<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XIII </h2>
<p>Thorpe found the woods very different from when he had first traversed
them. They were full of patches of wet earth and of sunshine; of dark
pine, looking suddenly worn, and of fresh green shoots of needles, looking
deliciously springlike. This was the contrast everywhere—stern,
earnest, purposeful winter, and gay, laughing, careless spring. It was
impossible not to draw in fresh spirits with every step.</p>
<p>He followed the trail by the river. Butterballs and scoters paddled up at
his approach. Bits of rotten ice occasionally swirled down the diminishing
stream. The sunshine was clear and bright, but silvery rather than golden,
as though a little of the winter's snow,—a last ethereal
incarnation,—had lingered in its substance. Around every bend Thorpe
looked for some of Radway's crew "driving" the logs down the current. He
knew from chance encounters with several of the men in Bay City that
Radway was still in camp; which meant, of course, that the last of the
season's operations were not yet finished. Five miles further Thorpe began
to wonder whether this last conclusion might not be erroneous. The Cass
Branch had shrunken almost to its original limits. Only here and there a
little bayou or marsh attested recent freshets. The drive must have been
finished, even this early, for the stream in its present condition would
hardly float saw logs, certainly not in quantity.</p>
<p>Thorpe, puzzled, walked on. At the banking ground he found empty skids.
Evidently the drive was over. And yet even to Thorpe's ignorance, it
seemed incredible that the remaining million and a half of logs had been
hauled, banked and driven during the short time he had lain in the Bay
City hospital. More to solve the problem than in any hope of work, he set
out up the logging road.</p>
<p>Another three miles brought him to camp. It looked strangely wet and
sodden and deserted. In fact, Thorpe found a bare half dozen people in it,—Radway,
the cook, and four men who were helping to pack up the movables, and who
later would drive out the wagons containing them. The jobber showed strong
traces of the strain he had undergone, but greeted Thorpe almost jovially.
He seemed able to show more of his real nature now that the necessity of
authority had been definitely removed.</p>
<p>"Hullo, young man," he shouted at Thorpe's mud-splashed figure, "come back
to view, the remains? All well again, heigh? That's good!"</p>
<p>He strode down to grip the young fellow heartily by the hand. It was
impossible not to be charmed by the sincere cordiality of his manner.</p>
<p>"I didn't know you were through," explained Thorpe, "I came to see if I
could get a job."</p>
<p>"Well now I AM sorry!" cried Radway, "you can turn in and help though, if
you want to."</p>
<p>Thorpe greeted the cook and old Jackson Hines, the only two whom he knew,
and set to work to tie up bundles of blankets, and to collect axes,
peavies, and tools of all descriptions. This was evidently the last
wagon-trip, for little remained to be done.</p>
<p>"I ought by rights to take the lumber of the roofs and floors," observed
Radway thoughtfully, "but I guess she don't matter."</p>
<p>Thorpe had never seen him in better spirits. He ascribed the older man's
hilarity to relief over the completion of a difficult task. That evening
the seven dined together at one end of the long table. The big room
exhaled already the atmosphere of desertion.</p>
<p>"Not much like old times, is she?" laughed Radway. "Can't you just shut
your eyes and hear Baptiste say, 'Mak' heem de soup one tam more for me'?
She's pretty empty now."</p>
<p>Jackson Hines looked whimsically down the bare board. "More room than God
made for geese in Ireland," was his comment.</p>
<p>After supper they even sat outside for a little time to smoke their pipes,
chair-tilted against the logs of the cabins, but soon the chill of melting
snow drove them indoors. The four teamsters played seven-up in the cook
camp by the light of a barn lantern, while Thorpe and the cook wrote
letters. Thorpe's was to his sister.</p>
<p>"I have been in the hospital for about a month," he wrote. "Nothing
serious—a crack on the head, which is all right now. But I cannot
get home this summer, nor, I am afraid, can we arrange about the school
this year. I am about seventy dollars ahead of where I was last fall, so
you see it is slow business. This summer I am going into a mill, but the
wages for green labor are not very high there either," and so on.</p>
<p>When Miss Helen Thorpe, aged seventeen, received this document she stamped
her foot almost angrily. "You'd think he was a day-laborer!" she cried.
