Chapter 14




THE PATH OF THE EAGLE

We travelled slowly down the hillside into the village, and were about to
turn towards the big mill when we saw Mr. Devlin and Ruth riding towards
us. We halted and waited for them. Mr. Devlin was introduced to Mrs.
Falchion by his daughter, who was sweetly solicitous concerning Mrs.
Falchion and Justine Caron, and seemed surprised at finding them abroad
after the accident of the day before. Ruth said that her father and
herself had just come from the summer hotel, where they had gone to call
upon Mrs. Falchion. Mrs. Falchion heartily acknowledged the courtesy. She
seemed to be playing no part, but was apparently grateful all round; yet
I believe that even already Ruth had caught at something in her presence
threatening Roscoe's peace; whilst she, from the beginning, had, with her
more trained instincts, seen the relations between the clergyman and his
young parishioner.--But what had that to do with her?

Between Roscoe and Ruth there was the slightest constraint, and I thought
that it gave a troubled look to the face of the girl. Involuntarily, the
eyes of both were attracted to Mrs. Falchion. I believe in that moment
there was a kind of revelation among the three. While I talked to Mr.
Devlin I watched them, standing a little apart, Justine Caron with us. It
must have been a painful situation for them; to the young girl because a
shadow was trailing across the light of her first love; to Roscoe because
the shadow came out of his past; to Mrs. Falchion because she was the
shadow. I felt that trouble was at hand. In this trouble I knew that I
was to play a part; for, if Roscoe had his secret and Mrs. Falchion had
the key to it, I also held a secret which, in case of desperate need, I
should use. I did not wish to use it, for though it was mine it was also
another's. I did not like the look in Mrs. Falchion's eyes as she glanced
at Ruth: I was certain that she resented Roscoe's regard for Ruth and
Ruth's regard for Roscoe; but, up to that moment, I had not thought it
possible that she cared for him deeply. Once she had influenced me, but
she had never cared for me.

I could see a change in her. Out of it came that glance at Ruth, which
seemed to me the talon-like hatred that shot from the eyes of Goneril and
Regan: and I was sure that if she loved Roscoe there would be mad trouble
for him and for the girl. Heretofore she had been passionless, but there
was a dormant power in her which had only to be wickedly aroused to wreck
her own and others' happiness. Hers was one of those volcanic natures,
defying calculation and ordinary conceptions of life; having the fullest
capacity for all the elementary passions--hatred, love, cruelty, delight,
loyalty, revolt, jealousy. She had never from her birth until now felt
love for any one. She had never been awakened. Even her affection for her
father had been dutiful rather than instinctive. She had provoked love,
but had never given it. She had been self-centred, compulsive,
unrelenting. She had unmoved seen and let her husband go to his doom--it
was his doom and death so far as she knew.

Yet, as I thought of this, I found myself again admiring her. She was
handsome, independent, distinctly original, and possessing capacity for
great things. Besides, so far, she had not been actively
vindictive--simply passively indifferent to the sufferings of others. She
seemed to regard results more than means. All she did not like she could
empty into the mill of the destroying gods: just as General Grant poured
hundreds of thousands of men into the valley of the James, not thinking
of lives but victory, not of blood but triumph. She too, even in her
cruelty, seemed to have a sense of wild justice which disregarded any
incidental suffering.

I could see that Mr. Devlin was attracted by her, as every man had been
who had ever met her; for, after all, man is but a common slave to
beauty: virtue he respects, but beauty is man's valley of suicide.
Presently she turned to Mr. Devlin, having, as it seemed to me, made
Roscoe and Ruth sufficiently uncomfortable. With that cheerful
insouciance which was always possible to her on the most trying
occasions, she immediately said, as she had often said to me, that she
had come to Mr. Devlin to be amused for the morning, perhaps the whole
day. It was her way, her selfish way, to make men her slaves.

Mr. Devlin gallantly said that he was at her disposal, and with a kind of
pride added that there was plenty in the valley which would interest her;
for he was a frank, bluff man, who would as quickly have spoken
disparagingly of what belonged to himself, if it was not worthy, as have
praised it.

"Where shall we go first?" he said. "To the mill?"

"To the mill, by all means," Mrs. Falchion replied; "I have never been in
a great saw-mill, and I believe this is very fine. Then," she added, with
a little wave of the hand towards the cable running down from Phil
Boldrick's eyrie in the mountains, "then I want to see all that cable can
do--all, remember."

