. And
the myth--the story--was that this little valley was once
inhabited by fairies--June's eyes lighted, for it was a fairy
story after all--and that when a strange messenger brought them
the news of Christ's crucifixion, they wept, and their tears, as
they fell to the ground, were turned into tiny crosses of stone.
Even the Indians had some queer feeling about them, and for a
long, long time people who found them had used them as charms to
bring good luck and ward off harm.
"And that's for you," he said, "because you've been such a good
little girl and have studied so hard. School's most over now and I
reckon you'll be right glad to get home again."
June made no answer, but at the gate she looked suddenly up at
him.
"Have you got one, too?" she asked, and she seemed much disturbed
when Hale shook his head.
There was again something strange in her manner as she turned
suddenly from him, and what it meant he was soon to learn. It was
the last week of school and Hale had just come down from the woods
behind the school-house at "little recess-time" in the afternoon.
The children were playing games outside the gate, and Bob and Miss
Anne and the little Professor were leaning on the fence watching
them. The little man raised his hand to halt Hale on the plank
sidewalk.
"I've been wanting to see you," he said in his dreamy, abstracted
way. "You prophesied, you know, that I should be proud of your
little protege some day, and I am indeed. She is the most
remarkable pupil I've yet seen here, and I have about come to the
conclusion that there is no quicker native intelligence in our
country than you shall find in the children of these mountaineers
and--"
Miss Anne was gazing at the children with an expression that
turned Hale's eyes that way, and the Professor checked his
harangue. Something had happened. They had been playing "Ring
Around the Rosy" and June had been caught. She stood scarlet and
tense and the cry was:
"Jack who?" But June looked around and saw the four at the gate.
Almost staggering, she broke from the crowd and, with one forearm
across her scarlet face, rushed past them into the school-house.
Miss Anne looked at Male's amazed face and she did not smile. Bob
turned respectfully away, ignoring it all, and the little
Professor, whose life-purpose was psychology, murmured in his
ignorance:
Through that afternoon June kept her hot face close to her books.
Bob never so much as glanced her way--little gentleman that he
was--but the one time she lifted her eyes, she met the mountain
lad's bent in a stupor-like gaze upon her. In spite of her
apparent studiousness, however, she missed her lesson and,
automatically, the little Professor told her to stay in after
school and recite to Miss Saunders. And so June and Miss Anne sat
in the school-room alone--the teacher reading a book, and the
pupil--her tears unshed--with her sullen face bent over her
lesson. In a few moments the door opened and the little Professor
thrust in his head. The girl had looked so hurt and tired when he
spoke to her that some strange sympathy moved him, mystified
though he was, to say gently now and with a smile that was rare
with him:
"You might excuse June, I think, Miss Saunders, and let her recite
some time to-morrow," and gently he closed the door. Miss Anne
rose:
June rose, too, gathering up her books, and as she passed the
teacher's platform she stopped and looked her full in the face.
She said not a word, and the tragedy between the woman and the
girl was played in silence, for the woman knew from the searching
gaze of the girl and the black defiance in her eyes, as she
stalked out of the room, that her own flush had betrayed her
secret as plainly as the girl's words had told hers.
Through his office window, a few minutes later, Hale saw June pass
swiftly into the house. In a few minutes she came swiftly out
again and went back swiftly toward the school-house. He was so
worried by the tense look in her face that he could work no more,
and in a few minutes he threw his papers down and followed her.
When he turned the corner, Bob was coming down the street with his
cap on the back of his head and swinging his books by a strap, and
the boy looked a little conscious when he saw Hale coming.
"I don't know, but--" Bob turned and pointed to the green dome of
a big beech.
"I think you'll find her at the foot of that tree," he said.
"That's where her play-house is and that's where she goes when
she's--that's where she usually goes."
"Oh, yes," said Hale--"her play-house. Thank you."
Hale went on, turned from the path and climbed noiselessly. When
he caught sight of the beech he stopped still. June stood against
it like a wood-nymph just emerged from its sun-dappled trunk--
stood stretched to her full height, her hands behind her, her hair
tossed, her throat tense under the dangling little cross, her face
uplifted. At her feet, the play-house was scattered to pieces. She
seemed listening to the love-calls of a woodthrush that came
faintly through the still woods, and then he saw that she heard
nothing, saw nothing--that she was in a dream as deep as sleep.
Hale's heart throbbed as he looked.
"June!" he called softly. She did not hear him, and when he called
again, she turned her face--unstartled--and moving her posture not
at all. Hale pointed to the scattered play-house.
"I done it!" she said fiercely--"I done it myself." Her eyes
burned steadily into his, even while she lifted her hands to her
hair as though she were only vaguely conscious that it was all
undone.
"You heerd me?" she cried, and before he could answer--"She heerd
me," and again, not waiting for a word from him, she cried still
more fiercely:
Her hands were trembling, she was biting her quivering lip to keep
back the starting tears, and Hale rushed toward her and took her
in his arms.
"June! June!" he said brokenly. "You mustn't, little girl. I'm
proud--proud--why little sweetheart--" She was clinging to him and
looking up into his eyes and he bent his head slowly. Their lips
met and the man was startled. He knew now it was no child that
answered him.
Hale walked long that night in the moonlit woods up and around
Imboden Hill, along a shadow-haunted path, between silvery beech-
trunks, past the big hole in the earth from which dead trees
tossed out their crooked arms as if in torment, and to the top of
the ridge under which the valley slept and above which the dark
bulk of Powell's Mountain rose. It was absurd, but he found
himself strangely stirred. She was a child, he kept repeating to
himself, in spite of the fact that he knew she was no child among
her own people, and that mountain girls were even wives who were
younger still. Still, she did not know what she felt--how could
she?--and she would get over it, and then came the sharp stab of a
doubt--would he want her to get over it? Frankly and with wonder
he confessed to himself that he did not know--he did not know. But
again, why bother? He had meant to educate her, anyhow. That was
the first step--no matter what happened. June must go out into the
world to school. He would have plenty of money. Her father would
not object, and June need never know. He could include for her an
interest in her own father's coal lands that he meant to buy, and
she could think that it was her own money that she was using. So,
with a sudden rush of gladness from his brain to his heart, he
recklessly yoked himself, then and there, under all responsibility
for that young life and the eager, sensitive soul that already
lighted it so radiantly.
And June? Her nature had opened precisely as had bud and flower
that spring. The Mother of Magicians had touched her as
impartially as she had touched them with fairy wand, and as
unconsciously the little girl had answered as a young dove to any
cooing mate. With this Hale did not reckon, and this June could
not know. For a while, that night, she lay in a delicious tremor,
listening to the bird-like chorus of the little frogs in the
marsh, the booming of the big ones in the mill-pond, the water
pouring over the dam with the sound of a low wind, and, as had all
the sleeping things of the earth about her, she, too, sank to
happy sleep.