"Why doesn't he try for a clerkship or something in the city where he'd
have a chance to use his brains!"</p>
<p>The thought of her big, strong, tanned brother chained to a desk rose to
her, and she smiled a little sadly.</p>
<p>"I know," she went on to herself, "he'd rather be a common laborer in the
woods than railroad manager in the office. He loves his out-of-doors."</p>
<p>"Helen!" called a voice from below, "if you're through up there, I wish
you'd come down and help me carry this rug out."</p>
<p>The girl's eyes cleared with a snap.</p>
<p>"So do I!" she cried defiantly, "so do I love out-of-doors! I like the
woods and the fields and the trees just as much as he does, only
differently; but I don't get out!"</p>
<p>And thus she came to feeling rebelliously that her brother had been a
little selfish in his choice of an occupation, that he sacrificed her
inclinations to his own. She did not guess,—how could she?—his
dreams for her. She did not see the future through his thoughts, but
through his words. A negative hopelessness settled down on her, which soon
her strong spirit, worthy counterpart of her brother's, changed to more
positive rebellion. Thorpe had aroused antagonism where he craved only
love. The knowledge of that fact would have surprised and hurt him, for he
was entirely without suspicion of it. He lived subjectively to so great a
degree that his thoughts and aims took on a certain tangible objectivity,—they
became so real to him that he quite overlooked the necessity of
communication to make them as real to others. He assumed unquestioningly
that the other must know. So entirely had he thrown himself into his
ambition of making a suitable position for Helen, so continually had he
dwelt on it in his thoughts, so earnestly had he striven for it in every
step of the great game he was beginning to play, that it never occurred to
him he should also concede a definite outward manifestation of his feeling
in order to assure its acceptance. Thorpe believed that he had sacrificed
every thought and effort to his sister. Helen was becoming convinced that
he had considered only himself.</p>
<p>After finishing the letter which gave occasion to this train of thought,
Thorpe lit his pipe and strolled out into the darkness. Opposite the
little office he stopped amazed.</p>
<p>Through the narrow window he could see Radway seated in front of the
stove. Every attitude of the man denoted the most profound dejection. He
had sunk down into his chair until he rested on almost the small of his
back, his legs were struck straight out in front of him, his chin rested
on his breast, and his two arms hung listless at his side, a pipe half
falling from the fingers of one hand. All the facetious lines had turned
to pathos. In his face sorrowed the anxious, questing, wistful look of the
St. Bernard that does not understand.</p>
<p>"What's the matter with the boss, anyway?" asked Thorpe in a low voice of
Jackson Hines, when the seven-up game was finished.</p>
<p>"H'aint ye heard?" inquired the old man in surprise.</p>
<p>"Why, no. What?"</p>
<p>"Busted," said the old man sententiously.</p>
<p>"How? What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"What I say. He's busted. That freshet caught him too quick. They's more'n
a million and a half logs left in the woods that can't be got out this
year, and as his contract calls for a finished job, he don't get nothin'
for what he's done."</p>
<p>"That's a queer rig," commented Thorpe. "He's done a lot of valuable work
here,—the timber's cut and skidded, anyway; and he's delivered a
good deal of it to the main drive. The M. & D. outfit get all the
advantage of that."</p>
<p>"They do, my son. When old Daly's hand gets near anything, it cramps. I
don't know how the old man come to make such a contrac', but he did.
Result is, he's out his expenses and time."</p>
<p>To understand exactly the catastrophe that had occurred, it is necessary
to follow briefly an outline of the process after the logs have been piled
on the banks. There they remain until the break-up attendant on spring
shall flood the stream to a freshet. The rollways are then broken, and the
saw logs floated down the river to the mill where they are to be cut into
lumber.</p>
<p>If for any reason this transportation by water is delayed until the flood
goes down, the logs are stranded or left in pools. Consequently every
logger puts into the two or three weeks of freshet water a feverish
activity which shall carry his product through before the ebb.</p>
<p>The exceptionally early break-up of this spring, combined with the fact
that, owing to the series of incidents and accidents already sketched, the
actual cutting and skidding had fallen so far behind, caught Radway
unawares. He saw his rollways breaking out while his teams were still
hauling in the woods. In order to deliver to the mouth of the Cass Branch
the three million already banked, he was forced to drop everything else
and attend strictly to the drive. This left still, as has been stated, a
million and a half on skidways, which Radway knew he would be unable to
get out that year.</p>
<p>In spite of the jobber's certainty that his claim was thus annulled, and
that he might as well abandon the enterprise entirely for all he would
ever get out of it, he finished the "drive" conscientiously and saved to
the Company the logs already banked. Then he had interviewed Daly. The
latter refused to pay him one cent. Nothing remained but to break camp and
grin as best he might over the loss of his winter's work and expenses.</p>
<p>The next day Radway and Thorpe walked the ten miles of the river trail
together, while the teamsters and the cook drove down the five teams.