Mr. Devlin laughed. "Well, it hasn't many tricks, but what it does it
does cleverly, thanks to The Padre."

"Oh yes," responded Mrs. Falchion, still looking at the cable; "The
Padre, I know, is very clever."

"He is more than clever," bluffly replied Mr. Devlin, who was not keen
enough to see the faint irony in her tones.

"Yes," responded Mrs. Falchion in the same tone of voice, "he is more
than clever. I have been told that he was once very brave. I have been
told that once in the South Seas he did his country a great service."

She paused. I could see Ruth's eyes glisten and her face suffuse, for
though she read the faint irony in the tone, still she saw that the tale
which Mrs. Falchion was evidently about to tell, must be to Galt Roscoe's
credit. Mrs. Falchion turned idly upon Ruth and saw the look in her face.
An almost imperceptible smile came upon her lips. She looked again at the
cable and Phil Boldrick's eyrie, which seemed to have a wonderful
attraction for her. Not turning away from it, save now and then to glance
indolently at Mr. Devlin or Ruth, and once enigmatically at myself, she
said:

"Once upon a time--that is the way, I believe, to begin a pretty
story--there were four men-of-war idling about a certain harbour of
Samoa. One of the vessels was the flag-ship, with its admiral on board.
On one of the other vessels was an officer who had years before explored
this harbour. It was the hurricane season. He advised the admiral not to
enter the harbour, for the indications foretold a gale, and himself was
not sure that his chart was in all respects correct, for the harbour had
been hurriedly explored and sounded. But the admiral gave orders, and
they sailed in.

"That day a tremendous hurricane came crying down upon Samoa. It swept
across the island, levelled forests of cocoa palms, battered villages to
pieces, caught that little fleet in the harbour, and played with it in a
horrible madness. To right and left were reefs, behind was the shore,
with a monstrous surf rolling in; before was a narrow passage. One vessel
made its way out--on it was the officer who had surveyed the harbour. In
the open sea there was safety. He brought his vessel down the coast a
little distance, put a rope about him and in the wild surf made for the
shore. I believe he could have been court-martialled for leaving his
ship, but he was a man who had taken a great many risks of one kind and
another in his time. It was one chance out of a hundred; but he made
it--he got to the shore, travelled down to the harbour where the
men-of-war were careening towards the reefs, unable to make the passage
out, and once again he tied a rope about him and plunged into the surf to
try for the admiral's ship. He got there terribly battered. They tell how
a big wave lifted him and landed him upon the quarter-deck just as big
waves are not expected to do. Well, like the hero in any melodrama of the
kind, he very prettily piloted monsieur the admiral and his fleet out to
the open sea."

She paused, smiling in an inscrutable sort of way, then turned and said
with a sudden softness in her voice, though still with the air of one who
wished not to be taken with too great a seriousness: "And, ladies and
gentlemen, the name of the ship that led the way was the 'Porcupine'; and
the name of the hero was Commander Galt Roscoe, R.N.; and 'of such is the
kingdom of heaven!'"

There was silence for a moment. The tale had been told adroitly, and with
such tact as to words that Roscoe could not take offence--need not,
indeed, as he did not, I believe, feel any particular self-consciousness.
I am not sure but he was a little glad that such evidence should have
been given at the moment, when a kind of restraint had come between him
and Ruth, by one who he had reason to think was not wholly his friend
might be his enemy. It was a kind of offset to his premonitions and to
the peril over which he might stumble at any moment.

To me the situation was almost inexplicable; but the woman herself was
inexplicable: at this moment the evil genius of us all, at that doing us
all a kind of crude, superior justice. I was the first to speak.

"Roscoe," I said, "I never had heard of this, although I remember the
circumstance as told in the newspapers. But I am glad and proud that I
have a friend with such a record."

"And, only think," said Mrs. Falchion, "he actually was not
court-martialled for abandoning his ship to save an admiral and a fleet.
But the ways of the English Admiralty are wonderful. They go out of their
way to avoid a court-martial sometimes, and they go out of their way to
establish it sometimes."

By this time we had started towards the mill. Roscoe walked ahead with
Ruth Devlin. Mr. Devlin, Mrs. Falchion, Justine Caron and myself walked
together.

