<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Promised Land </h2>
<p>Perhaps there were ten of them—these galloping dots were hard to
count—down in the distant bottom across the river. Their swiftly
moving dust hung with them close, thinning to a yellow veil when they
halted short. They clustered a moment, then parted like beads, and went
wide asunder on the plain. They veered singly over the level, merged in
twos and threes, apparently racing, shrank together like elastic, and
broke ranks again to swerve over the stretching waste. From this visioned
pantomime presently came a sound, a tiny shot. The figures were too far
for discerning which fired it. It evidently did no harm, and was repeated
at once. A babel of diminutive explosions followed, while the horsemen
galloped on in unexpected circles. Soon, for no visible reason, the dots
ran together, bunching compactly. The shooting stopped, the dust rose
thick again from the crowded hoofs, cloaking the group, and so passed back
and was lost among the silent barren hills.</p>
<p>Four emigrants had watched this from the high bleak rim of the Big Bend.
They stood where the flat of the desert broke and tilted down in grooves
and bulges deep to the lurking Columbia. Empty levels lay opposite,
narrowing up into the high country.</p>
<p>"That's the Colville Reservation across the river from us," said the man.</p>
<p>"Another!" sighed his wife.</p>
<p>"The last Indians we'll strike. Our trail to the Okanagon goes over a
corner of it."</p>
<p>"We're going to those hills?" The mother looked at her little girl and
back where the cloud had gone.</p>
<p>"Only a corner, Liza. The ferry puts us over on it, and we've got to go by
the ferry or stay this side of the Columbia. You wouldn't want to start a
home here?"</p>
<p>They had driven twenty-one hundred miles at a walk. Standing by them were
the six horses with the wagon, and its tunneled roof of canvas shone
duskily on the empty verge of the wilderness. A dry windless air hung over
the table-land of the Big Bend, but a sound rose from somewhere, floating
voluminous upon the silence, and sank again.</p>
<p>"Rapids!" The man pointed far up the giant rut of the stream to where a
streak of white water twinkled at the foot of the hills. "We've struck the
river too high," he added.</p>
<p>"Then we don't cross here?" said the woman, quickly.</p>
<p>"No. By what they told me the cabin and the ferry ought to be five miles
down."</p>
<p>Her face fell. "Only five miles! I was wondering, John—Wouldn't
there be a way round for the children to—"</p>
<p>"Now, mother," interrupted the husband, "that ain't like you. We've
crossed plenty Indian reservations this trip already."</p>
<p>"I don't want to go round," the little girl said. "Father, don't make me
go round."</p>
<p>Mart, the boy, with a loose hook of hair hanging down to his eyes from his
hat, did not trouble to speak. He had been disappointed in the westward
journey to find all the Indians peaceful. He knew which way he should go
now, and he went to the wagon to look once again down the clean barrel of
his rifle.</p>
<p>"Why, Nancy, you don't like Indians?" said her mother.</p>
<p>"Yes, I do. I like chiefs."</p>
<p>Mrs. Clallam looked across the river. "It was so strange, John, the way
they acted. It seems to get stranger, thinking about it."</p>
<p>"They didn't see us. They didn't have a notion—"</p>
<p>"But if we're going right over?"</p>
<p>"We're not going over there, Liza. That quick water's the Mahkin Rapids,
and our ferry's clear down below from this place."</p>
<p>"What could they have been after, do you think?"</p>
<p>"Those chaps? Oh, nothing, I guess. They weren't killing anybody."</p>
<p>"Playing cross-tag," said Mart.</p>
<p>"I'd like to know, John, how you know they weren't killing anybody. They
might have been trying to."</p>
<p>"Then we're perfectly safe, Liza. We can set and let 'em kill us all day."</p>
<p>"Well, I don't think it's any kind of way to behave, running around
shooting right off your horse."</p>
<p>"And Fourth of July over too," said Mart from the wagon. He was putting
cartridges into the magazine of his Winchester. His common-sense told him
that those horsemen would not cross the river, but the notion of a night
attack pleased the imagination of young sixteen.</p>
<p>"It was the children," said Mrs. Clallam. "And nobody's getting me any
wood. How am I going to cook supper? Stir yourselves!"</p>
<p>They had carried water in the wagon, and father and son went for wood.
Some way down the hill they came upon a gully with some dead brush, and
climbed back with this. Supper was eaten on the ground, the horses were
watered, given grain, and turned loose to find what pickings they might in
the lean growth; and dusk had not turned to dark when the emigrants were
in their beds on the soft dust. The noise of the rapids dominated the air
with distant sonority, and the children slept at once, the boy with his
rifle along his blanket's edge. John Clallam lay till the moon rose hard
and brilliant, and then quietly, lest his wife should hear from her bed by
the wagon, went to look across the river. Where the downward slope began
he came upon her. She had been watching for some time. They were the only
objects in that bald moonlight. No shrub grew anywhere that reached to the
waist, and the two figures drew together on the lonely hill. They stood
hand in hand and motionless, except that the man bent over the woman and
kissed her. When she spoke of Iowa they had left, he talked of the new
region of their hopes, the country that lay behind the void hills
opposite, where it would not be a struggle to live. He dwelt on the home
they would make, and her mood followed his at last, till husband and wife
were building distant plans together. The Dipper had swung low when he
remarked that they were a couple of fools, and they went back to their
beds. Cold came over the ground, and their musings turned to dreams. Next
morning both were ashamed of their fears.</p>
<p>By four the wagon was on the move. Inside, Nancy's voice was heard
discussing with her mother whether the school-teacher where they were
going to live now would have a black dog with a white tail, that could
swim with a basket in his mouth. They crawled along the edge of the vast
descent, making slow progress, for at times the valley widened and they
receded far from the river, and then circuitously drew close again where
the slant sank abruptly. When the ferryman's cabin came in sight, the
canvas interior of the wagon was hot in the long-risen sun. The lay of the
land had brought them close above the stream, but no one seemed to be at
the cabin on the other side, nor was there any sign of a ferry. Groves of
trees lay in the narrow folds of the valley, and the water swept black
between untenanted shores. Nothing living could be seen along the scant
levels of the bottom-land. Yet there stood the cabin as they had been
told, the only one between the rapids and the Okanagon; and bright in the
sun the Colville Reservation confronted them. They came upon tracks going
down over the hill, marks of wagons and horses, plain in the soil, and
charred sticks, with empty cans, lying where camps had been. Heartened by
this proof that they were on the right road, John Clallam turned his
horses over the brink. The slant steepened suddenly in a hundred yards,
tilting the wagon so no brake or shoe would hold it if it moved farther.</p>
<p>"All out!" said Clallam. "Either folks travel light in this country or
they unpack." He went down a little way. "That's the trail too," he said.