Under the influence of the solitude and a certain sympathy which Thorpe
manifested, Radway talked—a very little.</p>
<p>"I got behind; that's all there is to it," he said. "I s'pose I ought to
have driven the men a little; but still, I don't know. It gets pretty cold
on the plains. I guess I bit off more than I could chew."</p>
<p>His eye followed listlessly a frenzied squirrel swinging from the tops of
poplars.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't 'a done it for myself," he went on. "I don't like the
confounded responsibility. They's too much worry connected with it all. I
had a good snug little stake—mighty nigh six thousand. She's all
gone now. That'd have been enough for me—I ain't a drinkin' man. But
then there was the woman and the kid. This ain't no country for
woman-folks, and I wanted t' take little Lida out o' here. I had lots of
experience in the woods, and I've seen men make big money time and again,
who didn't know as much about it as I do. But they got there, somehow.
Says I, I'll make a stake this year—I'd a had twelve thousand in th'
bank, if things'd have gone right—and then we'll jest move down
around Detroit an' I'll put Lida in school."</p>
<p>Thorpe noticed a break in the man's voice, and glancing suddenly toward
him was astounded to catch his eyes brimming with tears. Radway perceived
the surprise.</p>
<p>"You know when I left Christmas?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I was gone two weeks, and them two weeks done me. We was going slow
enough before, God knows, but even with the rank weather and all, I think
we'd have won out, if we could have held the same gait."</p>
<p>Radway paused. Thorpe was silent.</p>
<p>"The boys thought it was a mighty poor rig, my leaving that way."</p>
<p>He paused again in evident expectation of a reply. Again Thorpe was
silent.</p>
<p>"Didn't they?" Radway insisted.</p>
<p>"Yes, they did," answered Thorpe.</p>
<p>The older man sighed. "I thought so," he went on. "Well, I didn't go to
spend Christmas. I went because Jimmy brought me a telegram that Lida was
sick with diphtheria. I sat up nights with her for 'leven days."</p>
<p>"No bad after-effects, I hope?" inquired Thorpe.</p>
<p>"She died," said Radway simply.</p>
<p>The two men tramped stolidly on. This was too great an affair for Thorpe
to approach except on the knees of his spirit. After a long interval,
during which the waters had time to still, the young man changed the
subject.</p>
<p>"Aren't you going to get anything out of M. & D.?" he asked.</p>
<p>"No. Didn't earn nothing. I left a lot of their saw logs hung up in the
woods, where they'll deteriorate from rot and worms. This is their last
season in this district."</p>
<p>"Got anything left?"</p>
<p>"Not a cent."</p>
<p>"What are you going to do?"</p>
<p>"Do!" cried the old woodsman, the fire springing to his eye. "Do! I'm
going into the woods, by God! I'm going to work with my hands, and be
happy! I'm going to do other men's work for them and take other men's pay.
Let them do the figuring and worrying. I'll boss their gangs and make
their roads and see to their logging for 'em, but it's got to be THEIRS.
No! I'm going to be a free man by the G. jumping Moses!"</p>
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<h2> Chapter XIV </h2>
<p>Thorpe dedicated a musing instant to the incongruity of rejoicing over a
freedom gained by ceasing to be master and becoming servant.</p>
<p>"Radway," said he suddenly, "I need money and I need it bad. I think you
ought to get something out of this job of the M. & D.—not much,
but something. Will you give me a share of what I can collect from them?"</p>
<p>"Sure!" agreed the jobber readily, with a laugh. "Sure! But you won't get
anything. I'll give you ten per cent quick."</p>
<p>"Good enough!" cried Thorpe.</p>
<p>"But don't be too sure you'll earn day wages doing it," warned the other.