Mrs. Falchion presently continued, talking, as it seemed to me, at the
back of Roscoe's head:

"I have known the Admiralty to force an officer to resign the navy
because he had married a native wife. But I never knew the Admiralty to
court-martial an officer because he did not marry a native wife whom he
OUGHT to have married: but, as I said, the ways of the Admiralty are past
admiration."

I could see Roscoe's hand clinch at his side, and presently he said over
his shoulder at her: "Your memory and your philosophy are as wonderful as
the Admiralty are inscrutable."

She laughed. "You have not lost your old gift of retort," she said. "You
are still amusing."

"Well, come," said Mr. Devlin cheerfully, "let's see if there isn't
something even more amusing than Mr. Roscoe in Viking. I will show you,
Mrs. Falchion, the biggest saw that ever ate the heart out of a Norfolk
pine."

At the mill Mrs. Falchion was interested. She asked questions concerning
the machinery which mightily pleased Mr. Devlin, they were so apt and
intelligent; and herself assisted in giving an immense log to the teeth
of the largest saw, which, with its six upright blades, ate, and was
never satisfied. She stooped and ran her ungloved hand into the sawdust,
as sweet before the sun has dried it as the scent of a rose. The rich
smell of the fresh-cut lumber filled the air, and suggested all kinds of
remote and pleasant things. The industry itself is one of the first that
comes with the invasion of new territory, and makes one think of man's
first work in the world: to fell the tree and till the soil. It is
impossible to describe that fierce, jubilant song of the saw, which even
when we were near was never shrill or shrieking: never drowning our
voices, but vibrant and delightful. To Mrs. Falchion it was new; she was
impressed.

"I have seen," she said to Mr. Devlin, "all sorts of enterprises, but
never anything like this. It all has a kind of rough music. It is
enjoyable."

Mr. Devlin beamed. "I have just added something to the mill that will
please you," he said.

She looked interested. We all gathered round. I stood between Mrs.
Falchion and Ruth Devlin, and Roscoe beside Justine Caron.

"It is the greatest mill-whistle in the country," he continued. "It will
be heard from twelve to twenty-five miles, according to the condition of
the atmosphere. I want big things all round, and this is a masterpiece, I
guess. Now, I'll let you hear it if you like. I didn't expect to use it
until to-night at nine o'clock, when, also for the first time, I am to
light the mills by electricity; a thing that's not been attempted yet in
any saw-mill on the Continent. We're going to work night and day for a
couple of months."

"This is all very wonderful. And are you indebted to Mr. Roscoe in these
things too?--Everybody seems to need him here."

"Well," said the mill-owner, laughing, "the whistle is my own. It's the
sort of thing I would propose--to blow my trumpet, as it were; but the
electricity and the first experiments in it I owe to The Padre."

"As I thought," she said, and turned to Roscoe. "I remember," she added,
"that you had an electrical search-light on the 'Porcupine', and that you
were fond of electricity. Do you ever use search-lights here? I should
think they might be of use in your parish. Then, for a change, you could
let the parish turn it upon you, for the sake of contrast and
edification."

For the moment I was exceedingly angry. Her sarcasm was well veiled, but
I could feel the sardonic touch beneath the smiling surface. This
innuendo seemed so gratuitous. I said to her, almost beneath my breath,
that none of the others could hear: "How womanly!"

She did no more than lift her eyebrows in acknowledgment, and went on
talking lightly to Mr. Devlin. Roscoe was cool, but I could see now in
his eyes a kind of smouldering anger; which was quite to my wish. I hoped
he would be meek no longer.

Presently Ruth Devlin said: "Would it not be better to wait till
to-night, when the place is lighted, before the whistle is blown? Then
you can get a better first impression. And if Mrs. Falchion will come
over to our home at Sunburst, we will try and amuse her for the rest of
the day--that is, after she has seen all here."

Mrs. Falchion seemed struck by the frankness of the girl, and for an
instant debated, but presently said: "No, thank you. When all is seen
now, I will go to the hotel, and then will join you all here in the
evening, if that seems feasible. Perhaps Dr. Marmion will escort me here.
Mr. Roscoe, of course, has other duties."

"I shall be happy," I said, maliciously smiling, "to guide you to the
sacrifice of the saw."