"Wheel marks down there, and the little bushes are snapped off."</p>
<p>Nancy slipped out. "I'm unpacked," said she. "Oh, what a splendid hill to
go down! We'll go like anything."</p>
<p>"Yes, that surely is the trail," Clallam pursued. "I can see away down
where somebody's left a wheel among them big stones. But where does he
keep his ferry-boat? And where does he keep himself?"</p>
<p>"Now, John, if it's here we're to go down, don't you get to studying over
something else. It'll be time enough after we're at the bottom. Nancy,
here's your chair." Mrs. Clallam began lifting the lighter things from the
wagon.</p>
<p>"Mart," said the father, "we'll have to chain lock the wheels after we're
empty. I guess we'll start with the worst. You and me'll take the stove
apart and get her down somehow. We're in luck to have open country and no
timber to work through. Drop that bedding mother! Yourself is all you're
going to carry. We'll pack that truck on the horses."</p>
<p>"Then pack it now and let me start first. I'll make two trips while you're
at the stove."</p>
<p>"There's the man!" said Nancy.</p>
<p>A man—a white man—was riding up the other side of the river.
Near the cabin he leaned to see something on the ground. Ten yards more
and he was off the horse and picked up something and threw it away. He
loitered along, picking up and throwing till he was at the door. He pushed
it open and took a survey of the interior. Then he went to his horse, and
when they saw him going away on the road he had come, they set up a
shouting, and Mart fired a signal. The rider dived from his saddle and
made headlong into the cabin, where the door clapped to like a trap.
Nothing happened further, and the horse stood on the bank.</p>
<p>"That's the funniest man I ever saw," said Nancy.</p>
<p>"They're all funny over there," said Mart. "I'll signal him again." But
the cabin remained shut, and the deserted horse turned, took a few first
steels of freedom, then trotted briskly down the river.</p>
<p>"Why, then, he don't belong there at all," said Nancy.</p>
<p>"Wait, child, till we know something about it."</p>
<p>"She's liable to be right, Liza. The horse, anyway, don't belong, or he'd
not run off. That's good judgment, Nancy. Right good for a little girl."</p>
<p>"I am six years old," said Nancy, "and I know lots more than that."</p>
<p>"Well, let's get mother and the bedding started down. It'll be noon before
we know it."</p>
<p>There were two pack-saddles in the wagon, ready against such straits as
this. The rolls were made, balanced as side packs, and circled with the
swing-ropes, loose cloths, clothes, frying-pans, the lantern, and the axe
tossed in to fill the gap in the middle, canvas flung over the whole, and
the diamond-hitch hauled taut on the first pack, when a second rider
appeared across the river. He came out of a space between the opposite
hills, into which the trail seemed to turn, and he was leading the first
man's horse. The heavy work before them was forgotten, and the Clallams
sat down in a row to watch.</p>
<p>"He's stealing it," said Mrs. Clallam.</p>
<p>"Then the other man will come out and catch him," said Nancy.</p>
<p>Mart corrected them. "A man never steals horses that way. He drives them
up in the mountains, where the owner don't travel much."</p>
<p>The new rider had arrived at the bank and came steadily along till
opposite the door, where he paused and looked up and down the river.</p>
<p>"See him stoop," said Clallam the father. "He's seen the tracks don't go
further."</p>
<p>"I guess he's after the other one," added Clallam the son.</p>
<p>"Which of them is the ferry-man?" said Mrs. Clallam.</p>
<p>The man had got off and gone straight inside the cabin. In the black of
the doorway appeared immediately the first man, dangling in the grip of
the other, who kicked him along to the horse. There the victim mounted his
own animal and rode back down the river. The chastiser was returning to
the cabin, when Mart fired his rifle. The man stopped short, saw the
emigrants, and waved his hand. He dismounted and came to the edge of the
water. They could hear he was shouting to them, but it was too far for the
words to carry. From a certain reiterated cadence, he seemed to be saying
one thing. John and Mart tried to show they did not understand, and
indicated their wagon, walking to it and getting aboard. On that the
stranger redoubled his signs and shootings, ran to the cabin, where he
opened and shut the door several times, came back, and pointed to the
hills.</p>
<p>"He's going away, and can't ferry us over," said Mrs. Clallam.</p>
<p>"And the other man thought he'd gone," said Nancy, "and he came and caught
him in his house."</p>
<p>"This don't suit me," Clallam remarked. "Mart, we'll go to the shore and
talk to him."</p>
<p>When the man saw them descending the hill, he got on his horse and swam
the stream. It carried him below, but he was waiting for them when they
reached the level. He was tall, shambling, and bony, and roved over them
with a pleasant, restless eye.</p>
<p>"Good-morning," said he. "Fine weather. I was baptized Edward Wilson, but
you inquire for Wild-Goose Jake. Them other names are retired and
pensioned. I expect you seen me kick him?"</p>
<p>"Couldn't help seeing."</p>
<p>"Oh, I ain't blamin' you, son, not a bit, I ain't. He can't bile water
without burnin' it, and his toes turns in, and he's blurry round the
finger-nails. He's jest kultus, he is. Hev some?" With a furtive smile
that often ran across his lips, he pulled out a flat bottle, and all took
an acquaintanceship swallow, while the Clallams explained their journey.
"How many air there of yu' slidin' down the hill?" he inquired, shifting
his eye to the wagon.</p>
<p>"I've got my wife and little girl up there. That's all of us."</p>
<p>"Ladies along! Then I'll step behind this bush." He was dragging his feet
from his waterlogged boots. "Hear them suck now?" he commented. "Didn't
hev to think about a wetting onced. But I ain't young any more. There, I
guess I ain't caught a chill." He had whipped his breeches off and spread
them on the sand. "Now you arrive down this here hill from Ioway, and says
you: 'Where's that ferry? 'Ain't we hit the right spot?' Well, that's what
you hev hit. You're all right, and the spot is hunky-dory, and it's the
durned old boat hez made the mistake, begosh! A cloud busted in this
country, and she tore out fer the coast, and the joke's on her! You'd
ought to hev heerd her cable snap! Whoosh, if that wire didn't screech!