"I saw Daly when I was down here last week."</p>
<p>"My time's not valuable," replied Thorpe. "Now when we get to town I want
your power of attorney and a few figures, after which I will not bother
you again."</p>
<p>The next day the young man called for the second time at the little
red-painted office under the shadow of the mill, and for the second time
stood before the bulky power of the junior member of the firm.</p>
<p>"Well, young man, what can I do for you?" asked the latter.</p>
<p>"I have been informed," said Thorpe without preliminary, "that you intend
to pay John Radway nothing for the work done on the Cass Branch this
winter. Is that true?"</p>
<p>Daly studied his antagonist meditatively. "If it is true, what is it to
you?" he asked at length.</p>
<p>"I am acting in Mr. Radway's interest."</p>
<p>"You are one of Radway's men?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"In what capacity have you been working for him?"</p>
<p>"Cant-hook man," replied Thorpe briefly.</p>
<p>"I see," said Daly slowly. Then suddenly, with an intensity of energy that
startled Thorpe, he cried: "Now you get out of here! Right off! Quick!"</p>
<p>The younger man recognized the compelling and autocratic boss addressing a
member of the crew.</p>
<p>"I shall do nothing of the kind!" he replied with a flash of fire.</p>
<p>The mill-owner leaped to his feet every inch a leader of men. Thorpe did
not wish to bring about an actual scene of violence. He had attained his
object, which was to fluster the other out of his judicial calm.</p>
<p>"I have Radway's power of attorney," he added.</p>
<p>Daly sat down, controlled himself with an effort, and growled out, "Why
didn't you say so?"</p>
<p>"Now I would like to know your position," went on Thorpe. "I am not here
to make trouble, but as an associate of Mr. Radway, I have a right to
understand the case. Of course I have his side of the story," he
suggested, as though convinced that a detailing of the other side might
change his views.</p>
<p>Daly considered carefully, fixing his flint-blue eyes unswervingly on
Thorpe's face. Evidently his scrutiny advised him that the young man was a
force to be reckoned with.</p>
<p>"It's like this," said he abruptly, "we contracted last fall with this man
Radway to put in five million feet of our timber, delivered to the main
drive at the mouth of the Cass Branch. In this he was to act independently
except as to the matter of provisions. Those he drew from our van, and was
debited with the amount of the same. Is that clear?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly," replied Thorpe.</p>
<p>"In return we were to pay him, merchantable scale, four dollars a
thousand. If, however, he failed to put in the whole job, the contract was
void."</p>
<p>"That's how I understand it," commented Thorpe. "Well?"</p>
<p>"Well, he didn't get in the five million. There's a million and a half
hung up in the woods."</p>
<p>"But you have in your hands three million and a half, which under the
present arrangement you get free of any charge whatever."</p>
<p>"And we ought to get it," cried Daly. "Great guns! Here we intend to saw
this summer and quit. We want to get in every stick of timber we own so as
to be able to clear out of here for good and all at the close of the
season; and now this condigned jobber ties us up for a million and a
half."</p>
<p>"It is exceedingly annoying," conceded Thorpe, "and it is a good deal of
Radway's fault, I am willing to admit, but it's your fault too."</p>
<p>"To be sure," replied Daly with the accent of sarcasm.</p>
<p>"You had no business entering into any such contract. It gave him no
show."</p>
<p>"I suppose that was mainly his lookout, wasn't it? And as I already told
you, we had to protect ourselves."</p>
<p>"You should have demanded security for the completion of the work. Under
your present agreement, if Radway got in the timber, you were to pay him a
fair price. If he didn't, you appropriated everything he had already done.
In other words, you made him a bet."</p>
<p>"I don't care what you call it," answered Daly, who had recovered his
good-humor in contemplation of the security of his position. "The fact
stands all right."</p>
<p>"It does," replied Thorpe unexpectedly, "and I'm glad of it. Now let's
examine a few figures. You owned five million feet of timber, which at the
price of stumpage" (standing trees) "was worth ten thousand dollars."</p>
<p>"Well."</p>
<p>"You come out at the end of the season with three million and a half of
saw logs, which with the four dollars' worth of logging added, are worth
twenty-one thousand dollars."</p>
<p>"Hold on!" cried Daly, "we paid Radway four dollars; we could have done it
ourselves for less."</p>
<p>"You could not have done it for one cent less than four-twenty in that
country," replied Thorpe, "as any expert will testify."</p>
<p>"Why did we give it to Radway at four, then?"</p>
<p>"You saved the expense of a salaried overseer, and yourselves some
bother," replied Thorpe. "Radway could do it for less, because, for some
strange reason which you yourself do not understand, a jobber can always
log for less than a company."</p>
<p>"We could have done it for four," insisted Daly stubbornly, "but get on.