She was not disturbed. She touched Mr. Devlin's arm, and, looking archly
at him, nodded backwards towards me. "'Beware the anaconda!'" she said.

It was impossible not to be amused; her repartee was always so
unrestrained. She disarmed one by what would have been, in a man,
insolent sang-froid: in her it was piquancy, daring.

Presently she added: "But if we are to have no colossal whistle and no
electric light till evening, there is one thing I must have: and that is
your remarkable Phil Boldrick, who seems to hold you all in the palm of
his hand, and lives up there like a god on his Olympus."

"Well, suppose you go and call on him," said Roscoe, with a touch of dry
humour, his eye on the cable that reached to Boldrick's perch.

She saw her opportunity, and answered promptly: "Yes, I will call on him
immediately,"--here she turned towards Ruth,--"if Miss Devlin and
yourself will go with me."

"Nonsense," interposed Mr. Devlin. "Besides, the cage will only hold two
easily. Anyhow, it's absurd."

"Why is it absurd? Is there any danger?" queried Mrs. Falchion.

"Not unless there's an idiot at the machinery."

"I should expect you to manage it," she persisted.

"But no woman has ever done it."

"I will make the record." And, turning to Ruth: "You are not afraid?"

"No, I am not afraid," said the girl bravely, though she acknowledged to
me afterwards that while she was not afraid of anything where her own
skill was called in question, such as mountain-climbing, or even
puma-hunting, she did not joyfully anticipate swinging between heaven and
earth on that incline. "I will go," she added, "if my father will let me.
. . . May I?" she continued, turning to him.

Perhaps something of the father's pride came up in him, perhaps he had
just got some suspicion that between his daughter and Mrs. Falchion there
was a subterranean rivalry. However it was, he gave a quick, quizzical
look at both of them, then glanced at Roscoe, and said: "I'll make no
objections, if Ruth would like to introduce you to Phil. And, as Mrs.
Falchion suggested, I'll 'turn the crank.'"

I could see that Roscoe had a bad moment. But presently he appeared to me
perfectly willing that Ruth should go. Maybe he was as keen that she
should not appear at a disadvantage beside Mrs. Falchion as was her
father.

A signal was given, and the cage came slowly down the cable to the mill.
We could see Boldrick, looking little bigger than a child at the other
end, watching our movements. At the last moment Mr. Devlin and Roscoe
seemed apprehensive, but the women were cool and determined. I noticed
Mrs. Falchion look at Ruth curiously once or twice after they entered the
cage, and before they started, and what she saw evidently gave her a
higher opinion of the girl, for she laid her hand on Ruth's arm suddenly,
and said: "We will show these mere men what nerve is."

Ruth nodded, then 'bon voyage' was said, and the signal was given. The
cage ascended at first quickly, then more slowly, swaying up and down a
little on the cable, and climbing higher and higher through the air to
the mountain-side. What Boldrick thought when he saw the two ascending
towards him, he expressed to Mr. Devlin later in the day in vigorous
language: what occurred at his but Ruth Devlin told me afterwards. When
the cage reached him, he helped the two passengers out, and took them to
his hut. With Ruth he had always been a favourite, and he welcomed her
with admiring and affectionate respect.

"Never b'lieved you could have done it, Miss Devlin--never! Not but what
I knew you weren't afraid of anything on the earth below, or the waters
under the earth; but when you get swinging there over the world, and not
high enough to get a hold on heaven, it makes you feel as if things was
droppin' away from you like. But, by gracious! you did it like an
eagle--you and your friend."

By this time he was introduced, and at the name of Mrs. Falchion, he
cocked his head, and looked quizzically, as if trying to remember
something, then drew his hand once or twice across his forehead. After a
moment he said: "Strange, now, ma'am, how your name strikes me. It isn't
a common name, and I've heerd it before somewhere--somewhere. It isn't
your face that I've seen before--for I'd have remembered it if it was a
thousand years ago," he added admiringly. "But I've heard some one use
it; and I can't tell where."

She looked curiously at him, and said: "Don't try to remember, and it
will come to you in good time. But show us everything about your place
before we go back, won't you, please?"

He showed them his hut, where he lived, quite alone. It was supplied with
bare necessaries, and with a counter, behind which were cups and a few
bottles. In reference to this, Boldrick said: "Temperance drinks for the
muleteers, tobacco and tea and sugar and postage stamps and things. They
don't gargle their throats with anything stronger than coffee at this
tavern."