Jest last week it was, and the river come round the corner on us in a wave
four feet high, same as a wall. I was up here on business, and seen the
whole thing. So the ferry she up and bid us good-bye, and lit out for
Astoria with her cargo. Beggin' pardon, hev you tobacco, for mine's in my
wet pants? Twenty-four hogs and the driver, and two Sheeny drummers bound
to the mines with brass jew'lry, all gone to hell, for they didn't near
git to Astoria. They sank in the sight of all, as we run along the bank. I
seen their arms wave, and them hogs rolling over like 'taters bilin' round
in the kettle." Wild-Goose Jake's words came slow and went more slowly as
he looked at the river and spoke, but rather to himself. "It warn't long,
though. I expect it warn't three minutes till the water was all there was
left there. My stars, what a lot of it! And I might hev been part of that
cargo, easy as not. Freight behind time was all that come between me and
them that went. So, we'd hev gone bobbin' down that flood, me and my
piah-chuck."</p>
<p>"Your piah-chuck?" Mart inquired.</p>
<p>The man faced the boy like a rat, but the alertness faded instantly from
his eye, and his lip slackened into a slipshod smile. "Why, yes, sonny, me
and my grub-stake. You've been to school, I'll bet, but they didn't learn
yu' Chinook, now, did they? Chinook's the lingo us white folks trade in
with the Siwashes, and we kinder falls into it, talking along. I was
thinkin' how but for delay me and my grubstake—provisions, ye know—that
was consigned to me clear away at Spokane, might hev been drownded along
with them hogs and Hebrews. That's what the good folks calls a
dispensation of the Sauklee Tyee!—Providence, ye know, in Chinook.
'One shall be taken and the other left.' And that's what beats me—they
got left; and I'm a bigger sinner than them drummers, for I'm ten years
older than they was. And the poor hogs was better than any of us. That
can't be gainsaid. Oh no! oh no!"</p>
<p>Mart laughed.</p>
<p>"I mean it, son. Some day such thoughts will come to you." He stared at
the river unsteadily with his light gray eyes.</p>
<p>"Well, if the ferry's gone," said John Clallam, getting on his legs,
"we'll go on down to the next one."</p>
<p>"Hold on! hold on! Did you never hear tell of a raft? I'll put you folks
over this river. Wait till I git my pants on," said he, stalking nimbly to
where they lay.</p>
<p>"It's just this way," Clallam continued; "we're bound for the upper
Okanagon country, and we must get in there to build our cabin before cold
weather."</p>
<p>"Don't you worry about that. It'll take you three days to the next ferry,
while you and me and the boy kin build a raft right here by to-morrow
noon. You hev an axe, I expect? Well, here is timber close, and your trail
takes over to my place on the Okanagon, where you've got another crossin'
to make. And all this time we're keeping the ladies waitin' up the hill!
We'll talk business as we go along; and, see here, if I don't suit yu', or
fail in my bargain, you needn't to pay me a cent."</p>
<p>He began climbing, and on the way they came to an agreement. Wild-Goose
Jake bowed low to Mrs. Clallam, and as low to Nancy, who held her mother's
dress and said nothing, keeping one finger in her mouth. All began
emptying the wagon quickly, and tins of baking-powder, with rocking-chairs
and flowered quilts, lay on the hill. Wild-Goose Jake worked hard, and
sustained a pleasant talk by himself. His fluency was of an eagerness that
parried interruption or inquiry.</p>
<p>"So you've come acrosst the Big Bend! Ain't it a cosey place? Reminds me
of them medicine pictures, 'Before and After Using.' The Big Bend's the
way this world looked before using—before the Bible fixed it up, ye
know. Ever seen specimens of Big Bend produce, ma'am? They send 'em East.
Grain and plums and such. The feller that gathered them curiosities hed
hunt forty square miles apiece for 'em. But it's good-payin' policy, and
it fetches lots of settlers to the Territory. They come here hummin' and
walks around the wilderness, and 'Where's the plums?' says they. 'Can't
you see I'm busy?' says the land agent; and out they goes. But you needn't
to worry, ma'am. The country where you're goin' ain't like that. There's
water and timber and rich soil and mines. Billy Moon has gone there—he's
the man run the ferry. When she wrecked, he pulled his freight for the new
mines at Loop Loop."</p>
<p>"Did the man live in the little house?" said Nancy.</p>
<p>"Right there, miss. And nobody lives there any more, so you take it if
you're wantin' a place of your own."</p>
<p>"What made you kick the other man if it wasn't your house?"</p>
<p>"Well, now, if it ain't a good one on him to hev you see that! I'll tell
him a little girl seen that, and maybe he'll feel the disgrace. Only he's
no account, and don't take any experience the reg'lar way. He's nigh onto
thirty, and you'll not believe me, I know, but he ain't never even learned
to spit right."</p>
<p>"Is he yours?" inquired Nancy.</p>
<p>"Gosh! no, miss—beggin' pardon. He's jest workin' for me."</p>
<p>"Did he know you were coming to kick him when he hid?"</p>
<p>"Hid? What's that?" The man's eyes narrowed again into points. "You folks
seen him hide?" he said to Clallam.</p>
<p>"Why, of course; didn't he say anything?"</p>
<p>"He didn't get much chance," muttered Jake. "What did he hide at?"</p>
<p>"Us."</p>
<p>"You, begosh!"</p>
<p>"I guess so," said Mart. "We took him for the ferry-man, and when he
couldn't hear us—"</p>
<p>"What was he doin'?"</p>
<p>"Just riding along. And so I fired to signal him, and he flew into the
door."</p>
<p>"So you fired, and he flew into the door. Oh, h'm." Jake continued to pack
the second horse, attending carefully to the ropes. "I never knowed he was
that weak in the upper story," he said, in about five minutes. "Knew his
brains was tenas, but didn't suspect he were that weak in the upper story.
You're sure he didn't go in till he heerd your gun?"</p>
<p>"He'd taken a look and was going away," said Mart.</p>
<p>"Now ain't some people jest odd! Now you follow me, and I'll tell you
folks what I'd figured he'd been at. Billy Moon he lived in that cabin,
yu' see. And he had his stuff there, yu, see, and run the ferry, and a
kind of a store. He kept coffee and canned goods and star-plug and this
and that to supply the prospectin' outfits that come acrosst on his ferry
on the trail to the mines. Then a cloud-burst hits his boat and his job's
spoiled on the river, and he quits for the mines, takin' his stuff along—do
you follow me? But he hed to leave some, and he give me the key, and I was
to send the balance after him next freight team that come along my way.
Leander—that's him I was kickin'—he knowed about it, and he'll
steal a hot stove he's that dumb. He knowed there was stuff here of Billy
Moon's. Well, last night we hed some horses stray, and I says to him,
'Andy, you get up by daylight and find them.' And he gits. But by seven
the horses come in all right of theirselves, and Mr. Leander he was
missin'; and says I to myself, 'I'll ketch you, yu' blamed hobo.' And I
thought I had ketched him, yu' see. Weren't that reasonable of me?