What are you driving at? My time's valuable."</p>
<p>"Well, put her at four, then," agreed Thorpe. "That makes your saw logs
worth over twenty thousand dollars. Of this value Radway added thirteen
thousand. You have appropriated that much of his without paying him one
cent."</p>
<p>Daly seemed amused. "How about the million and a half feet of ours HE
appropriated?" he asked quietly.</p>
<p>"I'm coming to that. Now for your losses. At the stumpage rate your
million and a half which Radway 'appropriated' would be only three
thousand. But for the sake of argument, we'll take the actual sum you'd
have received for saw logs. Even then the million and a half would only
have been worth between eight and nine thousand. Deducting this purely
theoretical loss Radway has occasioned you, from the amount he has gained
for you, you are still some four or five thousand ahead of the game. For
that you paid him nothing."</p>
<p>"That's Radway's lookout."</p>
<p>"In justice you should pay him that amount. He is a poor man. He has sunk
all he owned in this venture, some twelve thousand dollars, and he has
nothing to live on. Even if you pay him five thousand, he has lost
considerable, while you have gained."</p>
<p>"How have we gained by this bit of philanthropy?"</p>
<p>"Because you originally paid in cash for all that timber on the stump just
ten thousand dollars and you get from Radway saw logs to the value of
twenty," replied Thorpe sharply. "Besides you still own the million and a
half which, if you do not care to put them in yourself, you can sell for
something on the skids."</p>
<p>"Don't you know, young man, that white pine logs on skids will spoil
utterly in a summer? Worms get into em."</p>
<p>"I do," replied Thorpe, "unless you bark them; which process will cost you
about one dollar a thousand. You can find any amount of small purchasers
at reduced price. You can sell them easily at three dollars. That nets you
for your million and a half a little over four thousand dollars more.
Under the circumstances, I do not think that my request for five thousand
is at all exorbitant."</p>
<p>Daly laughed. "You are a shrewd figurer, and your remarks are
interesting," said he.</p>
<p>"Will you give five thousand dollars?" asked Thorpe.</p>
<p>"I will not," replied Daly, then with a sudden change of humor, "and now
I'll do a little talking. I've listened to you just as long as I'm going
to. I have Radway's contract in that safe and I live up to it. I'll thank
you to go plumb to hell!"</p>
<p>"That's your last word, is it?" asked Thorpe, rising.</p>
<p>"It is."</p>
<p>"Then," said he slowly and distinctly, "I'll tell you what I'll do. I
intend to collect in full the four dollars a thousand for the three
million and a half Mr. Radway has delivered to you. In return Mr. Radway
will purchase of you at the stumpage rates of two dollars a thousand the
million and a half he failed to put in. That makes a bill against you, if
my figuring is correct, of just eleven thousand dollars. You will pay that
bill, and I will tell you why: your contract will be classed in any court
as a gambling contract for lack of consideration. You have no legal
standing in the world. I call your bluff, Mr. Daly, and I'll fight you
from the drop of the hat through every court in Christendom."</p>
<p>"Fight ahead," advised Daly sweetly, who knew perfectly well that Thorpe's
law was faulty. As a matter of fact the young man could have collected on
other grounds, but neither was aware of that.</p>
<p>"Furthermore," pursued Thorpe in addition, "I'll repeat my offer before
witnesses; and if I win the first suit, I'll sue you for the money we
could have made by purchasing the extra million and a half before it had a
chance to spoil."</p>
<p>This statement had its effect, for it forced an immediate settlement
before the pine on the skids should deteriorate. Daly lounged back with a
little more deadly carelessness.</p>
<p>"And, lastly," concluded Thorpe, playing his trump card, "the suit from
start to finish will be published in every important paper in this
country. If you do not believe I have the influence to do this, you are at
liberty to doubt the fact."</p>
<p>Daly was cogitating many things. He knew that publicity was the last thing
to be desired. Thorpe's statement had been made in view of the fact that
much of the business of a lumber firm is done on credit. He thought that
perhaps a rumor of a big suit going against the firm might weaken
confidence. As a matter of fact, this consideration had no weight whatever
with the older man, although the threat of publicity actually gained for
Thorpe what he demanded. The lumberman feared the noise of an
investigation solely and simply because his firm, like so many others, was
engaged at the time in stealing government timber in the upper peninsula.