Then he took them to the cave in which puma, bear, and wapiti skins were
piled, together with a few stores and the kits of travellers who had left
their belongings in Boldrick's keeping till they should come again. After
Mrs. Falchion and Ruth had seen all, they came out upon the mountain-side
and waved their handkerchiefs to us, who were still watching from below.
Then Boldrick hoisted a flag on his hut, which he used on gala occasions,
to celebrate the event, and, not content with this, fired a 'feu de
joie', managed in this way: He took two anvils used by the muleteers and
expressmen to shoe their animals, and placed one on the other, putting
powder between. Then Mrs. Falchion thrust a red-hot iron into the powder,
and an explosion ensued. I was for a moment uneasy, but Mr. Devlin
reassured me, and instantly a shrill whistle from the little mills
answered the salute.

Just before they got into the cage, Mrs. Falchion turned to Boldrick, and
said: "You have not been trying to remember where you heard my name
before? Well, can you not recall it now?"

Boldrick shook his head. "Perhaps you will recall it before I see you
again," she said.

They started. As they did so, Mrs. Falchion said suddenly, looking at
Boldrick keenly: "Were you ever in the South Seas?"

Boldrick stood for an instant open-mouthed, and then exclaimed loudly, as
the cage swung down the incline: "By Jingo! No, ma'am, I was never there,
but I had a pal who come from Samoa."

She called back at him: "Tell me of him when we meet again. What was his
name?"

They were too far down the cable now for Boldrick's reply to reach them
distinctly. The descent seemed even more adventurous than the ascent,
and, in spite of myself, I could not help a thrill of keen excitement.
But they were both smiling when the cage reached us, and both had a very
fine colour.

"A delightful journey, a remarkable reception, and a very singular man is
your Mr. Boldrick," said Mrs. Falchion.

"Yes," replied Mr. Devlin, "you'll know Boldrick a long time before you
find his limits. He is about the most curious character I ever knew, and
does the most curious things. But straight--straight as a die, Mrs.
Falchion!"

"I fancy that Mr. Boldrick and I would be very good friends indeed," said
Mrs. Falchion; "and I purpose visiting him again. It is quite probable
that we shall find we have had mutual acquaintances." She looked at
Roscoe meaningly as she said this, but he was occupied with Ruth.

"You were not afraid?" Roscoe said to Ruth. "Was it not a strange
sensation?"

"Frankly, at first I was a little afraid, because the cage swings on the
cable, and it makes you uncomfortable. But I enjoyed it before we got to
the end."

Mrs. Falchion turned to Mr. Devlin. "I find plenty here to amuse me," she
said, "and I am glad I came. To-night I want to go up that cable and call
on Mr. Boldrick again, and see the mills and the electric light, and hear
your whistle, from up there. Then, of course, you must show us the mill
working at night, and afterwards--may I ask it?--you must all come and
have supper with me at the summer hotel."

Ruth dropped her eyes. I saw she did not wish to go. Fortunately Mr.
Devlin extricated her. "I'm afraid that will be impossible, Mrs.
Falchion," he said: "much obliged to you all the same. But I am going to
be at the mill pretty near all night, and shouldn't be able to go, and I
don't want Ruth to go without me."

"Then it must be another time," said Mrs. Falchion.

"Oh, whenever it's convenient for Ruth, after a day or two, I'll be ready
and glad. But I tell you what: if you want to see something fine, you
must go down as soon as possible to Sunburst. We live there, you know,
not here at Viking. It's funny, too, because, you see, there's a feud
between Viking and Sunburst--we are all river-men and mill-hands at
Viking, and they're all salmon-fishers and fruit-growers at Sunburst. By
rights I ought to live here, but when I started I thought I'd build my
mills at Sunburst, so I pitched my tent down there. My wife and the girls
got attached to the place, and though the mills were built at Viking, and
I made all my money up here, I live at Sunburst and spend my shekels
there. I guess if I didn't happen to live at Sunburst, people would be
trailing their coats and making Donnybrook fairs every other day between
these two towns. But that's neither here nor there. Take my advice, Mrs.
Falchion, and come to Sunburst and see the salmon-fishers at work, both
day and night. It is about the biggest thing in the way of natural
picturesqueness that you'll see--outside my mills. Indians, half-breeds,
white men, Chinamen--they are all at it in weirs and cages, or in the
nets, and spearing by torch-light!--Don't you think I would do to run a
circus, Mrs. Falchion?--Stand at the door, and shout: 'Here's where you
get the worth of your money'?"