Wouldn't any of you folks hev drawed that conclusion?" The man had fallen
into a wheedling tone as he studied their faces. "Jest put yourselves in
my place," he said.</p>
<p>"Then what was he after?" said Mart.</p>
<p>"Stealin'. But he figured he'd come again."</p>
<p>"He didn't like my gun much."</p>
<p>"Guns always skeers him when he don't know the parties shootin'. That's
his dumbness. Maybe he thought I was after him; he's jest that
distrustful. Begosh! we'll have the laugh on him when he finds he run from
a little girl."</p>
<p>"He didn't wait to see who he was running from," said Mart.</p>
<p>"Of course he didn't. Andy hears your gun and he don't inquire further,
but hits the first hole he kin crawl into. That's Andy! That's the kind of
boy I hev to work for me. All the good ones goes where you're goin', where
the grain grows without irrigation and the blacktail deer comes out on the
hill and asks yu' to shoot 'em for dinner. Who's ready for the bottom? If
I stay talkin' the sun'll go down on us. Don't yu' let me get started
agin. Just you shet me off twiced anyway each twenty-four hours."</p>
<p>He began to descend with his pack-horse and the first load. All afternoon
they went up and down over the hot bare face of the hill, until the
baggage, heavy and light, was transported and dropped piecemeal on the
shore. The torn-out insides of their home littered the stones with
familiar shapes and colors, and Nancy played among them, visiting each
parcel and folded thing.</p>
<p>"There's the red table-cover!" she exclaimed, "and the big coffee-grinder.
And there's our table, and the hole Mart burned in it." She took a long
look at this. "Oh, how I wish I could see our pump!" she said, and began
to cry.</p>
<p>"You talk to her, mother," said Clallam. "She's tuckered out."</p>
<p>The men returned to bring the wagon. With chain-locked wheels, and tilted
half over by the cross slant of the mountain, it came heavily down,
reeling and sliding on the slippery yellow weeds, and grinding deep ruts
across the faces of the shelving beds of gravel. Jake guided it as he
could, straining back on the bits of the two hunched horses when their
hoofs glanced from the stones that rolled to the bottom; and the others
leaned their weight on a pole lodged between the spokes, making a balance
to the wagon, for it leaned the other way so far that at any jolt the two
wheels left the ground. When it was safe at the level of the stream, dusk
had come and a white flat of mist lay along the river, striping its course
among the gaunt hills. They slept without moving, and rose early to cut
logs, which the horses dragged to the shore. The outside trunks were
nailed and lashed with ropes, and sank almost below the surface with the
weight of the wood fastened crosswise on top. But the whole floated dry
with its cargo, and crossed clumsily on the quick-wrinkled current. Then
it brought the wagon; and the six horses swam. The force of the river had
landed them below the cabin, and when they had repacked there was too
little left of day to go on. Clallam suggested it was a good time to take
Moon's leavings over to the Okanagon, but Wild-Goose Jake said at once
that their load was heavy enough; and about this they could not change his
mind. He made a journey to the cabin by himself, and returned saying that
he had managed to lock the door.</p>
<p>"Father," said Mart, as they were harnessing next day, "I've been up
there. I went awful early. There's no lock to the door, and the cabin's
empty."</p>
<p>"I guessed that might be."</p>
<p>"There has been a lock pried off pretty lately. There was a lot of broken
bottles around everywheres, inside and out."</p>
<p>"What do you make out of it?" said Mart.</p>
<p>"Nothing yet. He wants to get us away, and I'm with him there. I want to
get up the Okanagon as soon as we can."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm takin' yu' the soonest way," said Wild-Goose Jake, behind them.
From his casual smile there was no telling what he had heard. "I'll put
your stuff acrosst the Okanagon to-morrow mornin'. But to-night
yourselves'll all be over, and the ladies kin sleep in my room."</p>
<p>The wagon made good time. The trail crossed easy valleys and over the
yellow grass of the hills, while now and then their guide took a
short-cut. He wished to get home, he said, since there could be no
estimating what Leander might be doing. While the sun was still well up in
the sky they came over a round knob and saw the Okanagon, blue in the
bright afternoon, and the cabin on its further bank. This was a roomier
building to see than common, and a hay-field was by it, and a bit of green
pasture, fenced in. Saddle-horses were tied in front, heads hanging and
feet knuckled askew with long waiting, and from inside an uneven, riotous
din whiffled lightly across the river and intervening meadow to the hill.</p>
<p>"If you'll excuse me," said Jake, "I'll jest git along ahead, and see what
game them folks is puttin' up on Andy. Likely as not he's weighin' 'em out
flour at two cents, with it costin' me two and a half on freightin' alone.
I'll hev supper ready time you ketch up."</p>
<p>He was gone at once, getting away at a sharp pace, till presently they
could see him swimming the stream. When he was in the cabin the sounds
changed, dropping off to one at a time, and expired. But when the riders
came out into the air, they leaned and collided at random, whirled their
arms, and, screaming till they gathered heart, charged with wavering
menace at the door. The foremost was flung from the sill, and he shot
along toppling and scraped his length in the dust, while the owner of the
cabin stood in the entrance. The Indian picked himself up, and at some
word of Jake's which the emigrants could half follow by the fierce lift of
his arm, all got on their horses and set up a wailing, like vultures
driven off. They went up the river a little and crossed, but did not come
down this side, and Mrs. Clallam was thankful when their evil noise had
died away up the valley. They had seen the wagon coming, but gave it no
attention. A man soon came over the river from the cabin, and was lounging
against a tree when the emigrants drew up at the margin.</p>
<p>"I don't know what you know," he whined defiantly from the tree, "but I'm
goin' to Cornwall, Connecticut, and I don't care who knows it." He sent a
cowed look at the cabin across the river.</p>
<p>"Get out of the wagon, Nancy," said Clallam. "Mart, help her down."</p>
<p>"I'm going back," said the man, blinking like a scolded dog. "I ain't
stayin' here for nobody. You can tell him I said so, too." Again his eye
slunk sidewise towards the cabin, and instantly back.</p>
<p>"While you're staying," said Mart, "you might as well give a hand here."</p>
<p>He came with alacrity, and made a shift of unhitching the horses. "I was
better off coupling freight cars on the Housatonic," he soon remarked. His
voice came shallow, from no deeper than his throat, and a peevish
apprehension rattled through it. "That was a good job. And I've had
better, too; forty, fifty, sixty dollars better."</p>
<p>"Shall we unpack the wagon?" Clallam inquired.</p>
<p>"I don't know. You ever been to New Milford? I sold shoes there.
