During the latter part of that night and most of the day, it
rained; a fine, slow, quiet rain, with no wind to shake the wet
from burdened leaf or blade. But when the old shepherd left the
cave by a narrow opening on the side of the mountain, near Sammy's
Lookout, the sky was clear. The mists rolled heavily over the
valley, but the last of the sunlight was warm on the knobs and
ridges.
The old man paused behind the rock and bushes that concealed the
mouth of the underground passage. Not a hundred feet below was the
Old Trail; he followed the little path with his eye until it
vanished around the shoulder of Dewey. Along that way he had come
into the hills. Then lifting his eyes to the far away lines of
darker blue, his mind looked over the ridge to the world that is
on the other side, the world from which he had fled. It all seemed
very small and mean, now; it was so far--so far away.
He started as the sharp ring of a horse's iron shoe on the flint
rocks came from beyond the Lookout, and, safely hidden, he saw a
neighbor round the hill and pass on his way to the store on Roark.
He watched, as horse and rider followed the Old Trail around the
rim of the Hollow; watched, until they passed from sight in the
belt of timber. Then his eyes were fixed on a fine thread of smoke
that curled above the trees on the Matthews place; and, leaving
the shelter of rock and bush, he walked along the Old Trail toward
the big log house on the distant ridge.
Below him, on his left, Mutton Hollow lay submerged in the
drifting mists, with only a faint line of light breaking now and
then where Lost Creek made its way; and on the other side Compton
Ridge lifted like a wooded shore from the sea. A black spot in the
red west shaped itself into a crow, making his way on easy wing
toward a dead tree on the top of Boulder Bald. The old shepherd
walked wearily; the now familiar objects wore a strange look. It
was as though he saw them for the first time, yet had seen them
somewhere before, perhaps in another world. As he went his face
was the face of one crushed by shame and grief, made desperate by
his suffering.
Supper was just over and Young Matt was on the porch when Mr.
Howitt entered the gate. The young fellow greeted his old friend,
and called back into the house, "Here's Dad, Father." As Mr.
Matthews came out, Aunt Mollie and Sammy appeared in the doorway.
How like it all was to that other evening.
The mountaineer and the shepherd sat on the front porch, while
Young Matt brought the big sorrel and the brown pony to the gate,
and with Sammy rode away. They were going to the Postoffice at the
Forks. "Ain't had no news for a week," said Aunt Mollie, as she
brought her chair to join the two men. "And besides, Sammy needs
the ride. There's goin' to be a moon, so it'll be light by the
time they start home."
The sound of the horses' feet and the voices of the young people
died away in the gray woods. The dusk thickened in the valley
below, and, as the light in the west went out, the three friends
saw the clump of pines etched black and sharp against the blood
red background of the sky.
Old Matt spoke, "Reckon everything's alright at the ranch, Dad.
How's the little doctor? You ought to brung him up with you." He
watched the shepherd's face curiously from under his heavy brows,
as he pulled at his cob pipe.
"Tired out trampin' over these hills, I reckon," ventured Aunt
Mollie. Mr. Howitt tried to answer with some commonplace, but his
friends could not but note his confusion. Mrs. Matthews continued,
"I guess you'll be a leavin' us pretty soon, now. Well, I ain't a
blamin' you; and you've sure been a God's blessin' to us here in
the woods. I don't reckon we're much 'long 'side the fine friends
you've got back where you come from in the city; and we--we can't
do nothin' for you, but--but--" The good soul could say no more.
"We've often wondered, sir," added Old Matt, "how you've stood it
here, an educated man like you. I reckon, though, there's
somethin' deep under it all, keepin' you up; somethin' that
ignorant folks, without no education, like us, can't understand."
The old scholar could have cried aloud, but he was forced to sit
dumb while the other continued, "You're goin' won't make no
difference, though, with what you've done. This neighborhood won't
never go back to what it was before you come. It can't with all
you've taught us, and with Sammy stayin' here to keep it up. It'll
be mighty hard, though, to have you go; it sure will, Mr. Howitt."
Looking up, the shepherd said quietly, "I expect to live here
until the end if you will let me. But I fear you will not want me
to stay when you know what I've come to tell you this evening."
The mountaineer straightened his huge form as he returned, "Dad,
there ain't nothin' on earth or in hell could change what we think
of you, and we don't want to hear nothin' about you that you don't
like to tell us. We ain't a carin' what sent you to the hills.
We're takin' you for what you are. And there ain't nothin' can
change that."
"Not even if it should be the grave under the pine yonder?" asked
the other in a low voice.
Old Matt looked at him in a half frightened way, as though,
without knowing why, he feared what the shepherd would say next.
Mr. Howitt felt the look and hesitated. He was like one on a
desperate mission in the heart of an enemy's country, feeling his
way. Was the strong man's passion really tame? Or was his fury
only sleeping, waiting to destroy the one who should wake it? Who
could tell?
The old scholar looked away to Dewey Bald for strength. "Mr.
Matthews," he said, "you once told me a story. It was here on this
porch when I first came to you. It was a sad tale of a great
crime. To-night I know the other aide of that story. I've come to
tell you."
At the strange words, Aunt Mollie's face turned as white as her
apron. Old Matt grasped the arms of his chair, as though he would
crush the wood, as he said shortly, "Go on."
At the tone of his voice, the old shepherd's heart sank.