Mrs. Falchion laughed. "I am sure you and I will be good friends; you are
amusing. And, to be perfectly frank with you, I am very weary of trying
to live in the intellectual altitudes of Dr. Marmion--and The Padre."

I had never seen her in a greater strain of gaiety. It had almost a kind
of feverishness--as if she relished fully the position she held towards
Roscoe and Ruth, her power over their future, and her belief (as I think
was in her mind then) that she could bring back to her self Roscoe's old
allegiance. That she believed this, I was convinced; that she would never
carry it out, was just as strong: for I, though only the chorus in the
drama, might one day find it in my power to become, for a moment, one of
the principal actors--from which position I had declined one day when
humiliated before Mrs. Falchion on the 'Fulvia'. Boyd Madras was in my
mind.

After a few minutes we parted, agreeing to meet again in the valley in
the evening. I had promised, as Mrs. Falchion had suggested, to escort
her and Justine Caron from the summer hotel to the mill. Roscoe had
duties at both Viking and Sunburst and would not join us until we all met
in the evening. Mr. Devlin and Ruth rode away towards Sunburst. Mrs.
Falchion, Justine, and myself travelled slowly up the hillside, talking
chiefly upon the events of the morning. Mrs. Falchion appeared to admire
greatly the stalwart character of Mr. Devlin; in a few swift,
complimentary words disposed of Ruth; and then made many inquiries
concerning Roscoe's work, my own position, and the length of my stay in
the mountains; and talked upon many trivial matters, never once
referring--as it seemed to me, purposely--to our past experiences on the
'Fulvia', nor making any inquiry concerning any one except Belle
Treherne.

She showed no surprise when I told her that I expected to marry Miss
Treherne. She congratulated me with apparent frankness, and asked for
Miss Treherne's address, saying she would write to her. As soon as she
had left Roscoe's presence she had dropped all enigmatical words and
phrases, and, during this hour I was with her, was the tactful,
accomplished woman of the world, with the one present object: to make her
conversation agreeable, and to keep things on the surface. Justine Caron
scarcely spoke during the whole of our walk, although I addressed myself
to her frequently. But I could see that she watched Mrs. Falchion's face
curiously; and I believe that at this time her instinct was keener by far
to read what was in Mrs. Falchion's mind than my own, though I knew much
more of the hidden chain of events connecting Mrs. Falchion's life and
Galt Roscoe's.

I parted from them at the door of the hotel, made my way down to Roscoe's
house at the ravine, and busied myself for the greater part of the day in
writing letters, and reading on the coping. About sunset I called for
Mrs. Falchion, and found her and Justine Caron ready and waiting. There
was nothing eventful in our talk as we came down the mountain-side
towards Viking--Justine Caron's presence prevented that. It was dusk when
we reached the valley. As yet the mills were all dark. The only lights
visible were in the low houses lining the banks of the river. Against the
mountainside there seemed to hang one bunch of flame like a star, large,
red, and weird. It was a torch burning in front of Phil Boldrick's hut.
We made our way slowly to the mill, and found Mr. Devlin, Ruth, and
Roscoe, with Ruth's sister, and one or two other friends, expecting us.

"Well," said Mr. Devlin heartily, "I have kept the show waiting for you.
The house is all dark, but I guess you'll see a transformation scene
pretty quick. Come out," he continued, "and let us get the front seats.
They are all stalls here; nobody has a box except Boldrick, and it is up
in the flies."

"Mr. Devlin," said Mrs. Falchion, "I purpose to see this show not only
from the stalls, but from the box in the flies. Therefore, during the
first act, I shall be here in front of the foot-lights. During the second
act I shall be aloft like Tom Bowling--"

"In other words--" began Mr. Devlin.

"In other words," added Mrs. Falchion, "I am going to see the valley and
hear your great horn blow from up there!" She pointed towards the star in
front of Phil's hut.

"All right," said Mr. Devlin; "but you will excuse me if I say that I
don't particularly want anybody to see this performance from where Tom
Bowling bides."