Thirty-five dollars and board."</p>
<p>The emigrants attended to their affairs, watering the horses and driving
picket stakes. Leander uselessly followed behind them with conversation,
blinking and with lower lip sagged, showing a couple of teeth. "My
brother's in business in Pittsfield, Massachusetts," said he, "and I can
get a salary in Bridgeport any day I say so. That a Marlin?"</p>
<p>"No," said Mart. "It's a Winchester."</p>
<p>"I had a Marlin. He's took it from me. I'll bet you never got shot at."</p>
<p>"Anybody want to shoot you?" Mart inquired.</p>
<p>"Well and I guess you'll believe they did day before yesterday"</p>
<p>"If you're talking about up at that cabin, it was me."</p>
<p>Leander gave Mart a leer. "That won't do," said he. "He's put you up to
telling me that, and I'm going to Cornwall, Connecticut. I know what's
good for me, I guess."</p>
<p>"I tell you we were looking for the ferry, and I signalled you across the
river."</p>
<p>"No, no," said Leander. "I never seen you in my life. Don't you be like
him and take me for a fool."</p>
<p>"All right. Why did they want to murder you?"</p>
<p>"Why?" said the man, shrilly. "Why? Hadn't they broke in and filled
themselves up on his piah-chuck till they were crazy-drunk? And when I
came along didn't they—"</p>
<p>"When you came along they were nowhere near there," said Mart.</p>
<p>"Now you're going to claim it was me drunk it and scattered all them
bottles of his," screamed Leander, backing away. "I tell you I didn't. I
told him I didn't, and he knowed it well, too. But he's just that mean
when he's mad he likes to put a thing on me whether or no, when he never
seen me touch a drop of whiskey, nor any one else, neither. They were
riding and shooting loose over the country like they always do on a drunk.
And I'm glad they stole his stuff. What business had he to keep it at
Billy Moon's old cabin and send me away up there to see it was all right?
Let him do his own dirty work. I ain't going to break the laws on the
salary he pays me."</p>
<p>The Clallam family had gathered round Leander, who was stricken with
volubility. "It ain't once in a while, but it's every day and every week,"
he went on, always in a woolly scream. "And the longer he ain't caught the
bolder he gets, and puts everything that goes wrong on to me. Was it me
traded them for that liquor this afternoon? It was his squaw, Big Tracks,
and he knowed it well. He lets that mud-faced baboon run the house when
he's off, and I don't have the keys nor nothing, and never did have. But
of course he had to come in and say it was me just because he was mad
about having you see them Siwashes hollering around. And he come and shook
me where I was sittin', and oh, my, he knowed well the lie he was acting.
I bet I've got the marks on my neck now. See any red marks?" Leander
exhibited the back of his head, but the violence done him had evidently
been fleeting. "He'll be awful good to you, for he's that scared—"</p>
<p>Leander stood tremulously straight in silence, his lip sagging, as
Wild-Goose Jake called pleasantly from the other bank. "Come to supper,
you folks," said he. "Why, Andy, I told you to bring them across, and
you've let them picket their horses. Was you expectin' Mrs. Clallam to
take your arm and ford six feet of water?" For some reason his voice
sounded kind as he spoke to his assistant.</p>
<p>"Well, mother?" said Clallam.</p>
<p>"If it was not for Nancy, John—"</p>
<p>"I know, I know. Out on the shore here on this side would be a pleasanter
bedroom for you, but" (he looked up the valley) "I guess our friend's plan
is more sensible to-night."</p>
<p>So they decided to leave the wagon behind and cross to the cabin. The
horses put them with not much wetting to the other bank, where Jake, most
eager and friendly, hovered to meet his party, and when they were safe
ashore pervaded his premises in their behalf.</p>
<p>"Turn them horses into the pasture, Andy," said he, "and first feed 'em a
couple of quarts." It may have been hearing himself say this, but tone and
voice dropped to the confidential and his sentences came with a chuckle.
"Quarts to the horses and quarts to the Siwashes and a skookum pack of
trouble all round, Mrs. Clallam! If I hedn't a-came to stop it a while
ago, why about all the spirits that's in stock jest now was bein' traded
off for some blamed ponies the bears hev let hobble on the range
unswallered ever since I settled here. A store on a trail like this here,
ye see, it hez to keep spirits, of course; and—well, well! here's my
room; you ladies'll excuse, and make yourselves at home as well as you
can."</p>
<p>It was of a surprising neatness, due all to him, they presently saw; the
log walls covered with a sort of bunting that was also stretched across to
make a ceiling below the shingles of the roof; fresh soap and towels,
china service, a clean floor and bed, on the wall a print of some white
and red village among elms, with a covered bridge and the water running
over an apron-dam just above; and a rich smell of whiskey everywhere. "Fix
up as comfortable as yu' can," the host repeated, "and I'll see how Mrs.
Jake's tossin' the flapjacks. She's Injun, yu' know, and five years of
married life hadn't learned her to toss flapjacks. Now if I was you" (he
was lingering in the doorway) "I wouldn't shet that winder so quick. It
don't smell nice yet for ladies in here, and I'd hev liked to git the time
to do better for ye; but them Siwashes—well, of course, you folks
see how it is. Maybe it ain't always and only white men that patronizes
our goods. Uncle Sam is a long way off, and I don't say we'd ought to, but
when the cat's away, why the mice will, ye know—they most always
will."</p>
<p>There was a rattle of boards outside, at which he shut the door quickly,
and they heard him run. A light muttering came in at the window, and the
mother, peeping out, saw Andy fallen among a rubbish of crates and empty
cans, where he lay staring, while his two fists beat up and down like a
disordered toy. Wild-Goose Jake came, and having lifted him with great
tenderness, was laying him flat as Elizabeth Clallam hurried to his help.</p>
<p>"No, ma'am," he sighed, "you can't do nothing, I guess."</p>
<p>"Just let me go over and get our medicines."</p>
<p>"Thank you, ma'am," said Jake, and the pain on his face was miserable to
see; "there ain't no medicine. We're kind of used to this, Andy and me.
Maybe, if you wouldn't mind stayin' till he comes to—Why, a sick man
takes comfort at the sight of a lady."</p>
<p>When the fit had passed they helped him to his feet, and Jake led him
away.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jake made her first appearance upon the guests sitting down to their
meal, when she waited on table, passing busily forth from the kitchen with
her dishes. She had but three or four English words, and her best years
were plainly behind her; but her cooking was good, fried and boiled with
sticks of her own chopping, and she served with industry. Indeed, a squaw
is one of the few species of the domestic wife that survive today upon our
continent. Andy seemed now to keep all his dislike for her, and followed
her with a scowling eye, while he frequented Jake, drawing a chair to sit
next him when he smoked by the wall after supper, and sometimes watching
him with a sort of clouded affection upon his face. He did not talk, and
the seizure had evidently jarred his mind as well as his frame. When the
squaw was about lighting a lamp he brushed her arm in a childish way so
that the match went out, and set him laughing. She poured out a harangue
in Chinook, showing the dead match to Jake, who rose and gravely lighted
the lamp himself, Andy laughing more than ever. When Mrs. Clallam had
taken Nancy with her to bed, Jake walked John Clallam to the river-bank,
and looking up and down, spoke a little of his real mind.</p>
<p>"I guess you see how it is with me. Anyway, I don't commonly hev use for
stranger-folks in this house. But that little girl of yourn started cryin'
about not havin' the pump along that she'd been used to seein' in the yard
at home. And I says to myself, 'Look a-here, Jake, I don't care if they do
ketch on to you and yer blamed whiskey business. They're not the sort to
tell on you.' Gee! but that about the pump got me! And I says, 'Jake,
you're goin' to give them the best you hev got.' Why, that Big Bend desert
and lonesome valley of the Columbia hez chilled my heart in the days that
are gone when I weren't used to things; and the little girl hed came so
fur! And I knowed how she was a-feelin'."</p>
<p>He stopped, and seemed to be turning matters over.</p>
<p>"I'm much obliged to you," said Clallam.</p>
<p>"And your wife was jest beautiful about Andy. You've saw me wicked to
Andy. I am, and often, for I rile turruble quick, and God forgive me! But
when that boy gits at his meanness—yu've seen jest a touch of it—there's
scarcely livin' with him. It seems like he got reg'lar inspired. Some days
he'll lie—make up big lies to the fust man comes in at the door.