He did not call it stealing; but that was what it amounted to. Thorpe's
shot in the air hit full.</p>
<p>"I think we can arrange a basis of settlement," he said finally. "Be here
to-morrow morning at ten with Radway."</p>
<p>"Very well," said Thorpe.</p>
<p>"By the way," remarked Daly, "I don't believe I know your name?"</p>
<p>"Thorpe," was the reply.</p>
<p>"Well, Mr. Thorpe," said the lumberman with cold anger, "if at any time
there is anything within my power or influence that you want—I'll
see that you don't get it."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XV </h2>
<p>The whole affair was finally compromised for nine thousand dollars.
Radway, grateful beyond expression, insisted on Thorpe's acceptance of an
even thousand of it. With this money in hand, the latter felt justified in
taking a vacation for the purpose of visiting his sister, so in two days
after the signing of the check he walked up the straight garden path that
led to Renwick's home.</p>
<p>It was a little painted frame house, back from the street, fronted by a
precise bit of lawn, with a willow bush at one corner. A white picket
fence effectually separated it from a broad, shaded, not unpleasing
street. An osage hedge and a board fence respectively bounded the side and
back.</p>
<p>Under the low porch Thorpe rang the bell at a door flanked by two long,
narrow strips of imitation stained glass. He entered then a little dark
hall from which the stairs rose almost directly at the door, containing
with difficulty a hat-rack and a table on which rested a card tray with
cards. In the course of greeting an elderly woman, he stepped into the
parlor. This was a small square apartment carpeted in dark Brussels, and
stuffily glorified in the bourgeois manner by a white marble mantel-piece,
several pieces of mahogany furniture upholstered in haircloth, a table on
which reposed a number of gift books in celluloid and other fancy
bindings, an old-fashioned piano with a doily and a bit of china statuary,
a cabinet or so containing such things as ore specimens, dried seaweed and
coins, and a spindle-legged table or two upholding glass cases garnished
with stuffed birds and wax flowers. The ceiling was so low that the heavy
window hangings depended almost from the angle of it and the walls.</p>
<p>Thorpe, by some strange freak of psychology, suddenly recalled a wild,
windy day in the forest. He had stood on the top of a height. He saw again
the sharp puffs of snow, exactly like the smoke from bursting shells,
where a fierce swoop of the storm struck the laden tops of pines; the
dense swirl, again exactly like smoke but now of a great fire, that marked
the lakes. The picture super-imposed itself silently over this stuffy
bourgeois respectability, like the shadow of a dream. He heard plainly
enough the commonplace drawl of the woman before him offering him the
platitudes of her kind.</p>
<p>"You are lookin' real well, Mr. Thorpe," she was saying, "an' I just know
Helen will be glad to see you. She had a hull afternoon out to-day and
won't be back to tea. Dew set and tell me about what you've been a-doin'
and how you're a-gettin' along."</p>
<p>"No, thank you, Mrs. Renwick," he replied, "I'll come back later. How is
Helen?"</p>
<p>"She's purty well; and sech a nice girL I think she's getting right
handsome."</p>
<p>"Can you tell me where she went?"</p>
<p>But Mrs. Renwick did not know. So Thorpe wandered about the maple-shaded
streets of the little town.</p>
<p>For the purposes he had in view five hundred dollars would be none too
much. The remaining five hundred he had resolved to invest in his sister's
comfort and happiness. He had thought the matter over and come to his
decision in that secretive, careful fashion so typical of him, working
over every logical step of his induction so thoroughly that it ended by
becoming part of his mental fiber. So when he reached the conclusion it
had already become to him an axiom. In presenting it as such to his
sister, he never realized that she had not followed with him the logical
steps, and so could hardly be expected to accept the conclusion
out-of-hand.</p>
<p>Thorpe wished to give his sister the best education possible in the
circumstances. She was now nearly eighteen years old. He knew likewise
that he would probably experience a great deal of difficulty in finding
another family which would afford the young girl quite the same equality
coupled with so few disadvantages. Admitted that its level of intellect
and taste was not high, Mrs. Renwick was on the whole a good influence.