We left the office and went out upon the platform, a little distance from
the mill. Mr. Devlin gave a signal, touched a wire, and immediately it
seemed as if the whole valley was alight. The mill itself was in a blaze
of white. It was transfigured--a fairy palace, just as the mud barges in
the Suez Canal had been transformed by the search-light of the 'Fulvia'.
For the moment, in the wonder of change from darkness to light, the
valley became the picture of a dream. Every man was at his post in the
mill, and in an instant work was going on as we had seen it in the
morning. Then, all at once, there came a great roar, as it were, from the
very heart of the mill--a deep diapason, dug out of the throat of the
hills: the big whistle.

"It sounds mournful--like a great animal in pain," said Mrs. Falchion.
"You might have got one more cheerful."

"Wait till it gets tuned up," said Mr. Devlin. "It hasn't had a chance to
get the burs out of its throat. It will be very fine as soon as the
engine-man knows how to manage it."

"Yes," said Ruth, interposing, "a little toning down would do it good--it
is shaking the windows in your office; feel this platform tremble!"

"Well, I bargained for a big whistle and I've got it: and I guess they'll
know if ever there's a fire in the town!" Just as he said this, Roscoe
gave a cry and pointed.

We all turned, and saw a sight that made Ruth Devlin cover her face with
her hands and Mrs. Falchion stand horror-stricken. There, coming down the
cable with the speed of lightning, was the cage. In it was a man--Phil
Boldrick. With a cry and a smothered oath, Mr. Devlin sprang towards the
machinery, Roscoe with him. There was nobody near it, but they saw a boy
whose duty it was that night to manage the cable, running towards it.
Roscoe was the first to reach the lever; but it was too late. He
partially stopped the cage, but only partially. It came with a dull,
sickening thud to the ground, and Phil Boldrick--Phil Boldrick's broken,
battered body--was thrown out.

A few minutes later Boldrick was lying in Mr. Devlin's office.

Ill luck for Viking in the hour of her success. Phil's shattered hulk is
drifting. The masts have gone by the board, the pilot from the captain's
side. Only the man's "unconquerable soul" is on the bridge, watching the
craft dip at the bow till the waters, their sport out, should hugely
swallow it.

We were all gathered round. Phil had asked to see the lad who, by
neglecting the machinery for a moment, had wrecked his life. "My boy," he
said, "you played an ugly game. It was a big mistake. I haven't any
grudge agen you, but be glad I'm not one that'd haunt you for your cussed
foolishness. . . . There, now, I feel better; that's off my mind!"

"If you're wanting to show remorse or anything," he continued, "there's
my friend, Mr. Roscoe, The Padre--he's all right, you understand!--Are
you there? . . . Why don't you speak?" He stretched out his hand. The lad
took it, but he could not speak: he held it and sobbed.

Then Phil understood. His brow wrinkled with a sudden trouble. He said:
"There, never mind. I'm dying, but it isn't what I expected. It doesn't
smart nor tear much; not more than river-rheumatism. P'r'aps I wouldn't
mind it at all if I could see."

For Phil was entirely blind now. The accident had destroyed his remaining
eye. Being blind, he had already passed that first corridor of
death--darkness. Roscoe stooped over him, took his hand, and spoke
quietly to him. Phil knew the voice, and said with a faint smile: "Do you
think they'd plant me with municipal honours--honours to pardners?"

"We'll see to that, Phil," said Mr. Devlin from behind the clergyman.

Phil recognised the voice. "You think that nobody'll kick at making it
official?"

"Not one, Phil."

"And maybe they wouldn't mind firin' a volley--Lights out, as it were:
and blow the big whistle? It'd look sociable, wouldn't it?"

"There'll be a volley and the whistle, Phil--if you have to go," said Mr.
Devlin.

There was a silence, then the reply came musingly: "I guess I hev to go.
. . . I'd hev liked to see the corporation runnin' longer, but maybe I
can trust the boys."

A river-driver at the door said in a deep voice: "By the holy! yes, you
can trust us."

"Thank you kindly. . . . If it doesn't make any difference to the rest,
I'd like to be alone with The Padre for a little--not for religion, you
understand, for I go as I stayed, and I hev my views,--but for private
business."

Slowly, awkwardly, the few river-drivers passed out--Devlin and Mrs.
Falchion and Ruth and I with them--for I could do nothing now for him--he
was broken all to pieces. Roscoe told me afterwards what happened then.