They ain't harmless, his lies ain't. Then he'll trick my woman, that's
real good to him; and I believe he'd lick whiskey up off the dirt. And
every drop is poison for him with his complaint. But I'd ought to
remember. You'd surely think I could remember, and forbear. Most likely he
made a big talk to you about that cabin."</p>
<p>John Clallam told him.</p>
<p>"Well, that's all true, for onced. I did think he'd been up to stealin'
that whiskey gradual, 'stead of fishin', the times he was out all day. And
the salary I give him"—Jake laughed a little—"ain't enough to
justify a man's breaking the law. I did take his rifle away when he tried
to shoot my woman. I guess it was Siwashes bruck into that cabin."</p>
<p>"I'm pretty certain of it," said Clallam.</p>
<p>"You? What makes you?"</p>
<p>John began the tale of the galloping dots, and Jake stopped walking to
listen the harder. "Yes," he said; "that's bad. That's jest bad. They hev
carried a lot off to drink. That's the worst."</p>
<p>He had little to say after this, but talked under his tongue as they went
to the house, where he offered a bed to Clallam and Mart. They would not
turn him out, so he showed them over to a haystack, where they crawled in
and went to sleep.</p>
<p>Most white men know when they have had enough whiskey. Most Indians do
not. This is a difference between the races of which government has taken
notice. Government says that "no ardent spirits shall be introduced under
any presence into the Indian country." It also says that the white man who
attempts to break this law "shall be punished by imprisonment for not more
than two years and by a fine of not more than three hundred dollars." It
further says that if any superintendent of Indian affairs has reason to
suspect a man, he may cause the "boats, stores, packages, wagons, sleds,
and places of deposit" of such person to be searched, and if ardent
spirits be found it shall be forfeit, together with the boats and all
other substances with it connected, one half to the informer and the other
half to the use of the United States. The courts and all legal machines
necessary for trial and punishment of offenders are oiled and ready; two
years is a long while in jail; three hundred dollars and confiscation
sounds heavy; altogether the penalty looks severe on the printed page—and
all the while there's no brisker success in our far West than selling
whiskey to Indians. Very few people know what the whiskey is made of, and
the Indian does not care. He drinks till he drops senseless. If he has
killed nobody and nobody him during the process, it is a good thing, for
then the matter ends with his getting sober and going home to his tent
till such happy time when he can put his hand on some further possession
to trade away. The white offender is caught now and then; but Okanagon
County lies pretty snug from the arm of the law. It's against Canada to
the north, and the empty county of Stevens to the east; south of it rushes
the Columbia, with the naked horrible Big Bend beyond, and to its west
rises a domain of unfooted mountains. There is law up in the top of it at
Conconully sometimes, but not much even to-day, for that is still a new
country, where flow the Methow, the Ashinola, and the Similikameen.</p>
<p>Consequently a cabin like Wild-Goose Jake's was a holiday place. The
blanketed denizens of the reservation crossed to it, and the citizens who
had neighboring cabins along the trail repaired here to spend what money
they had. As Mrs. Clallam lay in her bed she heard customers arrive. Two
or three loud voices spoke in English, and several Indians and squaws
seemed to be with the party, bantering in Chinook. The visitors were in
too strong force for Jake's word about coming some other night to be of
any avail.</p>
<p>"Open your cellar and quit your talk," Elizabeth heard, and next she heard
some door that stuck, pulled open with a shriek of the warped timber. Next
they were gambling, and made not much noise over it at first; but the
Indians in due time began to lose to the soberer whites, becoming
quarrelsome, and raising a clumsy disturbance, though it was plain the
whites had their own way and were feared. The voices rose, and soon there
was no moment that several were not shouting curses at once, till Mrs.
Clallam stopped her ears. She was still for a time, hearing only in a
muffled way, when all at once the smell of drink and tobacco, that had
sifted only a little through the cracks, grew heavy in the room, and she
felt Nancy shrink close to her side.</p>
<p>"Mother, mother," the child whispered, "what's that?"</p>
<p>It had gone beyond card-playing with the company in the saloon; they
seemed now to be having a savage horse-play, those on their feet tramping
in their scuffles upon others on the floor, who bellowed incoherently.
Elizabeth Clallam took Nancy in her arms and told her that nobody would
come where they were.</p>
<p>But the child was shaking. "Yes, they will," she whispered, in terror.
"They are!" And she began a tearless sobbing, holding her mother with her
whole strength.</p>
<p>A little sound came close by the bed, and Elizabeth's senses stopped so
that for half a minute she could not stir. She stayed rigid beneath the
quilt, and Nancy clung to her. Something was moving over the floor. It
came quite near, but turned, and its slight rustle crawled away towards
the window.</p>
<p>"Who is that?" demanded Mrs. Clallam, sitting up.</p>
<p>There was no answer, but the slow creeping continued, always close along
the floor, like the folds of stuff rubbing, and hands feeling their way in
short slides against the boards. She had no way to find where her husband
was sleeping, and while she thought of this and whether or not to rush out
at the door, the table was gently shaken, there was a drawer opened, and
some object fell.</p>
<p>"Only a thief," she said to herself, and in a sort of sharp joy cried out
her question again.</p>
<p>The singular broken voice of a woman answered, seemingly in fear.