Helen had not in the least the position of servant, but of a daughter. She
helped around the house; and in return she was fed, lodged and clothed for
nothing.</p>
<p>So though the money might have enabled Helen to live independently in a
modest way for a year or so, Thorpe preferred that she remain where she
was. His game was too much a game of chance. He might find himself at the
end of the year without further means. Above all things he wished to
assure Helen's material safety until such time as he should be quite
certain of himself.</p>
<p>In pursuance of this idea he had gradually evolved what seemed to him an
excellent plan. He had already perfected it by correspondence with Mrs.
Renwick. It was, briefly, this: he, Thorpe, would at once hire a servant
girl, who would make anything but supervision unnecessary in so small a
household. The remainder of the money he had already paid for a year's
tuition in the Seminary of the town. Thus Helen gained her leisure and an
opportunity for study; and still retained her home in case of reverse.</p>
<p>Thorpe found his sister already a young lady. After the first delight of
meeting had passed, they sat side by side on the haircloth sofa and took
stock of each other.</p>
<p>Helen had developed from the school child to the woman. She was a handsome
girl, possessed of a slender, well-rounded form, deep hazel eyes with the
level gaze of her brother, a clean-cut patrician face, and a thorough-bred
neatness of carriage that advertised her good blood. Altogether a figure
rather aloof, a face rather impassive; but with the possibility of passion
and emotion, and a will to back them.</p>
<p>"Oh, but you're tanned and—and BIG!" she cried, kissing her brother.
"You've had such a strange winter, haven't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes," he replied absently.</p>
<p>Another man would have struck her young imagination with the wild, free
thrill of the wilderness. Thus he would have gained her sympathy and
understanding. Thorpe was too much in earnest.</p>
<p>"Things came a little better than I thought they were going to, toward the
last," said he, "and I made a little money."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm so glad!" she cried. "Was it much?"</p>
<p>"No, not much," he answered. The actual figures would have been so much
better! "I've made arrangements with Mrs. Renwick to hire a servant girl,
so you will have all your time free; and I have paid a year's tuition for
you in the Seminary."</p>
<p>"Oh!" said the girl, and fell silent.</p>
<p>After a time, "Thank you very much, Harry dear." Then after another
interval, "I think I'll go get ready for supper."</p>
<p>Instead of getting ready for supper, she paced excitedly up and down her
room.</p>
<p>"Oh, why DIDN'T he say what he was about?" she cried to herself. "Why
didn't he! Why didn't he!"</p>
<p>Next morning she opened the subject again.</p>
<p>"Harry, dear," said she, "I have a little scheme, and I want to see if it
is not feasible. How much will the girl and the Seminary cost?"</p>
<p>"About four hundred dollars."</p>
<p>"Well now, see, dear. With four hundred dollars I can live for a year very
nicely by boarding with some girls I know who live in a sort of a club;
and I could learn much more by going to the High School and continuing
with some other classes I am interested in now. Why see, Harry!" she
cried, all interest. "We have Professor Carghill come twice a week to
teach us English, and Professor Johns, who teaches us history, and we hope
to get one or two more this winter. If I go to the Seminary, I'll have to
miss all that. And Harry, really I don't want to go to the Seminary. I
don't think I should like it. I KNOW I shouldn't."</p>
<p>"But why not live here, Helen?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Because I'm TIRED of it!" she cried; "sick to the soul of the stuffiness,
and the glass cases, and the—the GOODNESS of it!"</p>
<p>Thorpe remembered his vision of the wild, wind-tossed pines, and sighed.
