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"Let me cook it for you," he pleaded. "You haven't eaten anything since morning."
"I can't eat," she said, and fell back to her fire-gazing, slipping away from him into the forbidding dumbness of her thoughts. He could only watch her, hoping for a word, an expressed wish. When it came it was, alas! outside his power to gratify:
"If there had only been a doctor here! That was what I was hoping for."
And so when she asked for the help he yearned to give, it was his fate that he should meet her longing with a hopeless silence.
When Daddy John emerged from the tent she leaped to her feet.
"Well?" she said with low eagerness.
"Go back to him. He wants you," answered the old man. "I've got something to do for him."
He made no attempt to touch her, his words and voice were brusque, yet David saw that she responded, softened, showed the ragged wound of her pain to him as she did to no one else. It was an understanding that went beneath all externals. Words were unnecessary between them, heart spoke to heart.
She returned to the tent and sunk on the skin beside her father. He smiled faintly and stretched a hand for hers, and her fingers slipped between his, cool and strong against the lifeless dryness of his palm.
She gave back his smile bravely, her eyes steadfast. She had no desire for tears, no acuteness of sensation. A weight as heavy as the world lay on her, crus.h.i.+ng out struggle and resistance. She knew that he was dying. When they told her there was no doctor in the camp her flickering hope had gone out. Now she was prepared to sit by him and wait with a lethargic patience beyond which was nothing.
He pressed her hand and said: "I've sent Daddy John on a hunt. Do you guess what for?"
She shook her head feeling no curiosity.
"The time is short, Missy."
The living's instinct to fight against the acquiescence of the dying prompted her to the utterance of a sharp "No."
"I want it all arranged and settled before it's too late. I sent him to see if there was a missionary here."
She was leaning against the couch of robes, resting on the piled support of the skins. In the pause after his words she slowly drew herself upright, and with her mouth slightly open inhaled a deep breath. Her eyes remained fixed on him, gleaming from the shadow of her brows, and their expression, combined with the amaze of the dropped underlip, gave her a look of wild attention.
"Why?" she said. The word came obstructed and she repeated it.
"I want you to marry David here to-night."
The doctor's watch on a box at the bed head ticked loudly in the silence. They looked at each other unconscious of the length of the pause. Death on the one hand, life pressing for its due on the other, were the only facts they recognized. Hostility, not to the man but to the idea, drove the amazement from her face and hardened its softness to stone.
"Here, to-night?" she said, her comprehension stimulated by an automatic repet.i.tion of his words.
"Yes. I may not be able to understand tomorrow."
She moved her head, her glance touching the watch, the lantern, then dropping to the hand curled round her own. It seemed symbolic of the will against which hers was rising in combat. She made an involuntary effort to withdraw her fingers but his closed tighter on them.
"Why?" she whispered again.
"Some one must take care of you. I can't leave you alone."
She answered with stiffened lips: "There's Daddy John."
"Some one closer than Daddy John. I want to leave you with David."
Her antagonism rose higher, sweeping over her wretchedness. Worn and strained she had difficulty to keep her lips shut on it, to prevent herself from crying out her outraged protests. All her dormant womanhood, stirring to wakefulness in the last few weeks, broke into life, gathering itself in a pa.s.sion of revolt, abhorrent of the indignity, ready to flare into vehement refusal. To the dim eyes fastened on her she was merely the girl, reluctant still. He watched her down-drooped face and said:
"Then I could go in peace. Am I asking too much?"
She made a negative movement with her head and turned her face away from him.
"You'll do this for my happiness now?"
"Anything," she murmured.
"It will be also for your own."
He moved his free hand and clasped it on the mound made by their locked fingers. Through the stillness a man's voice singing Zavier's Canadian song came to them. It stopped at the girl's outer ear, but, like a hail from a fading land, penetrated to the man's brain and he stirred.
"Hist!" he said raising his brows, "there's that French song your mother used to sing."
The distant voice rose to the plaintive burden and he lay motionless, his eyes filmed with memories. As the present dimmed the past grew clearer. His hold on the moment relaxed and he slipped away from it on a tide of recollection, muttering the words.
The girl sat mute, her hand cold under his, her being pa.s.sing in an agonized birth throe from unconsciousness to self-recognition. Her will--its strength till now unguessed--rose resistant, a thing of iron.
Love was too strong in her for open opposition, but the instinct to fight, blindly but with caution, for the right to herself was stronger.
His murmuring died into silence and she looked at him. His eyes were closed, the pressure of his fingers loosened. A light sleep held him, and under its truce she softly withdrew her hand, then stole to the tent door and stood there a waiting moment, stifling her hurried breathing. She saw David lying by the fire, gazing into its smoldering heart. With noiseless feet she skirted the encircling ropes and pegs, and stood, out of range of his eye, on the farther side. Here she stopped, withdrawn from the light that came amber soft through the canvas walls, slipping into shadow when a figure pa.s.sed, searching the darkness with peering eyes.
Around her the noises of the camp rose, less sharp than an hour earlier, the night silence gradually hus.h.i.+ng them. The sparks and shooting gleams of fires still quivered, imbued with a tenacious life.
She had a momentary glimpse of a naked Indian boy flinging loose his blanket, a bronze statue glistening in a leap of flame. Nearer by a woman's figure bent over a kettle black on a bed of embers, then a girl's fire-touched form, with raised arms, shaking down a snake of hair, which broke and grew cloudy under her disturbing hands. A resounding smack sounded on a horse's flank, a low ripple of laughter came tangled with a child's querulous crying, and through the walls of tents and the thickness of smoke the notes of a flute filtered.
Her ear caught the pad of a footstep on the gra.s.s, and her eyes seized on a shadow that grew from dusky uncertainty to a small, bent shape.
She waited, suffocated with heartbeats, then made a noiseless pounce on it.
"Daddy John," she gasped, clutching at him.
The old man staggered, almost taken off his feet.
"Is he worse?" he said.
"He's told me. Did you find anyone?"
"Yes--two. One's Episcopal--in a train from St. Louis."
A sound came from her that he did not understand. She gripped at his shoulders as if she were drowning. He thought she was about to swoon and put his arm around her saying:
"Come back to the tent. You're all on a shake as if you had ague."
"I can't go back. Don't bring him. Don't bring him. Don't tell father. Not now. I will later, some other time. When we get to California, but not now--not to-night."
The sentences were cut apart by breaths that broke from her as if she had been running. He was frightened and tried to draw her to the light and see her face.
"Why, Missy!" he said with scared helplessness, "Why, Missy! What's got you?"