"Match-es," it said; and "Match-es" said a second voice, pronouncing with
difficulty, like the first. She knew it was some of the squaws, and sprang
from the bed, asking what they were doing there. "Match-es," they
murmured; and when she had struck a light she saw how the two were
cringing, their blankets huddled round them. Their motionless black eyes
looked up at her from the floor where they lay sprawled, making no offer
to get up. It was clear to her from the pleading fear in the one word they
answered to whatever she said, that they had come here to hide from the
fury of the next room; and as she stood listening to this she would have
let them remain, but their escape had been noticed. A man burst into the
room, and at sight of her and Nancy stopped, and was blundering excuses,
when Jake caught his arm and had dragged him almost out, but he saw the
two on the floor; at this, getting himself free, he half swept the
crouching figures with his boot as they fled out of the room, and the door
was swung shut. Mrs. Clallam heard his violent words to the squaws for
daring to disturb the strangers, and there followed the heavy lashing of a
quirt, with screams and lamenting. No trouble came from the Indian
husbands, for they were stupefied on the ground, and when their
intelligences quickened enough for them to move, the punishment was long
over and no one in the house awake but Elizabeth and Nancy, seated
together in their bed, watching for the day. Mother and daughter heard
them rise to go out one by one, and the hoof-beats of their horses grew
distant up and down the river. As the rustling trees lighted and turned
transparent in the rising sun, Jake roused those that remained and got
them away. Later he knocked at the door.</p>
<p>"I hev a little raft fixed this morning," said he, "and I guess we can
swim the wagon over here."</p>
<p>"Whatever's quickest to take us from this place," Elizabeth answered.</p>
<p>"Breakfast'll be ready, ma'am, whenever you say."</p>
<p>"I am ready now. I shall want to start ferrying our things—Where's
Mr. Clallam? Tell him to come here."</p>
<p>"I will, ma'am. I'm sorry—"</p>
<p>"Tell Mr. Clallam to come here, please."</p>
<p>John had slept sound in his haystack, and heard nothing. "Well," he said,
after comforting his wife and Nancy, "you were better off in the room,
anyway. I'd not blame him so, Liza. How was he going to help it?"</p>
<p>But Elizabeth was a woman, and just now saw one thing alone: if selling
whiskey led to such things in this country, the man who sold it was much
worse than any mere law-breaker. John Clallam, being now a long time
married, made no argument. He was looking absently at the open drawer of a
table. "That's queer," he said, and picked up a tintype.</p>
<p>She had no curiosity for anything in that room, and he laid it in the
drawer again, his thoughts being taken up with the next step of their
journey, and what might be coming to them all.</p>
<p>During breakfast Jake was humble about the fright the ladies had received
in his house, explaining how he thought he had acted for the best; at
which Clallam and Mart said that in a rough country folks must look for
rough doings, and get along as well as they can; but Elizabeth said
nothing. The little raft took all but Nancy over the river to the wagon,
where they set about dividing their belongings in loads that could be
floated back, one at a time, and Jake returned to repair some of the
disorder that remained from the night at the cabin. John and Mart poled
the first cargo across, and while they were on the other side, Elizabeth
looked out of the wagon, where she was working alone, and saw five Indian
riders coming down the valley. The dust hung in the air they had rushed
through, and they swung apart and closed again as she had seen before; so
she looked for a rifle; but the firearms had gone over the Okanagon with
the first load. She got down and stood at the front wheel of the wagon,
confronting the riders when they pulled up their horses. One climbed
unsteadily from his saddle and swayed towards her.</p>
<p>"Drink!" said he, half friendly, and held out a bottle.</p>
<p>Elizabeth shook her head.</p>
<p>"Drink," he grunted again, pushing the bottle at her. "Piah-chuck!
Skookurn!" He had a slugglish animal grin, and when she drew back, tipped
the bottle into his mouth, and directly choked, so that his friends on
their horses laughed loud as he stood coughing. "Heap good," he remarked,
looking at Elizabeth, who watched his eyes swim with the plot of the
drink. "Where you come back?" he inquired, touching the wagon. "You cross
Okanagon? Me cross you; cross horses; cross all. Heap cheap. What yes?"</p>
<p>The others nodded. "Heap cheap," they said.</p>
<p>"We don't want you," said Elizabeth.</p>
<p>"No cross? Maybe he going cross you? What yes?"</p>
<p>Again Elizabeth nodded.</p>
<p>"Maybe he Jake?" pursued the Indian.</p>
<p>"Yes, he is. We don't want you."</p>
<p>"We cross you all same. He not."</p>
<p>The Indian spoke loud and thick, and Elizabeth looked over the river where
her husband was running with a rifle, and Jake behind him, holding a
warning hand on his arm. Jake called across to the Indians, who listened
sullenly, but got on their horses and went up the river.</p>
<p>"Now," said Jake to Clallam, "they ain't gone. Get your wife over here so
she kin set in my room till I see what kin be done."</p>
<p>John left him at once, and crossed on the raft. His wife was stepping on
it, when the noise and flight of riders descended along the other bank,
where Jake was waiting. They went in a circle, with hoarse shouts, round
the cabin as Mart with Nancy came from the pasture. The boy no sooner saw
them than he caught his sister up and carried her quickly away among the
corrals and sheds, where the two went out of sight.</p>
<p>"You stay here, Liza," her husband said. "I'll go back over."</p>
<p>But Mrs. Clallam laughed.</p>
<p>"Get ashore," he cried to her. "Quick!"</p>
<p>"Where you go, I go, John."</p>
<p>"What good, what good, in the name—"</p>
<p>"Then I'll get myself over," said she. And he seized her as she would have
jumped into the stream.</p>
<p>While they crossed, the Indians had tied their horses and rambled into the
cabin. Jake came from it to stop the Clallams.</p>
<p>"They're after your contract," said he, quietly. "They say they're going
to have the job of takin' the balance of your stuff that's left acrosst
the Okanagon over to this side."</p>
<p>"What did you say?" asked Mrs. Clallam.</p>
<p>"I set 'em up drinks to gain time."</p>
<p>"Do you want me there?" said Clallam.</p>
<p>"Begosh, no! That would mix things worse."</p>
<p>"Can't you make them go away?" Elizabeth inquired.</p>
<p>"Me and them, ye see, ma'am, we hev a sort of bargain they're to git
certain ferryin'. I can't make 'em savvy how I took charge of you. If you
want them—" He paused.</p>
<p>"We want them!" exclaimed Elizabeth. "If you're joking, it's a poor joke."</p>
<p>"It ain't no joke at all, ma'am." Jake's face grew brooding. "Of course
folks kin say who they'll be ferried by. And you may believe I'd rather do
it. I didn't look for jest this complication; but maybe I kin steer
through; and it's myself I've got to thank. Of course, if them Siwashes
did git your job, they'd sober up gittin' ready. And—"</p>
<p>The emigrants waited, but he did not go on with what was in his mind.