He wanted very, very much to act in accordance with his sister's desires,
although he winced under the sharp hurt pang of the sensitive man whose
intended kindness is not appreciated. The impossibility of complying,
however, reacted to shut his real ideas and emotions the more inscrutably
within him.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid you would not find the girls' boarding-club scheme a good one,
Helen," said he. "You'd find it would work better in theory than in
practice."</p>
<p>"But it has worked with the other girls!" she cried.</p>
<p>"I think you would be better off here."</p>
<p>Helen bravely choked back her disappointment.</p>
<p>"I might live here, but let the Seminary drop, anyway. That would save a
good deal," she begged. "I'd get quite as much good out of my work
outside, and then we'd have all that money besides."</p>
<p>"I don't know; I'll see," replied Thorpe. "The mental discipline of
class-room work might be a good thing."</p>
<p>He had already thought of this modification himself, but with his
characteristic caution, threw cold water on the scheme until he could
ascertain definitely whether or not it was practicable. He had already
paid the tuition for the year, and was in doubt as to its repayment. As a
matter of fact, the negotiation took about two weeks.</p>
<p>During that time Helen Thorpe went through her disappointment and emerged
on the other side. Her nature was at once strong and adaptable. One by one
she grappled with the different aspects of the case, and turned them the
other way. By a tour de force she actually persuaded herself that her own
plan was not really attractive to her. But what heart-breaks and tears
this cost her, only those who in their youth have encountered such
absolute negations of cherished ideas can guess.</p>
<p>Then Thorpe told her.</p>
<p>"I've fixed it, Helen," said he. "You can attend the High School and the
classes, if you please. I have put the two hundred and fifty dollars out
at interest for you."</p>
<p>"Oh, Harry!" she cried reproachfully. "Why didn't you tell me before!"</p>
<p>He did not understand; but the pleasure of it had all faded. She no longer
felt enthusiasm, nor gratitude, nor anything except a dull feeling that
she had been unnecessarily discouraged. And on his side, Thorpe was
vaguely wounded.</p>
<p>The days, however, passed in the main pleasurably for them both. They were
fond of one another. The barrier slowly rising between them was not yet
cemented by lack of affection on either side, but rather by lack of belief
in the other's affection. Helen imagined Thorpe's interest in her becoming
daily more perfunctory. Thorpe fancied his sister cold, unreasoning, and
ungrateful. As yet this was but the vague dust of a cloud. They could not
forget that, but for each other, they were alone in the world. Thorpe
delayed his departure from day to day, making all the preparations he
possibly could at home.</p>
<p>Finally Helen came on him busily unpacking a box which a dray had left at
the door. He unwound and laid one side a Winchester rifle, a variety of
fishing tackle, and some other miscellanies of the woodsman. Helen was
struck by the beauty of the sporting implements.</p>
<p>"Oh, Harry!" she cried, "aren't they fine! What are you going to do with
them?"</p>
<p>"Going camping," replied Thorpe, his head in the excelsior.</p>
<p>"When?"</p>
<p>"This summer."</p>
<p>Helen's eyes lit up with a fire of delight. "How nice! May I go with you?"
she cried.</p>
<p>Thorpe shook his head.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid not, little girl. It's going to be a hard trip a long ways
from anywhere. You couldn't stand it."</p>
<p>"I'm sure I could. Try me."</p>
<p>"No," replied Thorpe. "I know you couldn't. We'll be sleeping on the
ground and going on foot through much extremely difficult country."</p>
<p>"I wish you'd take me somewhere," pursued Helen. "I can't get away this
summer unless you do. Why don't you camp somewhere nearer home, so I can
go?"</p>
<p>Thorpe arose and kissed her tenderly. He was extremely sorry that he could
not spend the summer with his sister, but he believed likewise that their
future depended to a great extent on this very trip. But he did not say
so.</p>
<p>"I can't, little girl; that's all. We've got our way to make."</p>
<p>She understood that he considered the trip too expensive for them both. At
this moment a paper fluttered from the excelsior. She picked it up. A
glance showed her a total of figures that made her gasp.</p>
<p>"Here is your bill," she said with a strange choke in her voice, and left
the room.</p>
<p>"He can spend sixty dollars on his old guns; but he can't afford to let me
leave this hateful house," she complained to the apple tree. "He can go
'way off camping somewhere to have a good time, but he leaves me
sweltering in this miserable little town all summer. I don't care if he IS
supporting me. He ought to. He's my brother. Oh, I wish I were a man; I
wish I were dead!"</p>
<p>Three days later Thorpe left for the north. He was reluctant to go. When
the time came, he attempted to kiss Helen good-by. She caught sight of the
rifle in its new leather and canvas case, and on a sudden impulse which
she could not explain to herself, she turned away her face and ran into
the house. Thorpe, vaguely hurt, a little resentful, as the genuinely
misunderstood are apt to be, hesitated a moment, then trudged down the
street. Helen too paused at the door, choking back her grief.</p>
<p>"Harry! Harry!" she cried wildly; but it was too late.</p>
<p>Both felt themselves to be in the right. Each realized this fact in the
other. Each recognized the impossibility of imposing his own point of view
over the other's.</p>
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