"Padre," he said to Roscoe, "are we alone?"

"Quite alone, Phil."

"Well, I hevn't any crime to tell, and the business isn't weighty; but I
hev a pal at Danger Mountain--" He paused.

"Yes, Phil?"

"He's low down in s'ciety; but he's square, and we've had the same
blanket for many a day together. I crossed him first on the Panama level.
I was broke--stony broke. He'd been shipwrecked, and was ditto. He'd been
in the South Seas; I in Nicaragua. We travelled up through Mexico and
Arizona, and then through California to the Canadian Rockies. At last we
camped at Danger Mountain, a Hudson's Bay fort, and stayed there. It was
a roughish spot, but we didn't mind that. Every place isn't Viking. One
night we had a difference--not a quarrel, mind you, but a difference. He
was for lynchin' a fellow called Piccadilly, a swell that'd come down in
the world, bringin' the worst tricks of his tribe with him. He'd never
been a bony fidy gentleman--just an imitation. He played sneak with the
daughter of Five Fingers, an Injin chief. We'd set store by that girl.
There wasn't one of us rough nuts but respected her. She was one of the
few beautiful Injin women I've seen. Well, it come out that Piccadilly
had ruined her, and one morning she was found dead. It drove my pal
well-nigh crazy. Not that she was anything partik'ler to him; but the
thing took hold of him unusual."

Now that I know all concerning Roscoe's past life, I can imagine that
this recital must have been swords at his heart. The whole occurrence is
put down minutely in his diary, but there is no word of comment upon it.

Phil had been obliged to stop for pain, and, after Roscoe had adjusted
the bandages, he continued:

"My pal and the others made up their minds they'd lynch Piccadilly; they
wouldn't give him the benefit of the doubt--for it wasn't certain that
the girl hadn't killed herself. . . . Well, I went to Piccadilly, and
give him the benefit. He left, and skipped the rope. Not, p'r'aps, that
he ought to hev got away, but once he'd showed me a letter from his
mother,--he was drunk too, at the time,--and I remembered when my brother
Rodney was killed in the Black Hills, and how my mother took it; so I
give him the tip to travel quick."

He paused and rested. Then presently continued: "Now, Padre, I've got
four hundred dollars--the most I ever had at one time in my life. And I'd
like it to go to my old pal--though we had that difference, and parted. I
guess we respect each other about the same as we ever did. And I wish
you'd write it down so that the thing would be municipal."

Roscoe took pencil and paper and said: "What's his name, Phil?"

"Sam--Tonga Sam."

"But that isn't all his name?"

"No, I s'pose not, but it's all he ever had in general use. He'd got it
because he'd been to the Tonga Islands and used to yarn about them. Put
'Tonga Sam, Phil Boldrick's Pal at Danger Mountain, ult'--add the 'ult,'
it's c'rrect.--That'll find him. And write him these words, and if you
ever see him say them to him--'Phil Boldrick never had a pal that crowded
Tonga Sam.'"

When the document was written, Roscoe read it aloud, then both signed it,
Roscoe guiding the battered hand over the paper.

This done, there was a moment's pause, and then Phil said: "I'd like to
be in the open. I was born in the open--on the Madawaska. Take me out,
Padre."

Roscoe stepped to the door, and silently beckoned to Devlin and myself.
We carried him out, and put him beside a pine tree.

"Where am I now?" he said. "Under the white pine, Phil." "That's right.
Face me to the north."

We did so. Minutes passed in silence. Only the song of the saw was heard,
and the welting of the river. "Padre," he said at last hurriedly, "lift
me up, so's I can breathe."

This was done.

"Am I facin' the big mill?"

"Yes."

"That's c'rrect. And the 'lectric light is burnin' in the mill and in the
town, an' the saws are all goin'?"

"Yes."

"By gracious, yes--you can hear 'em! Don't they scrunch the stuff,
though!" He laughed a little. "Mr. Devlin an' you and me hev been pretty
smart, hevn't we?"

Then a spasm caught him, and after a painful pause he called: "It's the
biggest thing in cables. . . . Stand close in the cage. . . . Feel her
swing!--Safe, you bet, if he stands by the lever. . . ."

His face lighted with the last gleam of living, and he said slowly: "I
hev a pal--at Danger Mountain."



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