"It's all right," said he, in a brisk tone. "Whatever's a-comin's
a-comin'." He turned abruptly towards the door. "Keep yerselves away jest
now," he added, and went inside.</p>
<p>The parents sought their children, finding Mart had concealed Nancy in the
haystack. They put Mrs. Clallam also in a protected place, as a loud
altercation seemed to be rising at the cabin; this grew as they listened,
and Jake's squaw came running to hide herself. She could tell them
nothing, nor make them understand more than they knew; but she touched
John's rifle, signing to know if it were loaded, and was greatly relieved
when he showed her the magazine full of cartridges. The quarrelling had
fallen silent, but rose in a new gust of fierceness, sounding as if in the
open air and coming their way. No Indian appeared, however, and the noise
passed to the river, where the emigrants soon could hear wood being split
in pieces.</p>
<p>John risked a survey. "It's the raft," he said. "They're smashing it. Now
they're going back. Stay with the children, Liza."</p>
<p>"You're never going to that cabin?" she said.</p>
<p>"He's in a scrape, mother."</p>
<p>John started away, heedless of his wife's despair. At his coming the
Indians shouted and surrounded him, while he heard Jake say, "Drop your
gun and drink with them."</p>
<p>"Drink!" said Andy, laughing with the same screech he had made at the
match going out. "We re all going to Canaan, Connecticut."</p>
<p>Each Indian held a tin cup, and at the instant these were emptied they
were thrust towards Jake, who filled them again, going and coming through
a door that led a step or two down into a dark place which was half
underground. Once he was not quick, or was imagined to be refusing, for an
Indian raised his cup and drunkenly dashed it on Jake's head. Jake laughed
good-humoredly, and filled the cup.</p>
<p>"It's our one chance," said he to John as the Indian, propping himself by
a hand on the wall, offered the whiskey to Clallam.</p>
<p>"We cross you Okanagon," he said. "What yes?"</p>
<p>"Maybe you say no?" said another, pressing the emigrant to the wall.</p>
<p>A third interfered, saying something in their language, at which the other
two disagreed. They talked a moment with threatening rage till suddenly
all drew pistols. At this the two remaining stumbled among the group, and
a shot went into the roof. Jake was there in one step with a keg, that
they no sooner saw than they fell upon it, and the liquor jetted out as
they clinched, wrestling over the room till one lay on his back with his
mouth at the open bung. It was wrenched from him, and directly there was
not a drop more in it. They tilted it, and when none ran out, flung the
keg out of doors and crowded to the door of the dark place, where Jake
barred the way. "Don't take to that yet!" he said to Clallam, for John was
lifting his rifle.</p>
<p>"Piah-chuck!" yelled the Indians, scarcely able to stand. All other
thought had left them, and a new thought came to Jake. He reached for a
fresh keg, while they held their tin cups in the left hand and pistols in
the right, pushing so it was a slow matter to get the keg opened. They
were fast nearing the sodden stage, and one sank on the floor. Jake
glanced in at the door behind him, and filled the cups once again. While
all were drinking he went in the store-room and set more liquor open,
beckoning them to come as they looked up from the rims to which their lips
had been glued. They moved round behind the table, grasping it to keep on
their feet, with the one on the floor crawling among the legs of the rest.
When they were all inside, Jake leaped out and locked the door.</p>
<p>"They kin sleep now," said he. "Gunpowder won't be needed. Keep wide away
from in front."</p>
<p>There was a minute of stillness within, and then a groveling noise and
struggle. A couple of bullets came harmless through the door. Those inside
fought together as well as they could, while those outside listened as it
grew less, the bodies falling stupefied without further sound of rising.
One or two, still active, began striking at the boards with what heavy
thing they could find, until suddenly the blade of an axe crashed through.</p>
<p>"Keep away!" cried Jake. But Andy had leaped insanely in front of the
door, and fell dead with a bullet through him. With a terrible scream,
Jake flung himself at the place, and poured six shots through the panel;
then, as Clallam caught him, wrenched at the lock, and they saw inside.
Whiskey and blood dripped together, and no one was moving there. It was
liquor with some, and death with others, and all of it lay upon the guilty
soul of Jake.</p>
<p>"You deserve killing yourself," said Clallam.</p>
<p>"That's been attended to," replied Jake, and he reeled, for during his
fire some Indian had shot once more.</p>
<p>Clallam supported him to the room where his wife and Nancy had passed the
night, and laid him on the bed. "I'll get Mrs. Clallam," said he.</p>
<p>"If she'll be willin' to see me," said the wounded man, humbly.</p>
<p>She came, dazed beyond feeling any horror, or even any joy, and she did
what she could.</p>
<p>"It was seein' 'em hit Andy," said Jake. "Is Andy gone? Yes, I kin tell
he's gone from your face." He shut his eyes, and lay still so long a time
that they thought he might be dying now; but he moved at length, and
looked slowly round the wall till he saw the print of the village among
the elms and the covered bridge. His hand lifted to show them this.
"That's the road," said he. "Andy and me used to go fishin' acrosst that
bridge. Did you ever see the Housatonic River? I've fished a lot there.
Cornwall, Connecticut. The hills are pretty there. Then Andy got worse.
You look in that drawer." John remembered, and when he got out the
tintype, Jake stretched for it eagerly. "His mother and him, age ten," he
explained to Elizabeth, and held it for her to see, then studied the faces
in silence. "You kin tell it's Andy, can't yu'?" She told him yes. "That
was before we knowed he weren't—weren't goin' to grow up like the
other boys he played with. So after a while, when she was gone, I got
ashamed seein' Andy's friends makin' their way when he couldn't seem to,
and so I took him away where nobody hed ever been acquainted with us. I
was layin' money by to get him the best doctor in Europe. I 'ain't been a
good man."</p>
<p>A faintness mastered him, and Elizabeth would have put the picture on the
table, but his hand closed round it. They let him lie so, and Elizabeth
sat there, while John, with Mart, kept Nancy away till the horror in the
outer room was made invisible. They came and went quietly, and Jake seemed
in a deepening torpor, once only rousing suddenly to call his son's name,
and then, upon looking from one to the other, he recollected, and his eyes
closed again. His mind wandered, but very little, for torpor seemed to be
overcoming him. The squaw had stolen in, and sat cowering and useless.
Towards sundown John's heart sickened at the sound of more horsemen; but
it was only two white men, a sheriff and his deputy.</p>
<p>"Go easy," said John. "He's not going to resist."</p>
<p>"What's up here, anyway? Who are you?"</p>
<p>Clallam explained, and was evidently not so much as half believed.</p>
<p>"If there are Indians killed," said the sheriff, "there's still another
matter for the law to settle with him. We're sent to search for whiskey.
The county's about tired of him."</p>
<p>"You'll find him pretty sick," said John.</p>
<p>"People I find always are pretty sick," said the sheriff, and pushed his
way in, stopping at sight of Mrs. Clallam and the figure on the bed. "I'm
arresting that man, madam," he said, with a shade of apology. "The county
court wants him."</p>
<p>Jake sat up and knew the sheriff. "You're a little late, Proctor," said
he. "The Supreme Court's a-goin' to call my case." Then he fell back, for
his case had been called.</p>
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